Americas native prisoners of war Aaron Huey

[Music]

[Music]

I’m here today to show my photographs of

the Lakota how many of you may have

heard of the Lakota or at least the

larger group of tribes called the Sioux

the Lakota are one of many tribes were

moved off their land to prisoner of war

camps now called reservations the Pine

Ridge Reservation the subject of today’s

slideshow is located about 75 miles

southeast of the Black Hills in South

Dakota it is sometimes referred to as

prisoner of war camp number 334 and is

where the Lakota now live now if any of

you have ever heard of aim the American

Indian Movement or of Russell Means or

Leonard Peltier or the standoff at

Oglala then you know that Pine Ridge is

ground zero for Native issues in the

u.s. so I’ve been asked to talk a little

bit today about my relationship with the

Lakota and that’s a very difficult one

for me because if you haven’t noticed

from my skin color I’m white and that is

a huge barrier on a native Reservation

you’ll see a lot of people in my

photographs today and I become very

close with them and they’ve welcomed me

like family they’ve called me brother

and uncle and invited me again and again

over five years but on Pine Ridge I will

always be what is called washi Jew and

while she Jue is a Lakota word that

means non-indian but another version of

this word means the one who takes the

best meat for himself and that’s what I

want to focus on the one who takes the

best part of the meat

it means greedy so take a look around

this auditorium today we are at a

private school in the American West

sitting in red velvet chairs with money

in our pockets and if we look at our

lives we have indeed taken the best part

of the meat

so let’s look today at a set of

photographs of a people who lost so that

we could gain and know that when you see

these people’s faces that these are not

just images the Lakota they stand for

all indigenous people

on this piece of paper is the history

the way I learned it from my Lakota

friends and family the following is a

timeline of treaties made treaties

broken and massacres disguised as

battles

I’ll begin in 1824 what is known as the

Bureau of Indian Affairs was created

within the War Department setting an

early tone of aggression in our dealings

with the Native Americans 1851 the first

Treaty of Fort Laramie was made clearly

marking the boundaries of the Lakota

nation according to the treaty those

lands are a sovereign nation if the

boundaries of this treaty had held and

there is a legal basis that they should

then this is what the US would look like

today ten years later the Homestead Act

signed by President Lincoln unleashed a

flood of white settlers into native

lands 1863

an uprising of Santee Sioux in Minnesota

ends with the hanging of 38 Sioux men

the largest mass execution in US history

the execution was ordered by President

Lincoln only two days after he signed

the Emancipation Proclamation 1866 the

beginning of the transcontinental

railroad a new era we appropriated land

for trails and trains to shortcut

through the heart of the Lakota Nation

the treaties were out the window in

response three tribes led by the Lakota

chief Red Cloud attacked and defeated

the US Army many times over I want to

repeat that part the Lakota defeat the

US Army 1868 the second Fort Laramie

Treaty clearly guarantee is the

sovereignty of the Great Sioux Nation

and the lakotas ownership of the sacred

Black Hills the government also promises

land and hunting rights in the

surrounding states we promised that the

Powder River country will henceforth be

closed to all whites the treaty seemed

to be a complete victory for Red Cloud

in the Sioux in fact this is the only

war in American history in which the

government negotiated a peace by

conceding everything demanded by the

enemy 1869 the Transcontinental Railroad

was completed

began carrying among other things large

numbers of hunters began the wholesale

killing of Buffalo eliminating a source

of food clothing and shelter for the

Sioux 1871 the Indian appropriation Act

makes all Indians Ward’s of the federal

government in addition the military

issued orders forbidding Western Indians

from leaving reservations all Western

Indians at that point in time were now

prisoners of war also in 1871 we ended

the time of treaty making problem with

treaties is that they allow tribes to

exist as sovereign nations and we can’t

have that we had plans 1874 General

George Custer announced the discovery of

gold in Lakota territory specifically

the Black Hills the news of gold creates

a massive influx of white settlers into

locota nation Custer recommends that

Congress find a way to end the treaties

with the Lakota as soon as possible

1875 the Lakota war begins over the

violation of the Fort Laramie Treaty

1876 on July 26th on its way to attack a

Lakota village Custer’s seventh Cavalry

