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Official Site: www.brentblount.com iSound Site: www.isound.com/brent_blount
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Straight Ahead Jazz with a touch of the blues, bebop, and the avant-garde...
&
Traditional American Indian flute with modern influence
Brent Blount has been a foundational piece of the Oklahoma Jazz and Blues community for the last 21 y |
 |
|
|
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Saturday, September 27th, 2008 Essay On Goyathlay
An elder told me that the Navaho took Geronimo's bones and gave them a proper burial before the U.S. Army only thought that he remained buried at Fort Sill after they buried him there. I told her I had been to the grave site. She asked me, "Did it feel like he was in there?" "No," I said. "They 'buried' him in the grave stone by stone, so he wouldn't ever come back," she said. I personally don't believe he is at Fort Sill, and I don't believe this either -
Whose Skull and Bones?
"The skull of the worthy Geronimo the Terrible, exhumed from its tomb at Fort Sill by your club & the K -- t [Knight] Haffner, is now safe inside the T -- [Tomb] together with his well worn femurs[,] bit & saddle horn."
Geronimo died in 1909, that letter was in 1918, and Geronimo's great-grandson wrote Bush about that letter.Curiously, that all makes me wonder - "Why didn't they want him to come back from his (alleged) grave?"
The question, "Why didn't they want him to come back from his (alleged) grave?" Must be seen symbolically and interwoven with some legends about him; but first, the question must be put into historical context.
The Alamo was on February 23, 1836; it was seven years after Geronimo's birth in 1829.
Remember The Alamo
The Alamo was remembered, as well as the Goliad massacre (perpetrated by order of General Santa Anna), forty-six days later, on April 21, 1836 at the Battle of San Jacinto, where 783 men led by General Sam Houston defeated 1,500 Mexicans.
The battle lasted only eighteen minutes.
When all was over, 630 men of the Mexican army were dead; 730 were prisoners.
Nine Texans lost their lives.
History then cloned itself once again over its entire course with a gold rush, bringing white encroachment by settlers and miners.
Apache Indians Defended Homelands in Southwest
The gold rush of 1849 also brought prospectors to the West and further encroachment on Indian land.
Copper and silver being discovered is what brought more white encroachment to Arizona, which is where Geronimo and the Apache were, but referring back to the question, the discovery of copper and silver is not what I think the army wanted to "keep from coming back" when they "buried" Geronimo stone by stone.
Source
As prospectors rushed west to join the California Gold Rush of 1849, gold, silver and copper were also discovered in Arizona, which attracted most of the early settlers. Those frontiersmen (pioneers of sorts) faced many obstacles, including the war parties of the great American Indian chiefs, Geronimo and Cochise.
The first glimpse of what I think they wanted to "bury" begins with a lesser known fact, interwoven with some legend. That is, the fact that Geronimo was a prophet and a medicine man; he was not a chief.
Source
Geronimo was never an elected chief, but he was a medicine man who could see the future, and who, it was believed, had a spirit that could not be harmed by bullets.
The following restated facts are crucial to understanding what set Geronimo on the war path, for it was not merely the white encroachment that set him on it, though it may have been so eventually by sheer speculation.
These are not the real reasons that Geronimo personally began to violently defend his people and homeland in my opinion: the white encroachment after the Alamo, the gold rush of 1849 that was fueling white encroachment in California, while the discovery of copper and silver was fueling white encroachment in Arizona. The encroachment was not enough in and of itself, but genocide was.
Source
When Columbus landed in America in 1492, he mistook it for India and called the native inhabitants "Indians." It was his avowed aim to "convert the heathen Indians to our Holy Faith" that warranted the enslaving and exporting of thousands of Native Americans. That such treatment resulted in complete genocide did not matter as much as that these natives had been given the opportunity of everlasting life through their exposure to Christianity. The same sort of thinking also gave Westerners license to rape women.
-- The Dark Side of Christian History, by Helen Ellerbe
It was Roman Catholic Church from Spain, who had been guilty of genocide against the indigenous people for centuries prior that committed the atrocity against Geronimo's family, and put revenge in his heart.
The Spanish were in search of Christian converts and slaves. The Spanish exterminated Geronimo's family.
The Jesuit Missions that took place in New France in 1625 puts the Spanish's seeking slaves and converts to Roman Catholicism in historical context.
A People & A Nation. 4th Edition. p.38
The Jesuits, whom the Native Americans called the Black Robes, initially tried to persuade the tribal peoples to live near French settlements and to adopt European lifestyles as well as the European's religion. When that effort failed, the Jesuits concluded that they could introduce Roman Catholicism to their new charges without insisting that they alter most of their customary modes of existence. So the Black Robes learned Native American languages and traveled to remote regions in pursuit of their goal. By the early eighteenth century, they were living in present-day Illinois.
