MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
The Wakan Circle[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome to the Wakan Circle  
  Management list & Msn Code of Conduct  
  TheWakanCircleGuidelines  
  TheWakanCircleBeginning-  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  TO WALK THE RED ROAD~  
  What is The Red Road  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Dedicated to Our Ancestors  
  In Loving Memory.... Mamthesonak....5..1..2008  
  ***********************************  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Happy Thanksgiving to All  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  MESSAGE BOARD  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Wakan CHAT ROOM #! 1  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  ELDERS QUESTIONS  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  MEMBERS BIOS  
  Cherokee ? Board  
  NAME in CHEROKEE  
  Indian News  
  DID YOU KNOW???  
  American Indian Radio  
  Reservation Help  
  AdoptAElder&Grandparent  
  Prayer & Healing  
  YourPersonalPrayerCircle  
  Prayer Ties  
  Wakan Journeys  
  Mourning Place  
  OurCreator OurStrength  
  Spirit of Red Man  
  Abuse Shelter  
  Recovery Room  
  MemberProfiles&ContactList  
  Warning Message>  
  WHY AMERICAN INDIAN??  
  TheCherokeeWayOfTheCircle  
  Culture& History  
  Medicine Wheel & Shield  
  Earth Wheel,  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Daily Motivation  
  Elder Meditation  
  Healing Stones  
  Inspirational  
  Words of Wisdom  
  Quotes  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  A Womans World  
  Women Warriors  
  Women Of Courage  
  American IndianWomenRights  
  NativeAmericanMilitaryWomen  
  Words&Remedys(women)  
  *****************************************  
  Herbs, Oils, Etc  
  Medicinal Herbs.  
  Natural Soaps  
  Plants & Culture  
  Wakan Medicines  
  TalkingStick  
  Sacred Animals  
  Animal Medicines Etc  
  Totems & meanings  
  All Totems  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Pow Wow Updates  
  Events Updates  
  POW WOW Guidelines  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Leonard Peltier  
  Genealogy  
  Dreamcatchers Information  
  Dreamcatchers  
  Your Dreams  
  Indian Music +++  
  Storytime  
  Childrens Corner  
  Childrens Board  
  Our Storytellers  
  More Storyteller  
  Crafty Corner  
  Picture of Members  
  Pictures  
  Our Poetry Page  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Annie's Poetry  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Heart Songs  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Annie's Country Kitchen  
  FAMILY RECIPES  
  Old&New Remedies  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Folklore  
  Legends - Tales  
  FirstPipe&WhiteBuffaloWoman  
  White Buffalo Legend  
  White BuffaloECT  
  The Sacred PIPE  
  Age of the Sacred Pipe".  
  Sweat Lodge  
  Vision Quests  
  Smudging ect.  
  SMUDGING  
  Our Elders  
  Trail Of Tears  
  TrailOfTears Park(Powwow)  
  TrailOfTearsHistory...today  
  Cherokee Nation...Trail Map  
  Samuel Cloud turned 9 years old on the Trail  
  TrailOfTearsTimeline----&SpecialPoem  
  Cherokee Rose +  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Cherokee History  
  Cherokee..Lessons on Life  
  SouthernCherokee  
  Cherokee Sayings  
  The Cherokee Belief System  
  Cherokee Traditions  
  Cherokee Tribes  
  Our Cherokee Language  
  Cherokee Moons ect  
  Cherokee Seasons  
  Seven Clans of Cherokee Society  
  Cherokee history  
  Cherokee Words  
  Cherokee Nation  
  Building Body and Mind  
  NativeSymbolsOrigin&Meaning  
  Goal of Indian Spirituality  
  American IndianCodeOfEthics  
  Indian Beliefs  
  Maps of our Nations  
  Indian Prayers  
  AmericanIndianCommadments  
  American IndianLegends  
  Battle inHistory  
  American Indian Philosophy  
  Indian Poetry  
  Indian Authors  
  American Indians Poems  
  Wisdom  
  Great Quotes  
  American Indian Quotes  
  American Indian Quotes (more)  
  American Indian Spirituality #1  
  American Indian Spirituality# 2  
  Many Legends  
  Indian Heritage  
  Indian Genealogy  
  American Indian Religion  
  More Religion  
  Indian Beliefs  
  Indian Languages  
  Navajo Words  
  Blackfoot Words  
  Lakotah Words..  
