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Dakota 38 2012
Döküm
00:01:25M.K.
00:03:04The Indian hunting trade, if the game be at all plenty, is likely to prove a profitable investment during the present fall and winter for our hunters and scouts in the big woods.
00:03:15Having increased the bounty for each topknot of a bloody heathen to $200, there is likely to be considerable competition in the trade, and the best shots will carry off the most prizes.
00:04:34They were supposed to be given rations, they were given the treaty,
00:04:38but people get greedy, that's how they call them washichut.
00:04:41They started skimming off the rations and pretty soon they were starving them.
00:04:45When they were starving them, that's when this trader said,
00:04:48well let them eat grass, and so they revolted.
00:04:52When the fight occurred and many were killed.
00:04:55It was a very short war, it only lasted a few months.
00:04:59When it was over, President Abraham Lincoln hung 38 of our leaders at one time,
00:05:09one pull of the lever, which is today the largest max execution a government's ever carried out.
00:05:29My great-great-grandfather, who walks without a tail, was hung that day.
00:05:38Those of us that are on this ride descend from them 38 that were hanged.
00:05:42I was very proud of them and I was very proud of them and I was very proud of them.
00:07:46Killing our own people.
00:07:48And that's what this rides about, it's healing.
00:08:16We were exiled from Minnesota by an order of the government,
00:08:44which stated to annihilate the Indian race
00:08:47or forever push us from the borders of Minnesota.
00:08:50And that's what happened.
00:08:53Thousands and thousands of our people were slaughtered,
00:08:55froze to death, starved to death.
00:08:58Disease took a lot of our people also.
00:09:01A lot of them were marched on foot.
00:09:04Some were brought on cattle trains.
00:09:07Got down to St. Louis, they put us on riverboats.
00:09:11And they were brought up the river to where we presently are now.
00:09:14Central Creek, which was at that time a prisoner of war camp.
00:09:18From there, our people scattered to the four directions.
00:09:24Some of them, you know, would jump off their boats
00:09:27and just drown themselves,
00:09:29and they couldn't deal with the hardships.
00:09:31And so it was a horrible thing.
00:09:33They thought it was the end of their world coming here.
00:09:36They had no more hope.
00:09:37And so for us, this journey back,
00:09:40this ride back,
00:09:41is taking our, our, their spirits back,
00:09:44taking it home to the homeland.
00:09:46We're going to show up in Mankato at the hanging site
00:09:49on December 26th at 10 a.m.,
00:09:52which is the anniversary of them 38 that were hanged.
00:09:54When you have dreams,
00:10:00you know when they come from the creator.
00:10:07You just know it.
00:10:09And I always know when it's a significant dream
00:10:13because he says,
00:10:13I've got to tell you this, you know.
00:10:16And so he gets up and he says,
00:10:18I've got to tell you this.
00:10:19And I don't know what it means, but,
00:10:21and he started telling, telling me.
00:10:25He was being directed to make these offerings
00:10:28around the horse.
00:10:30The horse would carry these offerings.
00:10:32and that these offerings were for all of the men
00:10:38that were hung in Mankato.
00:10:41Didn't know about Mankato
00:10:43until I had this dream in 2005.
00:10:48In his dream, he,
00:10:50he seen all these, the 38 basically,
00:10:54being hung at the same time
00:10:55and they were all reaching out,
00:10:56holding each other's arms.
00:11:02Our ancestry starts over there in Mankato.
00:11:16So keep that in your hearts.
00:11:18Keep that in your minds as we travel.
00:11:23So I love you guys very much.
00:11:26I'm a real easy man to talk to.
00:11:29I'm kind of a quiet guy.
00:11:32I pretty much keep to myself.
00:11:37But any atrocity that happened to you,
00:11:39any of you,
00:11:41it happened to me.
00:11:44I was sexually abused,
00:11:46physically abused,
00:11:48spiritually abused,
00:11:50emotionally abused.
00:11:52I have blood on my hands.
00:11:54I'm a Vietnam veteran.
