Название: Lost Worlds of 1863
Автор: W. Dirk Raat
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Историческая литература
isbn: 9781119777632
isbn:
Wovoka’s preaching included the doctrine of non-violence. He had always taught that his followers should engage in agriculture and be hired labor for the white man. After Wounded Knee he eventually silenced his other messages and sought the isolation of his Yerington Indian Colony. But Wovoka had established a religious movement that not only had continued the tradition of Indian resistance, but marked the beginning of a new fight for religious freedom that characterized the early twentieth century, from the Peyote Church to Pentecostalism.112
He danced his last dance in Yerington on September 20, 1932. He was 74 and had suffered from poor eyesight and hearing for some time. His wife of 50 years had died the month before. According to his son-in-law he never said that he would literally never die, only that his spirit would go on forever. He was interred in the Paiute cemetery in the town of Schurz, Nevada (see Figure 2.5). At least for this one Numu his wandering was over.
Figure 2.5 Wovoka. Schurz, Nevada Paiute Indian Cemetery.
Photo by W. Dirk Raat, July, 2018.
Commentary: The Military and the Boarding School
The purpose now is never to relax the application of force with a people that can no more be trusted that you can trust the wolves that run through the mountains. To gather them together little by little onto a Reservation away from the haunts and hills and hiding places of their country and … teach their children how to read and write: teach them the art of peace: teach them the truth of christianity … the old Indians will die off and carry with them all latent longings for murdering and robbing: the young ones will take their places without these longings: and thus, little by little, they will become a happy and a contented people.
General James Carleton to General Lorenzo Thomas, Sept. 6, 18631
A great general has said that the only good Indian is a dead one. In a sense, I agree with the sentiment, but only in this: that all the Indian there is in the race should be dead. Kill the Indian in him and save the man.
Captain Richard Henry Pratt (speech in 1892 at Carlisle)2
When one Indian boy or girl leaves this school with an education, the ‘Indian Problem’ will forever be solved for him and his children.
Chancellor Lipincott of University of Kansas at Haskell Dedication (September 17, 1884)3
The next day the torture began. The first thing they did was cut our hair … .While we were bathing our breechclouts were taken, and we were ordered to put on trousers. We’d lost our hair and we’d lost our clothes; with the two we’d lost our identity as Indians.
Asa Daklugie, Chiricahua Apache, 18864
Your son died quietly, without suffering, like a man. We have dressed him in his good clothes and tomorrow we will bury him the way the white people do.
Captain Richard Henry Pratt, Carlisle, 18805
Boarding schools for Indians have a lengthy history in the United States, dating back to colonial times when seventeenth century Jesuits established missions so as to “civilize an ignorant people and lead them to heaven.” In the mid-1600s Harvard College had an Indian school on its campus as did Hanover (later known as Dartmouth College) in the eighteenth century. Prior to the founding of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania in 1879, missionaries of various faiths had established religious schools near Indian settlements and on reservations in the Greater Southwest. Most of these were known as day schools.6
Carlisle, established by a stern Christian, an ex-army officer and former Indian fighter named Richard Henry Pratt, was the first off-reservation boarding school. It was located in what was previously a military installation—the Carlisle Barracks that had once been a training center for the US cavalry. Carlisle became the prototype for other off-reservation schools. By 1902 the government had established 25 off-reservation boarding schools, including a dozen institutions in sites in Oregon, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, California, and Montana. The Santa Fe Indian School, established in 1890, served mostly students from Southwestern tribes, as did the Phoenix, Arizona, and Riverside, California schools. By the beginning of the twentieth century nearly 18,000 students out of 21,568 were enrolled in either reservation or off-reservation boarding schools.7
By the early 1870s the fighting that characterized Indian–white relations had subsided, and reformers began to argue that the cost in lives and property was not worth the military effort. Grant’s peace policy called for non-violent coercion by Protestant missionaries who would direct affairs on newly established reservations. These agents would both convert their charges to Christianity while teaching them the value of farming and other rural tasks. By accepting the reservation solution the federal government in effect recognized the Indians as wards of the state—the American form of colonialism.
Yet by the late 1870s the failures of reservation life, characterized by bribery and dishonesty by those who were charged with implementing the Indian policy, and by a ration system that was both inadequate and yet fostered dependency on hand-outs by an impoverished Indian people, led to new reform movement. It was in this context that the off-reservation solution was posed by Pratt and others. If overt military actions and segregation on reservations were not transforming the Indian to a civilized person, perhaps education should be tried. Education might finally detribalize Indian youths, convert them to Christianity, and provide them with the gift of the white man’s civilization.8
Education would not only include as it aims Christianization and citizenship training, but also would incorporate the rudiments of academics such as the ability to read, write, and speak English, as well as facilitate individualization by developing a work ethic that promoted the ideal of self-reliance as well as respect for private property.9 Education would produce assimilation, and this would result in a new American who no longer would speak his or her tribal language, avoid “pagan” thoughts and rituals, and would leave behind any notions of community and communal values. And it should be an educational process that would not be thwarted by angry parents and traditional forces on the reservation.
One solution was to distance the school children from their family and tribe. Not only did the federal officials believe that the children should be separated from their “tribal” and “savage” ways so as to become “civilized,” but by separating them from their families they could be used as hostages to insure proper behavior by their parents back at the reservation. This type of education would be a different kind of relocation policy, a sort of education that would assimilate and integrate the Indian into American society. It would be a form of cultural genocide, or as one writer called it, “education for extinction.”10 And the model for organizing an off-reservation school like Carlisle would be a military one, and Richard Henry Pratt would become its first officer and teacher.
Having served in the military for the Union cause during the Civil War, Pratt, when the war was over, retired from the army to manage a hardware store in Logansport, Indiana. Pratt, finding himself temperamentally ill-suited for the hardware business, joined the regular army in 1867 and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Tenth Cavalry, an all-“Negro” unit that had Cherokee scouts attached to it.11 For eight years, from 1867 to 1875, Pratt spent much of his time in what would become Fort Sill in the heart of Comanche and Kiowa country fighting plains Indians. When the Red River War of 1874 was concluded, СКАЧАТЬ