Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

October 21, 2014

Heartache and Genocide: Indian Boarding Schools in Photos



Heartache and Genocide: Indian Boarding Schools in Photos

Censored News live coverage of Boarding School Tribunal:
Day 3 Preliminary conclusions and testimony
More Testimony from Day 3: 
Day 2
Day 1
Peltier's statement
Livestream videos
www.earthcycles.net

By Censored News
Photos below (three) from Kumeyaay website, original from e-book Lakhota.com
http://www.kumeyaay.info/history/History_Indian_Boarding_Schools.pdf


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(Above) More photos on Kumeyaay website, original from e-book Lakhota.com
http://www.kumeyaay.info/history/History_Indian_Boarding_Schools.pdf
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(Below) Navajo and Apache children in prison at Fort Sumner, N.M.
Navajo and Apache Children in Prison of Fort Sumner, Bosque Redondo, NM

Fort Sumner by Louise Benally, Dine'
The following comments by Louise Benally of Big Mountain, comparing the Long Walk and imprisonment in Bosque Redondo to the war in Iraq, and responding to this photo, were censored by Indian Country Today.

 Navajos at Big Mountain resisting forced relocation view the 19th
Century prison camp of Bosque Redondo and the war in Iraq as a
continuum of U.S. government sponsored terror.
Louise Benally of Big Mountain remembered her great-grandfather and
other Navajos driven from their beloved homeland by the U.S. Army on
foot for hundreds of miles while witnessing the murder, rape and
starvation of their family and friends.

“I think these poor children had gone through so much, but, yet they
had the will to go on and live their lives. If it weren’t for that, we
wouldn’t be here today.
“It makes me feel very sad and I apply this to the situation in Iraq.
I wonder how the Native Americans in the combat zone feel about killing
innocent lives.”

Looking at the faces of the Navajo and Apache children in the Bosque
Redondo photo, Benally said, “I think the children in the picture look
concerned and maybe confused. It makes me think of what the children in
Iraq must be going through right now.

“The U.S. military first murders your people and destroys your way of
life while stealing your culture, then forces you to learn their evil
ways of lying and cheating,” Benally said.


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Carlisle: The Children Who Never Came Home
For the families
Long Walk 2 northern route photos by Brenda Norrell
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Forced assimilation and militarization for US government
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Indian children were forced into militarization, and conditioned to fight for the same US government that had murdered their ancestors.
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Haskell: Misery

Above: Haskell in Kansas, photo from: http://www.ancientways.org/otherprojects.asp
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(Above) Photos from online search

5 comments:

Saint Howard (a.k.a. Howard the Great) said...

I visited the Carlisle School graveyard several years ago. Very sad place. I think the greatest hypocrisy is the placing of crosses on the tombstones. I doubt that Jesus would have approved of what was done to the children at this school.

Anonymous said...

There is nothing that the American government or the American people can do that would repay what was done to the First Nation's children at these schools. An apology would be an ineffectual attempt to satisfy their feelings of guilt. It is very important that these facts be made public. The American people need to hear the hidden history.

This being said, it is important to remember that the American people not an held accountable for what their ancestors did or did not do. They can only be accountable for that which they do themselves in the present.

Anonymous said...

I was in one of these places in the State of Wisconsin,There they was no grave stones,most times no boxes,just bodies in ground and guess who had to dig holes

Anonymous said...

Such a shame! a big dark spot in US history! :-/

UNA INC said...

Dr.Lehman L. Brightman Speaks on The Mental Genocide of BIA Boarding Schools.