00:11:57I spent time in Leavenworth.
00:11:59I've been through the course.
00:12:08Any of you need to talk to me,
00:12:10call me aside.
00:12:12We're all equal in this room.
00:12:15Nobody's higher or better than anybody.
00:12:19We're all equal.
00:12:20So let's have a real beautiful ride.
00:12:26We've got a long haul ahead of us.
00:12:28I never did this before.
00:12:30I don't know what I have to expect
00:12:32in the next 16 days.
00:12:34But you do.
00:12:36You're my family.
00:12:37This horse has the six directions
00:12:52that we use in our ceremonies.
00:12:54The two front legs represent
00:12:55the west and the north.
00:12:57The two back legs represent
00:12:59the east and the south.
00:13:00The head points up.
00:13:02The ears point up.
00:13:04Represents wakata ke.
00:13:06Up above,
00:13:07the tail points downwards
00:13:09towards Mother Earth.
00:13:11When you put those six directions together,
00:13:13it creates a sacred center
00:13:15to bring wawaka in.
00:13:19It's a sacredness that you can only have
00:13:21with these six directions.
00:13:22and you can pray
00:13:24while you're on your horse.
00:13:25You can think about a lot of things.
00:13:27Some people can remember things
00:13:28that ancestors went through.
00:13:31It's the horse leading the way
00:13:32because of its healing power.
00:13:34Weechonee-ejane
00:13:38Weechonee-ei
00:13:56Weechonee-ei
00:14:01Weechonee-ei
00:14:03İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:14:33We're riding because of the healing that we need to continue.
00:14:39The reservation where I'm from is the poorest county in the United States with an average household income of $5,000 per year.
00:14:47We also have one of the highest suicide rates in the world.
00:14:51There is something that we suffer from.
00:14:54So basically, I'm riding for my family because they need help.
00:15:06I already lost my oldest brother.
00:15:12He passed away four years ago.
00:15:15And two of my other brothers are sitting in jail.
00:15:19My family is slowly falling apart.
00:15:22And this is why I'm doing this for them.
00:15:24And now my little brother, he's getting sent away.
00:15:29I wanted to go see him before he gets sent away next year.
00:15:37But I came here and I don't regret coming here.
00:15:43So all I can say is I'm honored to be on this ride.
00:15:49And I thank you for listening to me.
00:15:52It's just not for our Dakota people but everybody involved.
00:16:06So if you have horses or you want to be a part of the ride, I mean come join us.
00:16:11This is our family and we want you guys to be a part of it.
00:16:14So thank you.
00:16:20I didn't know Mankato, like 38 Native Americans were hung there.
00:16:24I had no idea about that.
00:16:25I'm not Native American but my mom's like Native Canadian and up there.
00:16:30And so just having a little bit of that in me and hearing this, it really means a lot.
00:16:36Thank you.
00:16:41It was pretty good though, talking to them.
00:16:44You know, letting them know our side of the story.
00:16:47And not what just came out of some book that some dude wrote.
00:16:51You know, coming from the real thing and from the people that are experiencing it.
00:16:57Yeah, it was pretty good.
00:16:59It was a pretty good ride right now.
00:17:03In spite of the burnt burger and the doughy pizza.
00:17:08No, that was just a joke.
00:17:10And I really don't associate with Caucasian people.
00:17:15I don't know why.
00:17:16It's just, I don't know, I never really, I used to like when I was little.
00:17:20I had like different races of friends when I was little.
00:17:23Like we might as well just put it on the table too because it's the truth
00:17:27and it's the only way that we're going to be able to come together.
00:17:30You know, like my people and me, and we've talked about this, there's a lot of racism.
00:17:36You know?
00:17:37So I think, and I'm willing to say, yeah, you know, I have some racist moments where I think,
00:17:42oh, okay, you know, like they just did that because they're a white guy.
00:17:45Or they're not going to get it because they're white.
00:17:47They're just not.
00:17:49I was like feeling like I didn't want to be a part of this anymore
00:17:53because I was feeling like everybody was talking to me as like Dakota Sarah.