was crushed the Battle of the Little

Bighorn 1877 the great Lakota warrior in

chief named Crazy Horse surrendered at

Fort Robinson he was later killed while

in custody

1877 is also the year we found a way to

get around the Fort Laramie treaties a

new agreement was presented to Sioux

chiefs and their leading men under

campaign known as seller starve signed

the paper or no food for your tribe only

10% of the adult male population signed

the Fort Laramie Treaty called for at

least three-quarters of the tribe to

sign away land that clause was obviously

ignored 1887 the Dawes Act communal

ownership of reservation lands ends

reservations are cut up into 160 acre

sections and distributed to individual

Indians with a surplus disposed of

tribes lost millions of acres the

American dream of individual land

ownership turned out to be a very clever

way to divide the reservation until

nothing was left the move destroyed the

reservations

making it easier to further subdivide

and to sell with every passing

generation most of the surplus land and

many of the plots within reservation

boundaries are now in the hands of white

Ranchers once again the fat of the land

goes to wash you to 1890 a date I

believe to be the most important in this

slideshow this is the year of the

Wounded Knee Massacre on December 29th

US troops surrounded a Sioux encampment

at Wounded Knee Creek and massacred

chief Bigfoot and 300 prisoners of war

using a new rapid-fire weapon the fired

exploding shells called a Hotchkiss gun

for this so-called battle twenty

congressional medals of Honor for valor

were given to the seventh Cavalry to

this day this is the most medals of

Honor ever awarded for a single battle

more medals of Honor were given for the

indiscriminate slaughter of women and

children than for any battle in World

War One World War two Korea Vietnam Iraq

or Afghanistan the Wounded Knee Massacre

is considered the end of the Indian Wars

whenever I visit the site of the mass

grave at Wounded Knee I see it not just

as a grave Lakota or for the Sioux but

as a grave for all indigenous peoples

the holy man Black Elk said I did not

know then how much was ended when I

looked back now from this high hill of

my old age I can still see the butchered

women and children lying heaped and

scattered all along the crooked gulch as

plain as when I saw them with I is still

young and I can see that something else

died there in the bloody mud and was

buried in the blizzard a people’s dream

died there and it was a beautiful dream

with this event a new era in Native

American history began everything can be

measured before Wounded Knee

and after because it was in this moment

with the fingers on the triggers of the

Hotchkiss guns that the US government

openly declared its position on native

rights they were tired of treaties they

were tired of sacred Hills they were

tired of ghost dances they were tired of

all the inconveniences of the Sioux so

they brought out their cannons you want

to be an idiot now they said finger on

the trigger

1900 the US Indian population reaches

low point less than 250,000 compared to

an estimated 8 million in 1492

fast-forward 1980 the longest-running

court case in US history the Sioux

Nation versus the United States was

ruled upon by the US Supreme Court the

Court determined that when the Subaru

settled on two reservations and 7

million acres of their land were opened

up to prospectors and homesteaders the

terms of the second Fort Laramie Treaty

had been violated the court stated that

the Black Hills were illegally taken and

at the initial offering price plus

interest should be paid to the Sioux

Nation as payment for the Black Hills

the court awarded only a hundred and six

million dollars to the Sioux Nation the

Sioux refused the money with the

rallying cry the Black Hills are not for

sale 2010 statistics about native

population today more than a century

after the massacre at Wounded Knee

revealed the legacy of colonization

forced migration and treaty violations

unemployment on the Pine Ridge Indian

Reservation fluctuates between 85 and 90

percent the housing office is unable to

build new structures and existing

structures are falling apart

many are homeless and those with homes

are packed into rotting buildings with

up to five families 39 percent of homes

on Pine Ridge have no electricity at

least 60% of the homes on the

reservation are infested with black mold

more than 90% of the population lives

below the federal poverty line the

tuberculosis rate on Pine Ridge is

approximately eight times higher than

the u.s. national average the infant

mortality rate is the highest on this

continent and is about three times

higher than the u.s. national average

cervical cancer is five times higher

than the u.s. national average the

school dropout rate is up to 70% teacher

turnover is 8 times higher than the u.s.