In the pursuit of their conversions, the Jesuits sought to undermine the authority of the villiage shamans (the traditional religious leaders) and to gain the confidence of leaders who could influence others. The Black Robes used a variety of weapons to attain the desired end. Trained in rhetoric, they won admirers by their eloquence. Seemingly immune to smallpox, they explained epidemics among the Native Americans as God's punishment for sin, their arguments aided by the ineffectiveness of the shaman's traditional remedies for illness against that deadly disease. Drawing on European science, the Jesuits predicted solar and lunar eclipses. Perhaps most important of all, they amazed the villagers by communicating with each other over long distances and periods of time by employing marks on paper. The Native Americans' desire to learn how to harness the extraordinary power of literacy was one of the most critical factors in making them receptive to the Jesuits' message.
To illustrate, here are just three examples of where the Spanish Roman Catholic Church had been guilty of genocide against the indigenous people about one century earlier than the above mentioned.
Things They Don't Tell You
"The [Catholic] Spaniards in Mexico and Peru used to baptize Indian infants and then immediately dash their brains out; by this means they secured that these infants went to heaven."
-- Bertrand Russell
Kurt Kaltreider, PH.D. American Indian Prophecies. p.54
According to Father Las Casas, the Spaniards "tore babies from their mother's breast by their feet, and dashed their heads against the rocks -"
Finally, a report from some concerned Dominican friars contains the following: "Some Christians encountered an Indian woman, who was carrying in her arms a child at suck; and since the dog they had with them was hungry they tore the child from the mother's arms and flung it still living to the dog, who proceeded to devour it before the mother's eyes."
In addition, it is crucial to remember that there were Indian Boarding Schools, whose aim was to culturally assimilate and destroy indigenous cultures.
Photo: Little girls praying beside their beds, Phoenix Indian School, Arizona. (NWDNS-75-EX-2B)
Hence, not only was Geronimo and the Apache fighting white encroachment and genocide, they also were fighting against being Christianized from both the white people and the Spanish Roman Catholic Church, which resulted in even more loss of their culture through assimilation and death. It was also in that context that Spanish exterminated Geronimo's children, wife, and mother.
Source
- when all were counted, I found that my aged mother, my young wife, and my three small children were among the slain.
Were the facts that Geronimo had adequate causes to defend his people, an adequate cause to feel vengeful, and that he was a medicine man large enough reasons for the army at Fort Sill to bury him such that he'd never "return?" Hardy, from the U.S. military's point of view at that time, I think. For me, the answer lies in one man: General George Crook, who had fought the Lakota in the Sioux Wars.
Source
"Crook never lied to us. His words gave the people hope."
-- Lakota Chief Red Cloud
Wars and Battles
Sioux Wars
A one-year conflict dubbed Red Cloud's War (1866-1867), concluded with a treaty that guaranteed the Sioux permanent possession of the Black Hills of present-day South Dakota. The covenant, however, was not observed by the United States. Prospectors and miners itching for gold inundated the territory in the 1870s.
In the ensuing hostilities, Brigadier General George Crook commanded the Sioux to move onto a reservation. Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse refused to comply and move their people. Infuriated by unjust assaults, Sitting Bull gave notice: "We are an island of Indians in a lake of whites... These soldiers want war. All right, we'll give it to them!"
On June 17, 1876, a war party of Sioux and Cheyenne took Crook's soldiers by surprise in southern Montana and routed them in the Battle of the Rosebud. General George A. Custer then led a force against the Indians. On June 25, he and his men ran into a Sioux war party on the Little Bighorn River. Not a single soldier in Custer's immediate command of some 300 men survived "Custer's Last Stand."
Crook experienced a metamorphous during the Sioux Wars and the trial of Standing Bear; he started looking at the indigenous people from his heart and began divorcing himself from the rhetoric of "The only good Indian is a dead Indian."
Dee Brown. Bury My heart At Wounded Knee.p. 402
To bring order out of chaos, the army called on General George Crook- quite a different man from the one who had left Arizona ten years earlier to go north to fight the Sioux and Cheyennes. He had learned from them and from the Poncas during the trial of Standing Bear that Indians were human beings, a viewpoint that most of his fellow officers had not yet accepted.
The Trial of Standing Bear
After the attorneys presented their arguments, Judge Dundy allowed Standing Bear to address the court. Standing Bear did not speak English, but he was able to make an eloquent plea to the court through his interpreter, Susette ("Bright Eyes") LaFlesche.
