[News] Crazy Horse was a Sober Warrior

Anti-Imperialist News news at freedomarchives.org
Fri Sep 7 18:33:30 EDT 2012


Weekend Edition September 7-9, 2012

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/09/07/crazy-horse-was-a-sober-warrior/
31 Notes on the Alcohol Wars at Pine Ridge


  Crazy Horse was a Sober Warrior

by RUSS McSPADDEN

1. Autumn Two Bulls is the mother of Wakiyan, or Loud Brave Thunder, a 
young Oglala Lakota protester who was maced by police on August 26 
during a march against alcohol sales along the border of the Pine Ridge 
Indian Reservation. "My son believes in sobriety. One thing he told me 
was that Crazy Horse, his hero, was a sober warrior. Crazy horse didn't 
believe in alcohol and he knew what was coming because he was a 
spiritual man and he stood up and fought against what was coming." 
  Wakiyan is ten years old. Days after the protest his vision was still 
blurry from the mace.

2. Wakiyan takes part in traditional ceremonies, traveling as far away 
as Wyoming to offer respect to the sacred, to hang prayer flags in the 
presence of Mato Tipila, or bear lodge, an enormous intrusion of igneous 
rock that towers over the land like a blunted 1,200 foot buffalo horn. 
The sacred mountain in the Black Hills is also known as Devil's Tower in 
the language of the ones who made wretched war on the Lakota and 
colonized the region.

3. There are four liquor stores and only fourteen residents in the 
unincorporated town of White Clay. It exists purely to unload alcohol, 
and lots of it. On average, the retailers sell 12,500 cans of beer every 
day, mostly to the reservations 40,000 residents. White Clay is 250 feet 
from Pine Ridge where alcohol is forbidden.

/4. I've always only respected and prayed for the "zombies" of White 
Clay, because some of them are my uncles, my grammas, or my cousins, a 
new pain hard to see...When I used to live at home, I live in Omaha now, 
I would drive through White Clay everyday, early in the morning, with a 
cigarette and a dream, on my way to school, I drove through everyday, 
with a fleeting moment's honor, I would honk at them; a small moment of 
honor, a small song with one drum beat and one sound, a death song 
perhaps, I would honor them. -- /Elisha Yellow Thunder

5. There is a green State Highway sign near the hamlet of Wounded Knee, 
18 miles northeast of White Clay that lists four possible burial sites 
of Crazy Horse, the great Lakota warrior. It is believed that his family 
buried his bones and his heart in the earth beside the creek.

6. Wounded Knee Creek is cut by wind, its behavior a condition of the 
topography of wind. The surface is evaporated skywards by the sweeping 
aridity in the summer or frozen by the crystallized gusts of winter. 
  Its waters eventually meander northwest to feed the White River into 
the isolated grassland mesas and buttes of the Badlands. From there, the 
blood of Wounded Knee Creek eventually feeds the Missouri, empties into 
the Mississippi, mixes with silt, agricultural runoff, thousands of 
other tributaries, and dumps, some 1,400 miles south, into the Gulf of 
Mexico. The migration of the watersheds of the Lakota nations, which 
carry the debris of attempted genocide, of struggle and spirit, pass 
into the warm open ocean, feeding the intensity of hurricanes.

7. Crazy Horse malt liquor first appeared in 1992 in New York City. 
Attorney's representing the descendants of Crazy Horse successfully sued 
the brewing company responsible, which went out of business in 1999. 
Collectors still sell cases, from time to time, online.

/8. For over 100 years the women of the Oglala Lakota nation have been 
dealing with an attack on the mind body and spirit of their relatives. 
We have been silenced through chemical warfare waged by the corporations 
who are out to exploit and make a profit off of the suffering and misery 
of our people. The time has come to end this suffering by any means 
necessary./ -- Olowan Martinez, organizer of the Women's Peace March.

9. Numerous documented complaints have been lodged against the four 
liquor stores:  beer sales to Lakota minors; racist slurs from the store 
keepers; the trading of alcohol for sexual favors; the violation of open 
container laws at the store fronts; the continued harassment of the 
Lakota by poisonous profiteers.

