[For this year’s
series on genuine American patriots, I wanted to focus on contemporary figures
who are doing the hard work of patriotism. If there’s a through-line to these
four, in addition to the ideas I discussed in my Patriot’s Day post, it’d be Howard
Zinn’s famous quote, “Dissent is the highest form of patriotism.” Please
share your own patriotic nominees, dissenters or otherwise, for a crowd-sourced
weekend post we can all be proud of!]
On a young
tribal emissary who embodies 21st century communal activism.
Most everything
I know about Santana Jayde Young Man Afraid of His Horses, who late last year at
the 30th Annual Oglala
Lakota Nation Wacipi (Pow Wow) was crowned Miss Oglala Lakota Nation
2015-2016, I learned from this
article. I could paraphrase the article’s details and quotes in this
paragraph, but instead I’ll ask you to check out that story about the amazing
work and voice of this inspiring young activist, and then come back here when
you’re done!
Welcome back! I’m
not sure I can imagine a more fitting moniker than Santana’s Lakota name, When
She Speaks They Listen. In the series of testimonials with which late 19th
century Paiute activist Sarah
Winnemucca concludes her autoethnographic book Life
among the Piutes (1886), a friend of Winnemucca’s notes that “she
deserves the attention of our best ears.” Indeed she did, and so too do Santana
and her work, both to raise awareness of reservation issues such as domestic
violence and teen suicide (among many others) and to “celebrate life,” deserve
as wide a hearing and response as possible. To read the quotes of Santana’s in
that article, to see the many layers to her community, tribal, and national
activisms (while she’s attending college, serving as the president of the Oglala Lakota College Center, and preparing for
law school applications), can’t help but inspire renewed commitment from all of
us to do our part to better the communities and world we share.
None of us can
do it alone, of course, and Santana’s story also illustrates how truly communal
are these activist efforts. Of particular note is the article’s recounting of her
visit to the innovative and successful Red
Cloud Indian School on the Pine Ridge Reservation, where students from
kindergarten through high school all study the Lakota language as a central
part of their curriculum. The school’s Lakota language teacher, Waniya Locke, articulates
succinctly the connections of language to identity and community: “I invited
Miss Oglala Lakota Nation into my classroom to show my students that outside my
classroom, people really do care about our language. She encouraged them to
continue to speak and grow in the Lakota Language.” Genuine patriotism takes impressive
individual voices and leaders like Santana to be sure, but it also takes
generations and communities of activists and leaders, like those being educated
at Red Cloud. There’s nothing more inspiring and significant, nor more American
in the best sense, than that combination.
Last patriot
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other figures you’d nominate?
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