Standing Bear rose, extended his hand toward the judge's bench --
"That hand is not the color of yours, but if I pierce it, I shall feel pain. If you pierce your hand, you also feel pain. The blood that will flow from mine will be the same color as yours. I am a man. God made us both."
The fact that a U.S. military general could change from seeing Indians as "savages" is what I believe the army never wanted to come back from Geronimo's grave, for Crook's transformation supplied him with the motivation to speak out against the propaganda of the press.
Source
"It is too often the case that . . . newspapers . . . disseminate all sorts of exaggerations and falsehoods about the Indians, which are copied in papers of high character and wide circulation, in other parts of the country, while the Indians' side of the case is rarely ever heard. In this way the people at large get false ideas with reference to the matter. Then when the outbreak does come public attention is turned to the Indians, their crimes and atrocities are alone condemned, while the persons who injustice has driven them to this course escape scot-free and are the loudest in their denunciations."
In addition, his transformation supplied him with the motivation to practice patience and diplomacy with Geronimo, Crook was called "Grey Wolf." Tragically, Grey Wolf could not keep the promise he made to Geronimo regarding their returning to their reservation after their surrendering and agreeing to being imprisoned in Florida, so that they could return to their reservation.
Geronimo
1829-1909
The Apache warriors were deported to incarceration in Florida without their families -an agreement broken - then Alabama and finally to Fort Sill, Oklahoma Territory.
The War Department, quite frankly - said no.
When they brought Geronimo to Fort Sill, here's the general location the put him in.
Specifically, this was the window he had to look out of.
I'm sure that all the stories about how popular he was meant a great deal to him, as did him having some freedom at Fort Sill.
After he died of pneumonia,they buried him here:
To bring this to a close, "an elder told me that the Navaho took Geronimo's bones and gave them proper burial before the U.S. Army only thought that he remained buried at Fort Sill after they buried him there," as I stated in the beginning. A look around the cemetery reveals the possibility of that being true, due to the remoteness and seclusion of the area. Note that there was probally more tree cover nearly a century ago.
Dee Brown. Bury My heart At Wounded Knee.p. 413
A legend still persists that not long afterward (his death) his bones were secretly removed and taken somewhere to the Southwest-
Hence, the next time someone mentions
Medicine Bluff or yells "Geronimoooo!!!"
When we speculated in print on why our soldiers use the name ("Geronimo!")of a dead Apache chieftain (no, Geronimo was a medicine man, seer, and intellectual leader) for their slogan, several alumni of airborne regiments reported stories of its origin. A plausible one came from Arthur A. Manion. "At Fort Sill, Oklahoma," he wrote, "a series of rather steep hills, called, I believe, Medicine Bluffs, was pointed out to all new arrivals. It was said that one day Geronimo, with the army in hot pursuit, made a leap on horseback down an almost vertical cliff a feat that the posse could not duplicate. The legend continues that in the midst of this jump to freedom he gave out the bloodcurdling cry of "Geronimo-o-o!" Hence the practice adopted by our paratroopers. I hope this helps. It's at least colorful, if not authentic."
You can understand the truth of his statement -
Geronimo:
The soldiers never explained to the government when an Indian was wronged, but reported the misdeeds of the Indians.
And you will know why they didn't want at least one truth to "come back from his (alleged) grave."
Geronimo:
I was born on the prairies where the wind blew free and there was nothing to break the light of the sun. I was born where there were no enclosures.
The spirit of Goyathlay ("one who yawns"), or Geronimo is quite simply this in my judgment: that people can and do change in extreme circumstances, and when they change for the better and/or for noble reasons from a position of true innocence in the midst of atrocities beyond their control... that is the spirit of Goyathlay.
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Straight Ahead Jazz with a touch of the blues, bebop, and the avant-garde...
&
Traditional American Indian flute with modern influence
Brent Blount has been a foundational piece of the Oklahoma Jazz and Blues community for the last 21 years. Doug Hill of Pop Magazine describes the experience of his performance as “Falling into a slow grove, he found intonations that escalated from the icy depths into bright crisp sunshine. Staccato stutter-steps danced off into brass oblivion. Blount played entire long solos with eyes closed, opening at the conclusion as if waking from a sweet dream (2000).”
He began as a saxophone player at Bianca's, a local jazz and blues club, in 1986 in Oklahoma City at the tender age of 16. He fell in love with the Blues. At the age of 12 Jazz would invade his world with confusion at the induction of John Coltrane into his ear, love it or hate it, he was obsessed. By his nineteenth year on earth Ernie Watts would provide clarification and cement the relationship with jazz that would last a lifetime. Brent is classically trained in the art of Saxophone and Clarinet performance and rounds off this talent with outstanding clarity in blues guitar and the Native American flute. He is truly a musician's musician. Ameritone records referred to him as an artist “who melds tradition and originality into his musical range from Bach to late John Coltrane (2004).”