00:17:58Like, oh, well, like, you know, like you're Dakota first.
00:18:02So I'm going to ask everything, all my questions based on your race.
00:18:07You have to understand there's a certain amount of curiosity coming into a situation.
00:18:11I mean, if someone from Africa came to me, they would have a million questions, I'm sure,
00:18:16about Adam the white guy, the Italian kid from Long Island.
00:18:20So the fact that the questions are getting, you know, directed at me makes me feel like,
00:18:25oh, Adam was the only one who was asking questions, the only one who didn't come from the heart.
00:18:30You know, from the heart.
00:19:00It's supposed to be getting a storm here the next couple days.
00:19:22It'll be real cold.
00:19:25Real cold.
00:19:27The forecast this morning said Saturday, Sunday, Monday, blizzard warnings, so.
00:19:38Not much to say.
00:19:41Yeah.
00:19:42I think some of the things that they're doing like this ride are important for their heritage.
00:19:50I think all people should be proud of who they are and their ancestry and their heritage.
00:19:56I'm proud I'm Norwegian.
00:19:59Golden, golden rims.
00:20:03I got pimped out here.
00:20:06Does she know the price in there?
00:20:08How much the tire was?
00:20:10Yeah.
00:20:11Just, hey, just don't worry about it.
00:20:14Oh, come on now.
00:20:16I gotta give you something.
00:20:17Don't worry about it.
00:20:18You sure?
00:20:19Yeah.
00:20:20Appreciate it.
00:20:21You betcha.
00:20:22I really appreciate it.
00:20:23Yeah.
00:20:24I wouldn't be so generous, but I just watched that movie Pay It Forward, so.
00:20:31I wish more of this country was that way.
00:20:35Yeah.
00:20:36Needs to go back to that.
00:20:37Yeah.
00:20:38Yeah, definitely.
00:20:39We've got too many people that are worried about the dollar instead of helping the human
00:20:44being.
00:20:45Exactly.
00:20:46Exactly.
00:20:47I'm getting Beckham.
00:20:48I better go.
00:20:49Yeah.
00:20:50We're yelling at you.
00:20:51Just fill that up and I'll come back out and shut that water off.
00:20:53It's okay.
00:20:54Yeah.
00:20:55Okay.
00:20:56Check it out.
00:20:57Okay.
00:21:03Okay.
00:21:04Take our saya, Raul.
00:21:09John 4,
00:21:16our
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00:27:28İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:27:58çok kötü, şimdi, ben hiçbir şey.
00:28:02O da yüzde, ve yasındayım.
00:28:06Ve daha önce, daha önce bir yüzeyken,
00:28:08ve daha bir yüzeyken bir seslerim.
00:28:10Bu ne?
00:28:12Çok iyi.
00:28:14Ben şimdi, ben bir yüzeyken.
00:28:16Ne?
00:28:18Evet, ben bir yüzeyken,
00:28:20arabaştırma olarak geri dönüştüğündeki deneyim.
00:28:22Bu ne?
00:28:24Bunu çok zor.
00:28:26The people that were doing something like that, you know.
00:28:30She went out in a tractor
00:28:32and found him somehow and that blizzard.
00:28:35You almost can't top that as far as support
00:28:40or commitment to what we're doing.
00:28:52Mounti, South Dakota.
00:28:55İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:30:40harfiyonlar çok güçlü contractingi.
00:30:41oyebkola
00:30:43kendisi
00:30:45bu весeliydi
00:30:47o
00:30:49'yuyorum
00:30:49yasındırmızı
00:30:50yasındırmızı
00:30:51korkuyoruz
00:30:51ben
00:30:52özgürlüğüm
00:30:53kim
00:30:54dörlüğüm
00:30:55bu
00:30:55bir
00:30:56yasaktan
00:30:57bu
00:30:58kader
00:30:59bazı
00:31:00kinses這樣
00:31:00çok
00:31:02değerli
00:31:03cok
00:31:04yasındır
00:31:05bir
00:31:06yasak
00:31:07görebileceğiniz
00:31:08You're Native and you should be proud of it no matter what tribe you're from.