national average frequently Graham

parents are raising their grandchildren

because parents due to alcoholism

domestic violence in general apathy

cannot raise them 50% of the population

over the age of 40 suffers from diabetes

the life expectancy for men is between

46 and 48 years old roughly the same as

Afghanistan and Somalia the last chapter

in any successful genocide is the one in

which the oppressor can remove their

hands and say my god what are these

people doing to themselves they’re

killing each other they’re killing

themselves while we watch them die this

is how we came to own these united

states this is the legacy of manifest

destiny prisoners are still born into

prisoner of war camps long after the

guards are gone these are the bones left

after the best meat has been taken a

long time ago a series of events was set

in motion by a people who look like me

by washi Jew eager to take the land and

the water and the gold in the hills

those events led to a domino effect that

has yet to end as removed as we the

dominant society may feel from a

massacre in 1890 or a series of broken

treaties 150 years ago I still have to

ask you the question how should you feel

about the statistics of today what is

the connection between these images of

suffering and the history that I just

read to you and how much of this history

do you need to own even is any of this

your responsibility today I have been

told that there must be something we can

do there must be some call to action

because for so long I’ve been standing

on the sidelines content to be a witness

just taking photographs because the

solution seems so far in the past

I needed nothing short of a time machine

to access them the suffering of

indigenous peoples is not a simple issue

to fix it’s not something everyone can

get behind the way they get behind

helping Haiti or ending AIDS

we’re fighting a famine the fix as it’s

called may be much more difficult for

the dominant society than say a $50

check or a church trip to paint some

graffiti covered houses or a suburban

family donating a box of clothes they

don’t even want anymore

so where does that leave us shrugging

our shoulders in the dark the United

States continues on a daily basis to

violate the terms of the 1851 and 1868

Fort Laramie treaties with the Lakota

the call to action I offer today my Ted

wish is this honor the treaties give

back the Black Hills it’s not your

business what they do with them

[Applause]

[Music]

[音乐]

[音乐]