Brent's eclectic talent is well represented in his vast experience. Brent was awarded outstanding soloist at the Wichita Jazz Festival in 1994 and 2001. He has performed with a variety of renowned artist's from the Scott Keeton Band and Danny White to Smilin Vic and the Temptations. He regularly performs at local venues such as Maker's Cigar Lounge and Bourbon Street Cafe. He has also been a staple at local events such as Chocolate Decadence, the Paseo Arts Festival, Oklahoma City Festival of Arts and Stillwater Blues Festival. A varied recording history is available on “Get Some Sauce on Your Monkey” by Big Daddy and The Sauce Monkeys in 1998; “A Suncrush for Sweethearts” by Eric Sarmienta in 1997; and “After All These Years” in which Blount produced in 1996.
Brent Blount: Tenor Sax, Clarinet, Blues and Jazz Guitar, and Native American Flute
1996: Composed, produced and recorded the acoustic jazz album, “After All These Years.”
2005: Composed, recorded and produced an original acoustic jazz album, “Breakfast at Jim's” Album has saxophone, clarinet, electric guitar, and a Native American cedar flute.
Performed “Breakfast at Jim's” live in 2005 at “Jazz in June” in Norman, Oklahoma; opening up before Cathy Cousins and Thelonious Monk Jr. See video here titled “Bad Pun, Live!”
Gear:
Yamaha Custom tenor saxophone with a David Guardala mouthpiece with a 2 ½ or 3 Vandoren V - 16 reed. However, that’s new. “Breakfast at Jim’s” was recorded using an Otto Link 7* with a number 3 Vandoren V - 16 reed.
Press Quotes:
Doug Hill of Pop Magazine describes the experience of his performance as “Falling into a slow grove, he found intonations that escalated from the icy depths into bright crisp sunshine. Staccato stutter-steps danced off into brass oblivion. Blount played entire long solos with eyes closed, opening at the conclusion as if waking from a sweet dream (2000).”
Ameritone records referred to him as an artist “who melds tradition and originality into his musical range from Bach to late John Coltrane (2004).”
Awards:
Outstanding soloist at the Wichita Jazz Festival in 1994 and 2001.
Home:
Oklahoma City, OK |
|
| Saturday, September 27th, 2008 Essay On Goyathlay
An elder told me that the Navaho took Geronimo's bones and gave them a proper burial before the U.S. Army only thought that he remained buried at Fort Sill after they buried him there. I told her I had been to the grave site. She asked me, "Did it feel like he was in there?" "No," I said. "They 'buried' him in the grave stone by stone, so he wouldn't ever come back," she said. I personally don't believe he is at Fort Sill, and I don't believe this either -
Whose Skull and Bones?
"The skull of the worthy Geronimo the Terrible, exhumed from its tomb at Fort Sill by your club & the K -- t [Knight] Haffner, is now safe inside the T -- [Tomb] together with his well worn femurs[,] bit & saddle horn."
Geronimo died in 1909, that letter was in 1918, and Geronimo's great-grandson wrote Bush about that letter.Curiously, that all makes me wonder - "Why didn't they want him to come back from his (alleged) grave?"
The question, "Why didn't they want him to come back from his (alleged) grave?" Must be seen symbolically and interwoven with some legends about him; but first, the question must be put into historical context.
The Alamo was on February 23, 1836; it was seven years after Geronimo's birth in 1829.
Remember The Alamo
The Alamo was remembered, as well as the Goliad massacre (perpetrated by order of General Santa Anna), forty-six days later, on April 21, 1836 at the Battle of San Jacinto, where 783 men led by General Sam Houston defeated 1,500 Mexicans.
The battle lasted only eighteen minutes.
When all was over, 630 men of the Mexican army were dead; 730 were prisoners.
Nine Texans lost their lives.
History then cloned itself once again over its entire course with a gold rush, bringing white encroachment by settlers and miners.
Apache Indians Defended Homelands in Southwest
The gold rush of 1849 also brought prospectors to the West and further encroachment on Indian land.
Copper and silver being discovered is what brought more white encroachment to Arizona, which is where Geronimo and the Apache were, but referring back to the question, the discovery of copper and silver is not what I think the army wanted to "keep from coming back" when they "buried" Geronimo stone by stone.
