Resistance at Wounded Knee
On the
basis of estimates of half a billion dollars in
uranium revenue, the U.S. was determined to
eliminate AIM and traditional opposition. But the
strength of resistance at Wounded Knee forced the
Interior Department to retreat from some of its
plans.
In 1973
traditional elders with the Oglala Sioux Civil
Rights Organization (OSCRO) called AIM to Pine Ridge
to protect the people from the GOONs. Denied access
to the BIA building at Pine Ridge by federal
marshals, AIM held a meeting at Calico with 600
supporters where 1,500 grievances against the BIA
and Wilson were taken in a two-day meeting. Then
traditional elders Ellen Moves Camp and Gladys
Bissonnette stood and challenged the men to take
action.
AIM warrior
Dennis Banks said of that meeting: “The decision to
take Wounded Knee came when Ellen Moves Camp pointed
at us and said, ‘What are you men going to do about
it?’ If the women hadn’t done that we’d still be
meeting at Calico.”
Clyde
Bellecourt recalled Bissonnette asking AIM, “Haven’t
you heard enough? Go back to Minneapolis, Milwaukee,
Los Angeles or Portland. We are going to stand here
and be warriors.” He said that he “was stunned by
that confrontation with an elderly woman, wrinkles
all over her face.”
Wounded
Knee was chosen for the takeover protest as it was
still held by the Lakota community. The village is
the site of the 1890 historic massacre of Big Foot’s
band of 300 Lakota Sioux women, men and children as
they were peacefully moving to the Pine Ridge
Reservation to avoid starvation. Instead, they were
viciously murdered by the U.S. Army Seventh Cavalry
in the snow. The world had heard of Wounded Knee
through Dee Brown’s book, “Bury My Heart at Wounded
Knee.”
Some 200
Native people went to Wounded Knee on Feb. 27, 1973,
to hold an early morning press conference. The
government attacked. The press conference was never
held. And the big business media did not report the
total government deployment of 17 armored personnel
carriers, 130,000 rounds of M-16 ammunition, 41,000
rounds of M-40 high explosives for grenade
launchers, helicopters and other aircraft. An army
assault unit in Colorado was put on 24-hour alert.
The
standoff held the attention of the world. Support
committees formed to help educate non-Native people
about the conditions of the Indigenous on the
reservations, and the significance of Native
American Indian culture, language and the land in
the fight against genocide.
During the
71-day struggle against the U.S. military assault of
the National Guard and armed FBI agents, Moves Camp
served as negotiator for the protesters with the
Justice Department. As Banks recalls: “Once the
strength was reawakened with the Oglalas, they
became the principal negotiators—especially the
women. Because it was their future. From there, AIM
took a backseat. The further we stepped back, the
further the Oglalas stepped forward.”
Moves Camp
was from Wanblee and had lost family members in the
1898 massacre. During the military assault in 1973,
her nephew Buddy Lamont was one of two Indians
killed. On the occasion of the 1998 commemoration of
the struggle, Ellen Moves Camp said it’s “just a
matter of time before another Wounded Knee and ... a
violent confrontation with the U.S. government.”
On the loss
of Ellen Moves Camp, Native political prisoner
Leonard Peltier said: “Those of us who really knew
her will dearly miss her as she was a big
inspiration to all of us. She loved and fought for
her People and the Nation without ever once that I
know of complaining or asking for something for her
personal use.”
Ellen Moves
Camp stands as an inspiration to Indigenous people
in struggle everywhere.
Sources
include articles by Ian Record, Lakota Student
Alliance; Jon Lurie’s article on the 25th
anniversary of Wounded Knee for the Pulse of the
Twin Cities; and the Sioux Falls Argus Leader.
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