我今天来这里是为了展示我

的拉科塔人照片,你们当中有多少人可能

听说过拉科塔人,或者至少是

被称为苏族的更大的部落群体,

拉科塔人是许多被

搬离他们的部落之一 战俘

营的土地,现在称为保留地 Pine

Ridge Reservation 今天幻灯片的主题

位于南达科他州布莱克山东南约 75 英里处,

有时被称为

334 号战俘营,

是拉科塔人现在居住的地方 现在,如果

你们中的任何人听说过瞄准美洲

印第安人运动或罗素·米恩斯或

伦纳德·佩尔蒂埃或奥格拉拉的对峙,

那么你知道松岭

在美国本土问题上是零基础

所以我今天被要求

谈谈我与

拉科塔人的关系,这

对我来说非常困难,因为如果你没有

从我的肤色中注意到我是白人,这

对当地人来说是一个巨大的障碍 预订

你今天会在我的照片中看到很多人,我

和他们变得非常亲密,他们

像家人一样欢迎我,他们称我为兄弟

和叔叔,五年来一次又一次地邀请我,

但在 Pine Ridge 我 将

永远是所谓的washi犹太人,

虽然she Jue是一个Lakota词,

意思是非印度人,但

这个词的另一个版本表示

为自己吃最好的肉的人,这就是我

想关注的人

最好的部分

意味着贪婪所以

今天环顾这个礼堂我们

在美国西部的一所私立学校

坐在红色天鹅绒椅子上

,口袋里有钱,如果我们看看我们的

生活,我们确实占据了最好的部分

肉的

所以让我们看看今天 在一组

失去的人的照片上,这样

我们就可以获得并知道,当你看到

这些人的脸时,这些

不仅仅是图像,他们在这张纸上代表

所有土著人民的拉科塔人

就是我学到的历史 它来自我的拉科塔

朋友和家人 以下是

条约的时间表 条约

被破坏和大屠杀伪装成

战斗

我将在 1824 年开始 所谓

的印第安事务局是

在战争部内建立的

,为侵略奠定了早期基调 我们

与美洲原住民的交往 1851 年,第一个

拉勒米堡条约清楚地

标明了拉科塔民族的边界,

根据该条约,

如果

该条约的边界已经成立并且

有法律依据,这些土地就是主权国家

那么这就是

十年后美国今天的样子

林肯总统签署的《宅基地法案》使

大量白人定居者涌入

本土 1

863 明尼苏达州桑蒂苏人起义

以绞死 38 名苏族男子而告终 这

是美国历史上最大规模的大规模处决

林肯总统在

签署《解放宣言》两天后下令处决 1866

年横贯大陆

铁路的开始 我们的新时代

为小径和火车划拨土地,

通过拉科塔民族的心脏走捷径

条约在窗外作为

回应 由拉科塔酋长红云领导的三个部落

多次袭击并击败美国军队 我想

重复拉科塔战败的那部分

美国陆军 1868 年第二次拉勒米堡

条约明确保证

了大苏族国家的主权

和神圣黑山的拉科塔人所有权

政府还承诺

在周边各州拥有土地和狩猎权

我们承诺

从此粉河国家将

对所有白人来说,这项条约似乎

是红云在苏族的彻底胜利,事实上 这

是美国历史上唯一一场

政府

通过承认敌人所要求的一切来谈判和平的

战争 1869 年,横贯大陆的铁路

建成,

开始运载其他物品,

大量猎人开始大规模

屠杀布法罗,消除

了食品服装的来源 和庇护所

1871 年印第安人拨款法案

使所有印第安人成为联邦政府的病房

,此外,军方

发布命令禁止西

印第安人留下保留地

,当时所有西印第安人现在

也是战俘,同样在 1871 年我们结束

了时间 条约制定的问题

在于它们允许部落

作为主权国家存在,我们不能

拥有我们的计划 1874 年

乔治卡斯特将军宣布

在拉科塔地区特别

是布莱克山发现黄金 黄金的消息

造成大量涌入 白人定居者进入

locota 国家卡斯特建议

国会找到 尽快结束与拉科塔人的条约的方法

1875 年拉科塔战争因

违反拉勒米堡条约而

于 7 月 26 日在其前往

拉科塔村的途中开始 1877 年卡斯特的第七骑兵团

被击溃

伟大的拉科塔勇士

总司令疯马在

罗宾逊堡投降,他后来

在拘留期间被杀

1877 年也是我们找到

绕过拉勒米堡条约的方法的一年

向苏族酋长及其竞选领袖提出了一项新协议

被称为卖方 饿死

签署文件或没有为您的部落提供食物 只有

10% 的成年男性人口签署

了拉勒米堡条约 要求

至少四分之三的部落

签署放弃土地 该条款显然

被忽视 1887 年道斯法案公共

保留地的所有权

保留地被分割成 160 英亩的

部分并分配给个别

印第安人,剩余的被处置的

部落损失了百万 s 英亩

个人土地所有权的美国梦

被证明是一种非常聪明的

方式来划分保留地,直到

一无所有 此举摧毁了

保留地

,使其更容易进一步细分

并与每一代人一起出售

大部分剩余土地和

保留区边界内的许多地块

现在再次掌握在白人

牧场主手中 土地的

肥力将你冲刷到 1890 年,我

认为