Source
As prospectors rushed west to join the California Gold Rush of 1849, gold, silver and copper were also discovered in Arizona, which attracted most of the early settlers. Those frontiersmen (pioneers of sorts) faced many obstacles, including the war parties of the great American Indian chiefs, Geronimo and Cochise.
The first glimpse of what I think they wanted to "bury" begins with a lesser known fact, interwoven with some legend. That is, the fact that Geronimo was a prophet and a medicine man; he was not a chief.
Source
Geronimo was never an elected chief, but he was a medicine man who could see the future, and who, it was believed, had a spirit that could not be harmed by bullets.
The following restated facts are crucial to understanding what set Geronimo on the war path, for it was not merely the white encroachment that set him on it, though it may have been so eventually by sheer speculation.
These are not the real reasons that Geronimo personally began to violently defend his people and homeland in my opinion: the white encroachment after the Alamo, the gold rush of 1849 that was fueling white encroachment in California, while the discovery of copper and silver was fueling white encroachment in Arizona. The encroachment was not enough in and of itself, but genocide was.
Source
When Columbus landed in America in 1492, he mistook it for India and called the native inhabitants "Indians." It was his avowed aim to "convert the heathen Indians to our Holy Faith" that warranted the enslaving and exporting of thousands of Native Americans. That such treatment resulted in complete genocide did not matter as much as that these natives had been given the opportunity of everlasting life through their exposure to Christianity. The same sort of thinking also gave Westerners license to rape women.
-- The Dark Side of Christian History, by Helen Ellerbe
It was Roman Catholic Church from Spain, who had been guilty of genocide against the indigenous people for centuries prior that committed the atrocity against Geronimo's family, and put revenge in his heart.
The Spanish were in search of Christian converts and slaves. The Spanish exterminated Geronimo's family.
The Jesuit Missions that took place in New France in 1625 puts the Spanish's seeking slaves and converts to Roman Catholicism in historical context.
A People & A Nation. 4th Edition. p.38
The Jesuits, whom the Native Americans called the Black Robes, initially tried to persuade the tribal peoples to live near French settlements and to adopt European lifestyles as well as the European's religion. When that effort failed, the Jesuits concluded that they could introduce Roman Catholicism to their new charges without insisting that they alter most of their customary modes of existence. So the Black Robes learned Native American languages and traveled to remote regions in pursuit of their goal. By the early eighteenth century, they were living in present-day Illinois.
In the pursuit of their conversions, the Jesuits sought to undermine the authority of the villiage shamans (the traditional religious leaders) and to gain the confidence of leaders who could influence others. The Black Robes used a variety of weapons to attain the desired end. Trained in rhetoric, they won admirers by their eloquence. Seemingly immune to smallpox, they explained epidemics among the Native Americans as God's punishment for sin, their arguments aided by the ineffectiveness of the shaman's traditional remedies for illness against that deadly disease. Drawing on European science, the Jesuits predicted solar and lunar eclipses. Perhaps most important of all, they amazed the villagers by communicating with each other over long distances and periods of time by employing marks on paper. The Native Americans' desire to learn how to harness the extraordinary power of literacy was one of the most critical factors in making them receptive to the Jesuits' message.
To illustrate, here are just three examples of where the Spanish Roman Catholic Church had been guilty of genocide against the indigenous people about one century earlier than the above mentioned.
Things They Don't Tell You
"The [Catholic] Spaniards in Mexico and Peru used to baptize Indian infants and then immediately dash their brains out; by this means they secured that these infants went to heaven."
-- Bertrand Russell
Kurt Kaltreider, PH.D. American Indian Prophecies. p.54
According to Father Las Casas, the Spaniards "tore babies from their mother's breast by their feet, and dashed their heads against the rocks -"
Finally, a report from some concerned Dominican friars contains the following: "Some Christians encountered an Indian woman, who was carrying in her arms a child at suck; and since the dog they had with them was hungry they tore the child from the mother's arms and flung it still living to the dog, who proceeded to devour it before the mother's eyes."
In addition, it is crucial to remember that there were Indian Boarding Schools, whose aim was to culturally assimilate and destroy indigenous cultures.
Photo: Little girls praying beside their beds, Phoenix Indian School, Arizona. (NWDNS-75-EX-2B)
Hence, not only was Geronimo and the Apache fighting white encroachment and genocide, they also were fighting against being Christianized from both the white people and the Spanish Roman Catholic Church, which resulted in even more loss of their culture through assimilation and death. It was also in that context that Spanish exterminated Geronimo's children, wife, and mother.
Source
- when all were counted, I found that my aged mother, my young wife, and my three small children were among the slain.