10. In 1973 several hundred Oglala Sioux and hundreds of others occupied 
the hamlet of Wounded Knee with rifles and roadblocks. Under the banner 
of the American Indian Movement (AIM) protesters reclaimed sovereignty 
of the land--reclaimed the spirit of a warrior's revolt. They demanded 
the end of corrupt tribal government collusion with outside and moneyed 
interests, the return of the Black Hills, and the end of strip mining, 
which toxified Lakota waters, on their land. For 71days AIM and the 
Lakota held the town. U.S. Armed Forces, Marshals, the National Guard 
and the FBI surrounded the uprising, cutting electricity and food 
supplies to Wounded Knee. Buddy Lamont and Frank Clearwater, both 
members of AIM, were killed by machine gun fire. Two FBI agents fell in 
open gunfights. Twelve other members of the uprising simply disappeared. 
In the end law enforcement raided the camp and made over 1,200 arrests. 
AIM organizer, Leonard Peltier, received two life sentences. Over the 
next few years the reservation would see more than 60 unsolved murders 
of tribal members.

11. Every year, the Lakota and other First Nation peoples commemorate 
the '73 uprising. It's not uncommon to see U.S. flags displayed upside down.

12./ I was also taught that the American flag upside down is our right. 
That when our ancestors rode off with this flag at the Battle of the 
Greasy Grass /[aka Custer's Last Stand] /it became ours. -- /Olowan 
Martinez.

13. Along with 10 year old Wakiyan, veterans of the '73 uprising, 
protesters from AIM grassroots, Deep Green Resistance (DGR), Un-Occupy 
Albuquerque, Occupy Lincoln and Native Youth Movement (NYM) joined women 
from the Oglala Lakota nation for the Women's Peace March on White Clay. 
Members of DGR closed down Nebraska Highway 87 for six hours by linking 
arms in fortified pvc tubes, laying in the road. Elders and youth 
provided them with support--water, shade, drums. Some stood with 
ceremonial staffs between the protesters and the police. The action cut 
off sales at the liquor stores to the tune of five grand. This is the 
second such highway blockade this summer. Autumn Two Bulls publicly 
thanked the activists for showing solidarity with the Lakota people 
noting that active unity across cultural lines would bring results. One 
of the members of DGR noted that the group is honored to follow the 
leadership of the Lakota. According to a published DGR code of conduct, 
"Non-indigenous members of DGR remember that we are living on stolen 
land in the midst of an ongoing genocide. The task of the non-indigenous 
is to build solidarity with indigenous people in defending the land, 
preserving traditional cultures, and protecting sacred ceremonies from 
exploitation."

14. Police sprayed mace from their cars, disabling marchers, elders, 
children, anyone--a chemical drive by.

15. A few days later--ushered by gusty winds--wildfires moving north 
from Nebraska raced through the Pine Ridge Reservation, burning 25,000 
acres. The tribal government issued evacuation orders for several districts.

16. It's common for winds to topple buildings throughout the area.

17. In 1890, hundreds of famished Minneconjou Sioux were murdered by the 
U.S. Seventh Cavalry in the dead of winter at Wounded Knee, 18 miles 
from White Clay.  Old photos capture the scene of the genocide in the 
frozen snow. With the thaw, the blood made its way to the creek.

/18. There was a woman with an infant in her arms who was killed as she 
almost touched the flag of truce, and the women and children of course 
were strewn all along the circular village until they were dispatched. 
Right near the flag of truce a mother was shot down with her infant; the 
child not knowing that its mother was dead was still nursing, and that 
especially was a very sad sight. The women as they were fleeing with 
their babes were killed together, shot right through, and the women who 
were very heavy with child were also killed. All the Indians fled in 
these three directions, and after most all of them had been killed a cry 
was made that all those who were not killed or wounded should come forth 
and they would be safe. Little boys who were not wounded came out of 
their places of refuge, and as soon as they came in sight a number of 
soldiers surrounded them and butchered them there./ -- Testimony of 
American Horse to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1891.