这是幻灯片中最重要的日期 这是

伤膝大屠杀的一年 12 月 29 日,

美国军队包围了受伤膝盖溪的苏族人营地

,并使用一种新的速射武器屠杀了

大脚酋长和 300 名战俘,

在这场所谓的战斗中,发射了称为 Hotchkiss 枪的爆炸炮弹 20

枚国会英勇勋章

被授予 迄今为止,授予第七骑兵团

荣誉勋章是有史以来单次战斗获得的最多荣誉勋章

对妇女和儿童的不分青红皂白的屠杀

比第一次世界大战中的任何一场

战争 第二次世界大战 韩国 越南 伊拉克

或阿富汗 受伤的膝盖大屠杀

被认为是印度战争的结束

每当我参观受伤膝盖的万人坑遗址时,

我认为没有

就像拉科塔人或苏族人

的坟墓一样,但作为所有土著人民的坟墓,

圣人黑麋鹿说我当时不

知道结束了多少当我

现在从我晚年的这座高山回头看时,

我仍然可以看到 被屠杀的

妇孺

乱七八糟地躺在弯曲的峡谷里,

一如我看到他们时的样子我还

年轻,我可以看到还有什么东西

死在了血腥的泥土里,

被埋在了暴风雪中,一个人的梦想

死在那里, 这次事件是一个美丽的梦想

,美洲

原住民历史上的一个新时代开始了,

在受伤的膝盖之前

和之后,一切都可以测量,因为就在这一刻

,手指放在了 Hotch 的触发器上

亲吻枪 美国政府

公开宣布其对土著

权利的立场 他们厌倦了条约

他们厌倦了圣山 他们

厌倦了鬼舞 他们厌倦

了苏人的所有不便 所以

他们拿出了你

想成为的大炮 现在他们说是个白痴

1900 年美国印第安人口达到

低于 250,000 的最低点

,而 1492 年估计为 800 万

快进 1980 美国历史上运行时间最长的

法庭案件 苏

族与美国被

裁定 美国

最高法院裁定,当斯巴鲁

在两处保留地定居,并将其 700

万英亩的土地

向探矿者和自耕农者开放时,

违反了第二个拉勒米堡条约的条款,

法院

称黑山是 非法获取并

以初始发行价格加上

利息支付给苏族

国家作为对布莱克山

的支付法院裁决 仅

向苏族国家捐赠了 1.6 亿美元

苏族人以战斗口号拒绝了这笔钱

黑山不

出售 2010 年关于今天土著人口的统计数据,

在受伤的膝盖大屠杀

揭示了殖民化的遗产之后一个多世纪

移民和违反条约

Pine Ridge Indian

Reservation 的失业率在 85% 和 90% 之间波动

住房办公室无法

建造新结构,现有

结构正在分崩离析

许多人无家可归,有房屋的人

被挤进腐烂的建筑物中,

最多有五个家庭 39

Pine Ridge 百分之百的家庭没有电 保留区中

至少 60% 的家庭

感染了黑霉菌

超过 90% 的人口生活

在联邦贫困线以下

Pine Ridge 的结核病发病率大约是

该地区的八倍 我们 全国平均婴儿

死亡率是该大陆最高的

,大约

是美国的三倍。 全国平均

宫颈癌发病率是

美国的五倍 全国平均

辍学率高达70% 教师

流失率是美国的8倍

全国平均水平 格雷厄姆

父母经常抚养孙子,

因为父母因酗酒

家庭暴力 普遍冷漠

无法抚养他们 40 岁以上的人口中有 50%

患有糖尿病

男性的预期寿命在

46 至 48 岁之间 大致相同 就像

阿富汗和索马里一样

,任何成功的种族灭绝的最后一章

都是压迫者可以

把手移开并说我的上帝这些

人对自己做了什么他们在

互相残杀他们正在杀死

自己而我们看着他们死去

我们是如何拥有这些

美国的 这是天命的遗产

囚犯离开后很久仍然出生在

战俘营

这些是很久以前吃过

最好的肉后留下的骨头

一系列 事件

是由一个看起来像我

的人发起的,由瓦西犹太人急于夺取土地

、水和山上的黄金,

这些事件导致了广告

尚未结束的 omino 效应就像我们

统治社会可能从

1890 年的大屠杀或 150 年前的一系列违反

条约中感受到的那样消除我仍然要

问你一个问题,你应该如何

看待今天的统计数据

这些

痛苦的图像与我刚刚

读给你的历史

之间的联系以及你需要拥有多少这段历史甚至是

你今天的责任我被

告知必须有一些我们可以

做的事情必须有一些 呼吁采取行动,

因为这么长时间以来,我一直

站在场边,满足于成为证人,

只是拍照,因为

解决方案似乎已经过去很久

解决一个简单的问题 不是每个人都

可以支持他们支持

海地或结束艾滋病的方式

我们正在与饥荒作斗争 所谓的修复

对于统治者来说可能要困难得多

社会比说一张 50 美元的

支票或一次教堂之旅来粉刷一些

涂鸦覆盖的房子,或者一个郊区

家庭捐赠一盒他们

甚至不再想要的衣服,

那么这让

我们在黑暗中耸耸肩美国在哪里

继续 每天

违反 1851 年和 1868 年

拉勒米堡与拉科塔条约的条款

我今天提出的行动号召 我的特德

希望是这份荣誉 条约

归还布莱克山 与他们做什么不是你的

[掌声]

[ 音乐]