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Stuart G

(38,420 posts)
Sat May 1, 2021, 09:38 AM May 2021

"Wounded Knee Massacre" ..Proof we fail to teach about .. genocide of Native Americans.

Last edited Sat May 1, 2021, 11:52 AM - Edit history (1)

Did you know about this? Probably Not............

"....An 1890 massacre left some 250 Native Americans dead, in what was the final clash between federal troops and the Sioux. Old people, women and children. On purpose by an leader in the military..
.......................................................................................................................................

from the link below
By the time the massacre was over, more than 250 men, women and children of the Lakota had been killed and 51 were wounded (4 men and 47 women and children, some of whom died later); some estimates placed the number of dead as high as 300.[3]

You haven't heard about the ...Massacre at Wounded Knee, have you?

... total proof that we do not teach about "genocide of Native Americans"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wounded_Knee_Massacre
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"Wounded Knee Massacre" ..Proof we fail to teach about .. genocide of Native Americans. (Original Post) Stuart G May 2021 OP
We know because of the Siege of Wounded Knee and Sacheen Littlefeather. quaint May 2021 #1
Did you never read the best seller, "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" by Dee Brown? hlthe2b May 2021 #2
At the link below, I reference this book..post 12.. Stuart G May 2021 #3
... hlthe2b May 2021 #8
We read this in Junior High School LongtimeAZDem May 2021 #5
In the late-70's a guy in our class had that book, FoxNewsSucks May 2021 #4
Tulsa's Wall Street-May 31, 1921-300 people died, 800 injured..I think I heard of it once, long ago. Stuart G May 2021 #6
So many massacres, so many names, not all known, a few mentioned in passing sanatanadharma May 2021 #7
We got Wounded Knee and the attack on the bonus camp from my high school brewens May 2021 #9
Read, "Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee" Bayard May 2021 #10
It upsets me greatly that the Buffalo Soldiers were involved in the Native American genocide. Sneederbunk May 2021 #11
It is not American History, but Massacre History..Armenian Genocide Stuart G May 2021 #12
Much of what many people know about Native Americans, comes from old western movies tulipsandroses May 2021 #13
Well...today I learned about ..".The Osage Murders." Thank You for teaching me of that.. Stuart G May 2021 #14
The Sand Creek Massacre. Nov. 29, 1864. Between 70 to 500 Cheyenne and Arapahoe,, niyad May 2021 #15
Genocide: an integral part of Tribalism. n/t MarcA May 2021 #16
Wounded Knee is just one example. Grumpy Old Guy May 2021 #17

hlthe2b

(102,234 posts)
2. Did you never read the best seller, "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" by Dee Brown?
Sat May 1, 2021, 09:59 AM
May 2021

Published in 1970 with a film adaptation in 2007.

The book came out a mere three years following the rise of American Indian Activism and AIM (American Indian Movement). The tragic crack-down on the group by the FBI a few years later led to what I fully believe was the tragic politically motivated murder charge toward Leonard Pelletier who languishes in prison to this day, long beyond normal incarceration for most white defendants- despite decades of attempts to free him

The publication of Brown's book came at the height of the American Indian Movement's activism. In 1969, AIM occupied Alcatraz Island for 19 months in hopes of reclaiming Native American land after the San Francisco Indian Center burned down.[7] In 1973, less than three years after the book's release, AIM and local Oglala and neighboring Sicangu Lakota took part in a 71-day occupation at Wounded Knee[8] in protest of the government of Richard Wilson, the chairman of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, which resulted in the death of two Indians and injury of the US Marshal.[9] The resulting 1974 trial ended in the dismissal of all charges due to the uncovering of various incidents of government misconduct.




So, yeah, I know all about this and find it horrific that more do not.

FoxNewsSucks

(10,429 posts)
4. In the late-70's a guy in our class had that book,
Sat May 1, 2021, 10:12 AM
May 2021

"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee". I think it was my sophomore year. We had never heard of Wounded Knee, and even though he explained it, I don't think we really understood. That was the only time I ever heard of it, except for a couple years that I lived in SD.

It's not in the history books for the same reason that Tulsa's Wall Street isn't in them.