Were the facts that Geronimo had adequate causes to defend his people, an adequate cause to feel vengeful, and that he was a medicine man large enough reasons for the army at Fort Sill to bury him such that he'd never "return?" Hardy, from the U.S. military's point of view at that time, I think. For me, the answer lies in one man: General George Crook, who had fought the Lakota in the Sioux Wars.
Source
"Crook never lied to us. His words gave the people hope."
-- Lakota Chief Red Cloud
Wars and Battles
Sioux Wars
A one-year conflict dubbed Red Cloud's War (1866-1867), concluded with a treaty that guaranteed the Sioux permanent possession of the Black Hills of present-day South Dakota. The covenant, however, was not observed by the United States. Prospectors and miners itching for gold inundated the territory in the 1870s.
In the ensuing hostilities, Brigadier General George Crook commanded the Sioux to move onto a reservation. Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse refused to comply and move their people. Infuriated by unjust assaults, Sitting Bull gave notice: "We are an island of Indians in a lake of whites... These soldiers want war. All right, we'll give it to them!"
On June 17, 1876, a war party of Sioux and Cheyenne took Crook's soldiers by surprise in southern Montana and routed them in the Battle of the Rosebud. General George A. Custer then led a force against the Indians. On June 25, he and his men ran into a Sioux war party on the Little Bighorn River. Not a single soldier in Custer's immediate command of some 300 men survived "Custer's Last Stand."
Crook experienced a metamorphous during the Sioux Wars and the trial of Standing Bear; he started looking at the indigenous people from his heart and began divorcing himself from the rhetoric of "The only good Indian is a dead Indian."
Dee Brown. Bury My heart At Wounded Knee.p. 402
To bring order out of chaos, the army called on General George Crook- quite a different man from the one who had left Arizona ten years earlier to go north to fight the Sioux and Cheyennes. He had learned from them and from the Poncas during the trial of Standing Bear that Indians were human beings, a viewpoint that most of his fellow officers had not yet accepted.
The Trial of Standing Bear
After the attorneys presented their arguments, Judge Dundy allowed Standing Bear to address the court. Standing Bear did not speak English, but he was able to make an eloquent plea to the court through his interpreter, Susette ("Bright Eyes") LaFlesche.
Standing Bear rose, extended his hand toward the judge's bench --
"That hand is not the color of yours, but if I pierce it, I shall feel pain. If you pierce your hand, you also feel pain. The blood that will flow from mine will be the same color as yours. I am a man. God made us both."
The fact that a U.S. military general could change from seeing Indians as "savages" is what I believe the army never wanted to come back from Geronimo's grave, for Crook's transformation supplied him with the motivation to speak out against the propaganda of the press.
Source
"It is too often the case that . . . newspapers . . . disseminate all sorts of exaggerations and falsehoods about the Indians, which are copied in papers of high character and wide circulation, in other parts of the country, while the Indians' side of the case is rarely ever heard. In this way the people at large get false ideas with reference to the matter. Then when the outbreak does come public attention is turned to the Indians, their crimes and atrocities are alone condemned, while the persons who injustice has driven them to this course escape scot-free and are the loudest in their denunciations."
In addition, his transformation supplied him with the motivation to practice patience and diplomacy with Geronimo, Crook was called "Grey Wolf." Tragically, Grey Wolf could not keep the promise he made to Geronimo regarding their returning to their reservation after their surrendering and agreeing to being imprisoned in Florida, so that they could return to their reservation.
Geronimo
1829-1909
The Apache warriors were deported to incarceration in Florida without their families -an agreement broken - then Alabama and finally to Fort Sill, Oklahoma Territory.
The War Department, quite frankly - said no.
When they brought Geronimo to Fort Sill, here's the general location the put him in.
Specifically, this was the window he had to look out of.
I'm sure that all the stories about how popular he was meant a great deal to him, as did him having some freedom at Fort Sill.
After he died of pneumonia,they buried him here:
To bring this to a close, "an elder told me that the Navaho took Geronimo's bones and gave them proper burial before the U.S. Army only thought that he remained buried at Fort Sill after they buried him there," as I stated in the beginning. A look around the cemetery reveals the possibility of that being true, due to the remoteness and seclusion of the area. Note that there was probally more tree cover nearly a century ago.
Dee Brown. Bury My heart At Wounded Knee.p. 413
A legend still persists that not long afterward (his death) his bones were secretly removed and taken somewhere to the Southwest-
Hence, the next time someone mentions
Medicine Bluff or yells "Geronimoooo!!!"