  Ojibwe Words  
  Mohawk Words  
  Cherokee Lessons  
  Strength Of Our Ancestors  
  Our Military  
  Code Talkers  
  Todays History  
  Our Founding Fathers  
  The Six Nations:  
  History of Native Americans  
  In Honor of my People!!!!!  
  In Remembrance of The People  
  OUR LAND WAS TAKE----------------(message from our people)  
  Sign Language  
  Ceremonies!!!  
  SACRED HOOP  
  The DRUM  
  Cherokees�?Treasure  
  Power of the Flute  
  Ceremonial Dance  
  Spiritual Warrior  
  Indian Lands  
  Indian Spirituality.message  
  Spiritual Animals  
  Indian Myths ect  
  Indian Tribes !  
  Choctaw  
  Pawnee  
  Black Indians  
  Indian Tribes  
  Indian Quotes  
  Chiefs ect  
  Native Men  
  Todays Indians  
  Are You Indian????  
  Tribal Colors  
  Geronimo  
  Seven Teachings  
  Sacred Prayers ect  
  Our Prayer Carriers  
  The Philosophies  
  Moons ect.  
  Prophecies  
  Native American Code Of Ethics  
  Mother Earths Lament  
  Copyright Corner © Disclaimer...Copyright info  
  ALL Links Pages  
  Other Websites Links ect  
  Banner Exchange  
  Members Birthdays  
  World Clock & More  
  PSP Makers groups Links  
  PRAYERS  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Women Warriors : Mary Brave Bird
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 1 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameAnnie-LL  (Original Message)Sent: 7/16/2006 4:18 AM

Mary Brave Bird


            Mary Brave Bird dictated her life story in the two books Lakota Woman and Ohitika Woman to Richard Erdoes, a photographer and illustrator who himself became involved in political activism through having taped and transcribed her story.  In these two books, written 15 years apart, Brave Bird told how the American Indian Movement (AIM) gave meaning to her life.  Lakota Woman, written under the name Mary Crow Dog, portrays her life from her birth to 1977, and Ohitika Woman written under her current name of Mary Brave Bird, covers events up to 1992 and adds new details to the earlier history.
            Mary Brave Bird’s mother, Emily Brave Bird, had been raised in a tent in the village of He-Dog on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota, then taken to St. Francis Mission boarding school where she was converted to Catholicism.  While she studied nursing in Pierre, South Dakota, her four children were raised by their grandparents.  Robert Brave Bird trapped in the winter and farmed in the summer.  He was a descendant of the legendary warrior Pakeska Maza (“Iron Shell�?, who became chief of the Wablenicha (“Orphan Band�? of the Brulé or Sicanju tribe of the Lakota Sioux.
            Growing up on the Rosebud Reservation, Brave Bird faced poverty, racism, and brutality from an early age.  Although she descended from a distinguished family, she was not taught a great deal about her heritage.  Her mother would not teach her her native language because, she said, “speaking Indian would only hold you back, turn you the wrong way.�?nbsp; She was sent to St. Francis Mission boarding school at the age of five, where she reported that nuns beat Indian students who practiced native customs or spoke their native languages.  She later ran away from the school and began her teenage life drinking heavily and getting into fights.
            While still a teenager, Brave Bird became involved in the protest activities of AIM, where she began to find new spirit and meaning in being Indian.  In 1972, at the age of 16, she participated in the Trail of Broken Treaties march on Washington, D.C., after which protesters occupied the Bureau of Indian Affairs building.  At that time, Brave Bird met Leonard Crow Dog, a Sioux medicine man who was active in AIM and taught her much about Indian traditions.  They were married the following year.
            In February 1973 in Custer, South Dakota, Sarah Bad Heart Bull protested the release of the murderer of her son, Wesley Bad Heart Bull, and requested AIM’s help at the Custer courthouse.  When AIM protesters in Custer learned that the police had used violence on Bad Heart Bull’s mother, they rioted.  The riot was followed by a meeting attended by medicine men Frank Fools Crow, Wallace Black Elk, Henry Crow Dog, and Pete Catches, all there to consider how to protest this incident.  At the time the Pine Ridge Reservation was calling for AIM to help protest the corrupt rule of Richard Wilson, the elected chairman of the reservation.  Two elders suggested that they take a stand at Wounded Knee, where the U.S. cavalry had massacred hundreds of Sioux in 1890.