Stuart G

(38,420 posts)
6. Tulsa's Wall Street-May 31, 1921-300 people died, 800 injured..I think I heard of it once, long ago.
Sat May 1, 2021, 10:21 AM
May 2021

In 1921, Tulsa, Oklahoma’s Greenwood District, known as Black Wall Street, was one of the most prosperous African-American communities in the United States. But on May 31 of that year, the Tulsa Tribune reported that a black man, Dick Rowland, attempted to rape a white woman, Sarah Page. Whites in the area refused to wait for the investigative process to play out, sparking two days of unprecedented racial violence. Thirty-five city blocks went up in flames, 300 people died, and 800 were injured. Defense of white female virtue was the expressed motivation for the collective racial violence.

sanatanadharma

(3,701 posts)
7. So many massacres, so many names, not all known, a few mentioned in passing
Sat May 1, 2021, 10:39 AM
May 2021

From New England to Sand Creek, Colorado to California's shores, the colorless people have proved the immorality of supremacy.

This evil of colorlessness is widespread.

In Uruguay, in 1831, the now extinct Charrúa were massacred by the Uruguayan Army on the banks of the Salsipuedes* Creek *Spanish for "Get-out-if-you-can"

Those who could were later killed or taken into slavery.

brewens

(13,580 posts)
9. We got Wounded Knee and the attack on the bonus camp from my high school
Sat May 1, 2021, 11:03 AM
May 2021

history teacher. He was unusual though. I'm sure he was the only one of the three at my school in the 70's that taught that. We learned a lot of things that were not in the book and you had to take good notes. Some of that was on the tests.

Bayard

(22,062 posts)
10. Read, "Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee"
Sat May 1, 2021, 11:10 AM
May 2021

In high school. Recently bought it again to re-read. Along with, "Custer Died For Your Sins".

When the take back over happened in the 70's, my best friend and I were waving our fists, and saying, "Red Power." No one knew what the hell we were talking about except our History teacher.

It should be required reading. Rethugs would say its, "Un-American....."

Stuart G

(38,420 posts)
12. It is not American History, but Massacre History..Armenian Genocide
Sat May 1, 2021, 11:16 AM
May 2021

The Armenian Genocide was the systematic mass murder and ethnic cleansing of around one million ethnic Armenians from Anatolia and adjoining regions by the Ottoman Empire and its ruling party, the Committee of Union and Progress, during World War 1. 1915 - 1917..

I was discussing the holocaust and a student in my class, said, "Why aren't you discussing the.... Armenian Genocide? and I knew nothing about that. She was Armenian, and I was teaching in a mixed school of all ethnic types in Chicago.

The neighborhood from the school's population of students was verydiverse from all parts of the world. Maybe 25 languages were spoken in the halls by students from different countries
But....in most classes, only English was spoken, and going to that school was
part o the students ....experience at learning English. Most if not all wanted to become "citizens" of
the U.S.A. and were leaning English as part of ..."life", just like all immigrants did..My grandparents did
exactly the same..Their language was Yiddish, and they did not speak very good English.


tulipsandroses

(5,123 posts)
13. Much of what many people know about Native Americans, comes from old western movies
Sat May 1, 2021, 11:22 AM
May 2021

The " redman" coming to get the white man.

This is all part of the systemic racism that people are pushing back against. Rick Santorum earlier this week said " we birthed a nation from nothing". The caucasity of that statement is stunning. Giving voice that America is the birthright of white people. No mention of the violence against the native people. I guess this was just an inconvenient necessity just as slavery was a necessity.

A while ago, I read that Martin Scorsese and Robert Deniro were working on a movie about the Osage murders


As best-selling author David Grann details in his new book, “Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI,” the Osage reservation was soaked in blood because it was awash in oil. Driven from their lands in Kansas, the Osage had bought a swath of northeast Oklahoma in the early 1870s. The rocky, barren reservation promised to yield little—with the exception of their desire to be left alone—until the discovery of one of the largest oil deposits in the United States below the surface.

[link:https://www.history.com/news/the-fbis-first-big-case-the-osage-murders|

niyad

(113,275 posts)
15. The Sand Creek Massacre. Nov. 29, 1864. Between 70 to 500 Cheyenne and Arapahoe,,
Sat May 1, 2021, 11:45 AM
May 2021

mostly women, children and elders, encamped under a flag of truce, massacred, mutilated, body parts carried like trophies by chivington and his drunken band of murderers.

We were not taught about this in Colorado history.

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