00:31:12Get to know your history because we are an awesome people and you guys should be so proud of that.
00:31:27I was in an 8x5 cell and it was hard.
00:31:31It was really hard.
00:31:33I shed some tears in there.
00:31:34They said men don't cry but we do.
00:31:38It takes a real man to cry.
00:31:43Thank you.
00:31:45The reason why I'm doing this journey is so I can maybe help one of you in this room today.
00:31:51Because our people are lost and it's up to us to keep our language and our culture alive.
00:31:56We have to be the leaders because we're the next generation and it's up to us.
00:32:01If not, our culture is gone, our language is gone.
00:32:04And the makaija of the youth, the next generation, they won't.
00:32:07They'll be lost.
00:32:08They'll have nothing to turn to.
00:32:10November 26th, I celebrated a year of drugs and alcohol.
00:32:13I ain't going to lie.
00:32:15Sometimes I feel like using, you know.
00:32:17I get around my old buddies back home and say,
00:32:20Oh, come on.
00:32:21Have a beer with us.
00:32:22Let's go.
00:32:23Let's go get high.
00:32:24I got this joint, you know.
00:32:26But I choose to pray and go to sweat lodges.
00:32:29During the summertime we attend sun dances and it's hard.
00:32:33Growing up where I'm from, you know, Pine Ridge is a hard place to live.
00:32:36They call it poverty plains, you know, but we choose to live like that, you know.
00:32:40And now me riding is to make, hopefully make a change for our youth so that they won't have to grow up in a society that we grew up in today.
00:32:56I got caught speeding and he left me behind.
00:33:09They turned the lights on him so I drove around him.
00:33:13With the trees, it's parked.
00:33:19Any suggestions from life here, boss?
00:33:21My main concern is like the A-80.
00:33:30And West Asia Canada.
00:33:35Again, for my family from here, you know, it's good to see everybody in.
00:33:40And my main thing was to see you guys laughing, fed and all that stuff like that.
00:33:45So, you know, I extend my thanks.
00:33:49And you guys are coming over this hill down here, but this little town, Eden, that was, that was what I got afraid of.
00:33:55Man, these semis on 34, you know, they're going to come flying over and it's cold and icy.
00:34:01So I just stayed up there and I see a vehicle trying to slow them down.
00:34:06This is a lady right here. This is a step. She has been really great in doing the, uh, coordinating so much of the food, the help, the whole works.
00:34:24She's been fantastic.
00:34:26I had food coming all morning to my house. So my truck was loaded.
00:34:38Yeah, there was not even a question. As soon as we heard about it, we got the email, we responded back right away and said, yeah, count us in. We'll help out.
00:34:44When they marched the 38 to be hung, you know, they marched them to Maniketo and then after they hung them, they buried them in a mass grave.
00:34:52And the doctors from the local area, they dug up the bodies and used them for science.
00:34:56So when we learn that history, then, then it's really hard.
00:35:06I own all the land back here. I'm just curious what is going on. I've seen all the trailers here.
00:35:24I grew up in Minnesota and I had no idea that there had been a hanging of 38 warriors.
00:35:32And then the boarding schools, of course, to try to turn all the Indians into white people and their spiritual ceremonies were illegal until 1978.
00:35:45Maybe U.S. White America will reach or maybe is reaching the point where they can start acknowledging what really happened in this country.
00:35:59They can acknowledge the massive land theft, 3 billion acres within the continental United States.
00:36:06Maybe they cannot acknowledge the broken treaties, over 400 of them broken and violated by the United States of America and its U.S. Euro-American citizenry.
00:36:17Maybe they can acknowledge the genocide that occurred, 16 million native people within the continental United States around 1500.
00:36:29And by four centuries later, 1900, the U.S. Bureau of Census said there's 237,000 left in the U.S.
00:36:39What happened?