When we speculated in print on why our soldiers use the name ("Geronimo!")of a dead Apache chieftain (no, Geronimo was a medicine man, seer, and intellectual leader) for their slogan, several alumni of airborne regiments reported stories of its origin. A plausible one came from Arthur A. Manion. "At Fort Sill, Oklahoma," he wrote, "a series of rather steep hills, called, I believe, Medicine Bluffs, was pointed out to all new arrivals. It was said that one day Geronimo, with the army in hot pursuit, made a leap on horseback down an almost vertical cliff a feat that the posse could not duplicate. The legend continues that in the midst of this jump to freedom he gave out the bloodcurdling cry of "Geronimo-o-o!" Hence the practice adopted by our paratroopers. I hope this helps. It's at least colorful, if not authentic."
You can understand the truth of his statement -
Geronimo:
The soldiers never explained to the government when an Indian was wronged, but reported the misdeeds of the Indians.
And you will know why they didn't want at least one truth to "come back from his (alleged) grave."
Geronimo:
I was born on the prairies where the wind blew free and there was nothing to break the light of the sun. I was born where there were no enclosures.
The spirit of Goyathlay ("one who yawns"), or Geronimo is quite simply this in my judgment: that people can and do change in extreme circumstances, and when they change for the better and/or for noble reasons from a position of true innocence in the midst of atrocities beyond their control... that is the spirit of Goyathlay.
Posted By Brent Blount @ 12:04 PM |
| Monday, July 28th, 2008 “Ghosts of Wounded Knee” now in 2 Parts
I stood at the mass grave at the Wounded Knee Massacre last summer, where the bones of Big Foot and Standing Bear are amongst all the others who were massacred in 1890 at Wounded Knee.
Here was then:
Here is now:
In addition to the above photo being the mass grave site, it is also the site of where the massacre began, where two soldiers made it look like a deaf man "started it." Framing him, they grabbed the gun and blamed him as the excuse they needed to begin killing. The soldiers were given forty-six medals of honor for mowing down the disarmed Big Foot's band (46 if memory serves from information from an original news article from "Lakota Times." It was not merely 20 medals of honor). They disarmed them before massacring them. Later in 1973 at the Siege of Wounded Knee 1973, it was also the location of the church which once stood in the "firefight" between the FBI and those at the Siege (that church has since been bulldozed). Amongst those were Crow Dog and Mary Crow Dog. "Firefight" is in quotations, because it shouldn't be called as such. They were defending their lives, family's lives, land, and their way of life.
Allow me to share the words a friend shared with me on the matter.
The big problem on Pine Ridge was economic before, during and after Wounded Knee II, and the big problem tomorrow will likely still be economic. Pine Ridge has always (even before 1973) been the most poverty-stricken community in the nation. And Pine Ridge has a whole lot of valuable natural resources; coal, uranium, an aquifer with millions of gallons of clean water. In 1868 after getting their deserved butt-kick in battle against the Lakota, the US negotiated the Fort Laramie Treaty and right away began breaking the treaty by stealing Indian land and resources. By the 1970s, the Lakota had lost two-thirds of their land and the government had plans to steal even more - especially uranium filled land.
Early in 1972 Raymond Yellow Thunder was beat to death by two white men in Gordon Nebraska. Attacks on Indian people by racists and Dickie Wilson and his GOONS had been increasing on the reservation and the whites who committed these crimes were seldom punished (like rape charges against Governor Janklow).
The traditional camp represented by Chief Fools Crow and Elders like Ellen Moves Camp and Gladys Bissonette, formed Oglala Sioux Civil Rights Organization and began impeachment proceedings against Dickie Wilson, charging him with use of tribal funds, harassing and failing to protect the rights and interests of the Pine Ridge people. Erosion of the tribal land base and acceptance of government money for lost tribal land were at the heart of the conflict.
But, when Raymond Yellow Thunder was murdered, the Traditionals called on AIM and things got a bit better with Fools Crow welcoming Russel Means and Dennis Banks onto the Rez. And then things got way out of hand and grew worse. And I think maybe Fools Crow soon wished he hadn't.
Carter Camp has said "I could still hear the words of the traditional chiefs of my Oglala Lakota Nation, spoken earlier that fateful day...Chief Fools Crow had told us: 'Go to Wounded Knee. There you will be protected.'
Camp: "People were waiting for us to appear on the scene and for some Indians to stand up and say that we're not going to take this shit no more. We've lived under this oppression for so many years. We're going to fight back now. The American Indian Movement is the force that stood for the people as a warrior society and said we're no longer going to allow you to roll over our people, to take our land, to pave over our reservations and dam up our rivers."
But then the FBI - AIM seige happened.
Not a whole lot of people really wanted to talk about what happened in 1973 at the time and they still don't. But a whole lot of key players sure wrote a lot of books about it. The conflicts and accusations between them are enough to make the head spin and makes me wonder if the truth can ever be known!A pretty condensed history is found on the pages of this link.