19. Nearly twenty years before the massacre at Wounded Knee, Crazy Horse 
led a successful coalition war party against the 7^th Cavalry of the 
U.S. Army, which included 700 soldiers and one General George Custer at 
the battle of Little Bighorn in Montana.

20. Every year tribal members reenact their ancestors' victory against 
Custer in a grand celebration on horseback.

21. One year after the victory, as the story goes, Crazy Horse was 
fatally wounded in Nebraska, resisting imprisonment.

22. Crazy Horse malt liquor has a Facebook page in disturbing memoriam.

23. Though the Lakota struggle to rid their community of outside poisons 
has existed since the first European traders arrived in their land with 
small pox and liquor, the recent skirmishes were reignited in 1999. Two 
tribal members, Ron Hard Heart and Wally Black Elk Jr., were killed near 
White Clay, their deaths unsolved. Marches, protests, blockades and 
legislative hearings in Nebraska called into question the legality and 
morality of liquor sales in the region.

24. According to Re-Member, a non-profit working on the reservation, 
Pine Ridge boasts some rather painful statistics: alcoholism in up to 80 
percent of the community; 1 in 4 infants suffer the effects of fetal 
alcohol syndrome; the lowest life expectancy rate in the U.S., second 
lowest in the Western Hemisphere; high rates of cancer, diabetes, suicide.

25. Wakiyan: /Alcoholism ain't right. It kills a lot of our relatives./

26. The Oglala Sioux tribe filed a lawsuit in February, 2012 seeking 
$500 million in damages from the four establishments and the nation's 
biggest breweries.

27. The area around White Clay has a history rooted in illegal liquor 
sales. In 1882, at the behest of Oglala elders and the U.S. Indian agent 
in the territory, U.S. President Chester Arthur ordered that a buffer 
zone be put in place in Nebraska, south of the reservation, between 
illegal whisky peddlers and the Lakota. Known as the White Clay 
Extension, the fifty square mile area was later incorporated into the 
reservation then offered up into public domain, precipitating a land 
grab by whites. Liquor licenses followed shortly after--its original 
purpose turned upside-down.

28. The growing alliance in defense of Lakota sovereignty, uniting DGR, 
the occupy movement and indigenous resistance, both broadly, under the 
banner of AIM, and locally, with the descendants and veterans of the '73 
uprising, is promising to the resistance--terrifying to authority.

29. DGR is a movement built upon Derrick Jensen's critique of industrial 
civilization and his premises for a return to a healthy humanity and 
planet, spelled out his book /End Game/. In essence, Jensen has called 
for the deliberate toppling of industrialism and militarism, 
power-grids, dams, monoculture, patriarchy, and the dominant culture of 
contemporary city-states--for a return to the land and the land-based 
community. In his books Jensen calls for a new warrior ethos amongst 
environmentalists, for a serious resistance prepared to meet a serious 
and terrifying enemy, a resistance akin to the French underground during 
WWII, the Spanish anarchists in the time of Franco, or the Lakota Sioux 
in the time of Crazy Horse.

30. It was Custer's Last Stand, sure, but not the last stand of Manifest 
Destiny, which eventually had its way and still does.

31. Until it kills itself, or something else does.

*/Russ McSpadden/*/ is a part of the editorial collective of the Earth 
First! Journal <http://www.earthfirstjournal.org/> and Newswire 
<http://earthfirstnews.wordpress.com/>. He has worked on grassroots 
biodiversity, human and indigenous rights campaigns across the United 
States and has taken part in tree-sits, power plant blockades and late 
night political rants about the beauty of the stars and the detritus of 
civilization. He can be reached at russ at earthfirstjournal.org 
<mailto:russ at earthfirstjournal.org>/

-- 
Freedom Archives 522 Valencia Street San Francisco, CA 94110 415 
863.9977 www.freedomarchives.org
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