            On February 27, under AIM leadership, a group of Native Americans, Brave Bird and Crow Dog among them, did take a stand at Wounded Knee.  They dug trenches, put up cinderblock walls, and became warriors.  The siege lasted 71 days.  On March 12, surrounded by armored cars spewing bursts of gunfire, a declaration was drafted for the independent Oglala Nation proclaiming its sovereignty.  Two Native Americans were killed, and many were wounded.  Leonard Crow Dog treated the injured survivors with medicinal herbs; he led sunrise prayers and brought back the Ghost Dance for which his ancestors had been slaughtered in 1890.  For four days, and for the first time in 80 years, on sacred ground, they circled a cedar tree, dancing in the snow.
            On April 11 Mary Brave Bird’s baby was born.  She named him after Pedro Bissonette, a man who was killed by the tribal police for having founded the Oglala Sioux Civil Rights Organization (OSCRO).  The terrorist reprisals by Wilson’s “goons�?(Guardians of the Oglala Nation) resulted in the deaths of 250 people, many of them children, on the reservation.  Among those murdered was Delphine, Leonard Crow Dog’s sister, who was beaten to death.
            The American Indian Movement (AIM) played a crucial role in Brave Bird’s new life.  Without the organization, she lived in poverty and despair, coping with alcoholism, domestic violence, joblessness, and hopelessness.  Within the movement, she felt a sense of purpose.  The alliance that AIM members made with the traditionalists restored for them their own ancient ways.  Meanwhile, the tribal elders were given back their traditional roles as communicators of their culture.  Brave Bird, sober, working for the cause, was heroic.  She learned from her work in the movement that pan-tribal (involving Native people from all tribal lines) unity can give spiritual power to even those who are treated as the dregs of society.  She described the movement’s ability to strengthen Native communities in her book Lakota Woman, which became a national best-seller, won a movie contract, and earned the American Book Award for best nonfiction.
            Both Lakota Woman and Ohitika Woman retell the ancient myths and explain the meanings of many Native American ceremonies.  As Brave Bird wrote, “AIM made medicine men radical activists, and made radical activists into sundancers and vision seekers�?  It restored women’s voices and brought them into the tribal councils.�?nbsp; But while Lakota Woman is a breathless first-hand account of AIM’s early demonstrations from the perspective of a teenager who had been involved in heady events, Ohitika Woman presents them from the viewpoint of a mature woman, adding needed historical background.
            Brave Bird’s life did not necessarily become simpler with her new outlook, however.  Even the large gap between their ages—Mary was 17 and Leonard was 31 when they married in 1973—was less of a problem than their cultural differences.  Leonard had to teach Mary the ceremonies, the use of healing plants, and reconcile her to the role of a medicine man’s wife.  This involved feeding multitudes of uninvited guests at the feasts following every service.  It also meant never getting enough rest; as tribal counselor, Leonard Crow Dog was always on call, traveling constantly, and taking his family along when he was summoned.  Since he did not charge for healing, and gave everything away, there was never enough money to feed the family.  Brave Bird raised seven children.  In addition to Richard, Ina, and Bernadette from Leonard’s first marriage, she had four more with him:  Pedro, Anwah, June Bug, and Jennifer Louise.
            On September 5, 1975, with helicopters whirring overhead, 180 agents broke into Crow Dog’s home and took him away in handcuffs.  After three trials, he was sentenced to 23 years in prison for his political activities.  Brave Bird addressed rallies to raise funds, but it took contributions of $200,000 from friends, Amnesty International, and the World Council of Churches to get him out of prison.  Famed activist attorney William Kunstler argued on his behalf.  At Lewisburg Penitentiary Crow Dog’s cell was so small that he could not stand upright in it, while authorities at Leavenworth tried to disorient him by keeping a neon light glaring 24 hours a day.  Filmmakers Mike Cuesta and David Baxter made a documentary about his imprisonment, and as a result a number of celebrities rallied to his support.  When he returned to Rosebud, the entire tribe welcomed him with honoring songs.
            After many separations and reconciliations Brave Bird and Crow Dog divorced.  Brave Bird married Rudi Olguin, a descendant of Zapotecs, Mexican Indians, on August 24, 1991, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  Together they had a daughter, Summer Rose.
            In her books Brave Bird tells what it means to be a Sioux woman—caught between the forces of tradition and the feminist movement, often subject to sexual harassment and degradation.  In Ohitika Woman, she speaks about her recurring problems with alcohol abuse, and the healing she has found in the Native American Church.  Still, like many other feminists who are also Native Americans, she tends to place the economic, political, and legal struggles of Indian peoples before the pursuit of women’s rights.
Native North American Biography edited by Sharon Malinowski and Simon



First  Previous  No Replies  Next  Last