"Where White Men Fear to Tread: The Autobiography of Russell Means" by Russell Means vs
"Ojibwa Warrior: Dennis Banks And The Rise Of The American Indian Movement" by Dennis Banks and Richard Erdoes vs
"Loud Hawk: The United States Versus the American Indian Movement" by Kenneth S Stern vs "Prison Writings: My Life Is My Sun Dance" by Leonard Peltier, Harvey Arden, Chief Arvol Looking Horse, and Ramsey Clark
"Crow Dog: Four Generations of Sioux Medicine Men" by Leonard Crow Dog vs
"Lakota Woman" by Mary Crow Dog
"Songs called poems (Living in reality)" by John Trudell
"Who Would Unbraid Her Hair: the Legend of Annie Mae" by Antoinette Nora Claypoole
"The Unquiet Grave: The FBI and the Struggle for the Soul of Indian Country" by Steve Hendricks
To compliment this, here's some more information about the Siege Of Wounded Knee 1973:
A TATTOO ON MY HEART: THE WARRIORS OF WOUNDED KNEE 1973 - Synopsis
Nowhere was that awakening more profound, nor reaction by the government greater than around the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Racism and violence against Indians, corruption, and repression of traditional people on the reservations had left many Indians desperate. After the brutal deaths of two Indian men, traditional leaders called upon AIM. Fearing a takeover of tribal headquarters, federal law enforcement, armed with modern weapons and armored personnel carriers moved to protect the tribal government.
On February 27, 1973 traditional and AIM leaders chose another location to make a stand-the site of the 1890 massacre at Wounded Knee. Cold, hungry, and armed only with hunting rifles, fake guns, and one AK-47, they held out for 71 days against the US government. Over 500,000 rounds were exchanged between federal officers and Indians during the siege. Two Indians were killed, and several other wounded. Nearly 600 federal criminal charges were filed. A Tattoo on My Heart: The Warriors of Wounded Knee 1973 tells this dramatic and emotional story in the words of those men and women who struggled for survival inside the bunkers and ravines at Wounded Knee.
I believe this is a core issue of the Siege of Wounded Knee 1973:
Self-defense Summary: Should the law punish those who use force to defend themselves against criminal acts?
What do you think? I'll say what I think in the conclusion.
Going back to 1890 from 1973, more people survived if they tried to escape through this tree row, because there was more tree cover.
More were massacred if they tried to escape through this tree row, because there was much less tree cover.
The truth has still been tried to be slanted and concealed, even after over one century ago, because the old sign said that there were 150 warriors. The truth is, there were only 40 warriors (the sign at the beginning of this records the truth of there being 40 warriors).
To conclude, I think that forgiveness will be very difficult, especially as long as this history is revised to suite the "victors," the Black Hills continue to be raped, and the fact that many deny the problems indigenous people still face are because of the direct and long lasting effects of the United States extermination policy against them in the most immediate forms of Intergenerational Boarding School Trauma and the Forced Sterilizations that ended in the approximate 1970's (when Indian Boarding Schools closed) and mid 1970's, respectively. This is not even mentioning Alex White Plume's case regarding his attempts to grow Hemp.
However, I sincerely hope that reparations and forgiveness will someday become reality. For forgiveness leads to healing prayers and healing actions in my personal experience, and I believe that healing prayers and healing actions such as the Big Foot Memorial Ride can and will mend the sacred hoop.
Posted By Brent Blount @ 3:42 PM |
| Thursday, July 10th, 2008 #1 Artist at FAMECAST 4 9 Days & New Competition! My video "The Birth Of Wakinyan" got chosen to compete this week.
Here's how to find it. At the top of the page below is a box that says "Contests." Just go there until the list opens up underneath it and go to "Singer - Songwriter." "The Medicine Bluffs" finished #3 out of 15, and one of those was the returning champion.
You can see "The Birth Of Wakinyan" here in the video section and at the lower left corner of my isound account here, but there are two versions. The version that is in the competition is at the top. There are also two YouTube videos in the "Videos" section, one is custom made where you can watch all the YouTube videos I ever did in one. It's pretty cool.
My ranking was rank #1 for 9 days under "Hot Artists"! It was very, very cool.
See here:
www.famecast.com/community/index.html
Posted By Brent Blount @ 4:15 PM |
| Friday, June 6th, 2008 “I Wish You Knew Then”
I want to explain the new song “I Wish You Knew Then” both stylistically and programmatically, and to say what directions I see my next albums going.
“I Wish You Knew Then” has bass, guit |
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