Remember Wounded
Knee*The Ghost Dance War
The armed resistance
was over. The remaining Sioux were forced into reservation life at gunpoint.
Many Sioux sought spiritual guidance. Thus began a religious awakening among
the tribes of North America.
Arrival of the
"Ghost Dance"
Called the
"Ghost Dance" by the white soldiers who observed the new practice, it
spread rapidly across the continent. Instead of bringing the answer to their
prayers, however, the "Ghost Dance" movement resulted in yet another
human travesty.
It all began in 1888
with a Paiute holy man called WOVOKA. During a total eclipse of the sun, Wovoka
received a message from the Creator. Soon an Indian messiah would come and the
world would be free of the white man. The Indians could return to their lands
and the buffalo would once again roam the Great Plains.
Wovoka even knew that
all this would happen in the spring of 1891. He and his followers meditated,
had visions, chanted, and performed what became known as the GHOST DANCE. Soon
the movement began to spread. Before long, the Ghost Dance had adherents in
tribes throughout the South and West.
Although Wovoka
preached nonviolence, whites feared that the movement would spark a great
Indian rebellion. Ghost Dance followers seemed more defiant than other Native
Americans, and the rituals seemed to work its participants into a frenzy. All
this was disconcerting to the soldiers and settlers throughout the South and
West. Tragedy struck when the Ghost Dance movement reached the Lakota Sioux.
Local residents of
South Dakota demanded that the Sioux end the ritual of the Ghost Dance. When
they were ignored, the United States Army was called for assistance. Fearing
aggression, a group of 300 Sioux did leave the reservation. Army regulars
believed them to be a hostile force preparing for attack. When the two sides
came into contact, the Sioux reluctantly agreed to be tranported to WOUNDED
KNEE CREEK on PINE RIDGE RESERVATION.
A Final Tragedy
On the morning of
December 29, 1890, the army demanded the surrender of all Sioux weapons. Amid
the tension, a shot rang out, possibly from a deaf brave who misunderstood his
chief's orders to surrender.
The Seventh Cavalry —
the reconstructed regiment lost by George Armstrong Custer — opened fire on the
Sioux. The local chief, BIG FOOT, was shot in cold blood as he recuperated from
pneumonia in his tent. Others were cut down as they tried to run away. When the
smoke cleared almost all of the 300 men, women, and children were dead. Some
died instantly, others froze to death in the snow.
This massacre marked
the last showdown between Native Americans and the United States Army. It was
nearly 400 years after Christopher Columbus first contacted the first
Americans. The 1890 United States census declared the frontier officially
closed.
Now the appropriate response to that is to do TWICE as much Ghost Dancing. I like the design on your website. I downloaded it and will make mine look something like that. Thanks for the inspiration. May Jah Rastafari bless you.
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