Sign Up |  Login

     
 
    My Blog |  Popular Posts |  Top 100 Blogs |  Recent Blogs |  Random Blogs |  Write a Blog |  Manage Categories |  New Members |  Comments  
   View Blog
 
 Independence Day
Report to Crazy Horse
--by William stafford

All the Sioux were defeated.  Our clan
got poor, but a few got richer.
They fought two wars.  I did not
take part.  No one remembers your vision
or even your real name.   Now
the children go to town and like
loud music.  I married a Christian.

Crazy Horse, it is not fair
to hide a new vision from you. 
In our schools we are learning
to take aim when we talk, and we have
found out our enemies.  They shift when
words do; they even change and hide
in every person.  A teacher here says
hurt or scorned people are places
where real enemies hide.  He says
we should not hurt or scorn anyone,
but help them.  And I will tell you
in a brave way, the way Crazy Horse
talked:  that teacher is right.

I will tell you a strange thing:
at the rodeo, close to the grandstand,
I saw a farm lady scared by a blown
piece of paper; and at that place
horses and policemen were no longer
frightening, but suffering faces were,
and the hunched-over backs of the old.

Crazy Horse, tell me if I am right:
these are the things we thought we were
doing something about.

In your life you saw many strange things,
and I will tell you another: now I salute
the white man’s flag. But when I salute
I hold my hand alertly on the heartbeat
and remember all of us and how we depend
on a steady pulse together. There are those
who salute because they fear other flags
or mean to use ours to chase them:
I must not allow my part of saluting
to mean this. All of our promises,
our generous sayings to each other, our
honorable intentions—those I affirm
when I salute. At these times it is like
shutting my eyes and joining a religious
colony at prayer in the gray dawn
in the deep aisles of a church.

Now I have told you about new times.
Yes, I know others will report
different things. They have been caught
by weak ways. I tell you straight
the way it is now, and it is our way,
the way we were trying to find.

The chokecherries along our valley
still bear a bright fruit. There is good
pottery clay north of here. I remember
our old places. When I pass the Musselshell
I run my hand along those old grooves in the rock.




I want my salute to mean more; rememberance, respect, the knowledge we ALL need each other.  I want to stand in the deep aisles of that church and sing about love, the verb.  I want to speak the truth, be strong, remember your name, Tȟašúŋke Witkó.  hokaheh
    Posted by lynbarnes on 2009-07-04 00:04:00 | Rating: | Views: 59
    Email This to a Friend            Print This Blog Post  

  Bookmark:
Permalink:  
   Blog Comments
  
Nicely said...

E
Posted by  Evetspordlaw  on 2009-07-04 05:23:34 
  
Thanks--and not just for the compliment....
Posted by  lynbarnes  on 2009-07-04 09:46:38 
  
I started this three times. I just want to say,that those peoples who deserve to be called brave, should be. Not all were braves, not all of the enemy were wrong, either way. I wish truth were taught, but the politics of the moment skews all that was real. Very impressive post Lyn.
Posted by  circe  on 2009-07-04 21:16:23 
  
Thanks. I always think of this poem on the fourth of July.

I have lots of ambivalence about my country. I am very aware of the dichotomy between the ideal (which is what generations of brave patriots have fought and died for) and what it really is. As long as we strive for the ideal--all of us everywhere--then we're moving in the right direction.
Posted by  lynbarnes  on 2009-07-04 21:23:33 
  
You're right. But I feel like I need a shower and confession after reading American history, or driving past an indian casino.
Posted by  circe  on 2009-07-04 23:58:39 
  
Amen.
Posted by  lynbarnes  on 2009-07-05 00:01:39 
  
Lyn, are you saying one puts right the past by remembering what was done wrong in the past and doing right in the present?
Posted by  stevehayes13  on 2009-07-05 08:41:06 
  
There is this thing of restitution, but how do you make right something that can't just be undone, or unsaid. I, as an individual, can only do so much to make restitution for things my government and my ancestors have done. I, as an individual, can only do better today than I did yesterday. I, as a mother, can only teach my children a better way. I can't change my government by myself, but I can certainly teach my children to be good people, good citizens, and to remember everyone counts, marginalized as they may be by popular thought .

You're right, though. Sometimes things just can't be put right. Then what?
Posted by  lynbarnes  on 2009-07-05 10:26:45 
Would you like to comment?

    (Maximum characters: 5000)
    You have characters left.
  Blog Information
 

lynbarnes
Idaho, United States

Latest Posts

 The Girl Who Longed...
 In a funk. Not funky.
 Incarceration
 Fall
 Sorry. Deleted.

lynbarnes's Links

 No links found

Blog Categories

 Abyss
 Dragon (He)
 Dragon (She)
 In Your Dreams
 Other's
 Personal
 Poetry
 Scribbles
 Short Stuff
 Thinks
 Top Tens
 Unspecified
 Weed
 Work

Blog Archive

 November 2009 (11)
 October 2009 (28)
 September 2009 (30)
 August 2009 (21)
 July 2009 (31)
 June 2009 (25)
 May 2009 (22)
 April 2009 (15)
 March 2009 (9)
 February 2009 (7)

Comment Archives

 November 2009 (53)
 October 2009 (308)
 September 2009 (354)
 August 2009 (275)
 July 2009 (283)
 June 2009 (245)
 May 2009 (127)
 April 2009 (11)
 March 2009 (2)
 February 2009 (1)

   Bookmarked Bloggers
Firewater
View Blogs
desinq
View Blogs
paperlily
View Blogs
circe
View Blogs
badlydr...
View Blogs
Perigo_...
View Blogs
Evetspo...
View Blogs
greunie
View Blogs
steveha...
View Blogs
dreadna...
View Blogs
Circleo...
View Blogs
EditorA...
View Blogs
   Bookmarked Posts
Walking...
For...
You...
Regurgi...
Proverb...
I'm...
Page load time: 0.6589732170105 ms