00:36:41I can feel that there's nothing left to be concealed.
00:36:49I'm moving on, it seems surreal.
00:36:53I know my heart will never, will never be far from here.
00:36:59Sure as I am breathing, sure as I'm sad, I'll keep this wisdom in my flesh.
00:37:08I'll leave here believing more than I had.
00:37:13And there's a reason I'll be, a reason I'll be there.
00:37:21It's like my brother and I, we grew up shaking hands with everybody.
00:37:50Whether you've seen him last night or, you know, stick that old black paw out there.
00:37:56Let somebody shake that thing for you, you shake it back.
00:38:00And when you've got love in your heart, they feel that love.
00:38:03It could be the most bitter SOB there, but you know, he'll cool off and slow down.
00:38:11And like I said, we don't discriminate against anybody on this ride.
00:38:15Anybody's welcome.
00:38:17I was always scared to tell people that I loved them and I'm not anymore.
00:38:25So I just want to tell you guys I love you and thank you for being here.
00:38:33I know it's hard, but let me know if you need anything.
00:38:36I'm more than willing to help.
00:38:37I'm more than willing to help.
00:38:38Doc Yesen.
00:38:39I know something's in there.
00:38:40No, it's her ankle.
00:38:41That one guy said he saw her stepping a crack.
00:38:45Yeah.
00:38:46That's her ankle.
00:38:47Well, she ain't gonna make this ride.
00:39:04You may not know it because I don't tell very many people, but I'm 100% combat-related disabled.
00:39:19100%.
00:39:30Jim knows what I'm talking about.
00:39:46As a Vietnam combat veteran, my PTSD really kicked in today.
00:39:51It's a post-traumatic stress disorder.
00:39:55I'm 100% disabled and the doctors tell me not to be on the horse.
00:40:05Today it's really kicking in.
00:40:08I'm glad you guys let me be part of this.
00:40:36Oh, let me talk again.
00:40:37Oh, let go.
00:40:38Okay.
00:40:53With that Wua Waka inside those 6 directions, you place a man or a woman on a horse, you give
00:40:59Bu zevk tarafı yada çevre,
00:41:01ve çokata tarafından çoğkata'a,
00:41:03çoğkata'a,
00:41:04ve her şeyin.
00:41:05Biriyle bir şeyin.
00:41:07İlalede ve ileriyle bir şekilde
00:41:08ve ileriyle bir ileriyle.
00:41:11Bu, bu daha fazla var.
00:41:12Ve bu,
00:41:14ve bu dağılınca çok güçlü.
00:41:16Bu,
00:41:19Bu,
00:41:20bu,
00:41:21bu,
00:41:22bu,
00:41:23bu.
00:41:24Bu,
00:41:25bu,
00:41:26bu,
00:41:27Yeni yaşadığı bir şey.
00:41:29İnanılmaz bir şey.
00:41:31İnanılmaz bir şey.
00:41:33İnanılmaz bir şey.
00:41:35Bu bir şey.
00:41:37Çünkü bu,
00:41:38başladığında da bir şey,
00:41:39benliyordu.
00:41:41Bu,
00:41:42başladığım,
00:41:43bir şey var.
00:41:44Bu da yapma.
00:41:45İnanılmaz bir şey.
00:41:47İnanılmaz.
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00:44:03İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
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00:44:11İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:13İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:15abone olmalı.
00:44:17İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:19abone olmalı.
00:44:21İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:23İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:25İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:26İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:28İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:30Hoşçakalın.
00:44:32İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:44:36So I'm going to sing this song on behalf of my relatives here to honor you today for this grateful thing that you have done for us.
00:45:06I'm going to sing this song.
00:45:36We couldn't even see, like, I mean, the cars couldn't even see.
00:45:45The horses were, like, doing this, like, faces, the wind's coming from this way and everybody's going this.
00:45:50Julian stops, gets out, we're shutting it down, we're shutting it down.
00:45:53Everybody gets off their horses.
00:45:54They're not room enough in the car.
00:45:55I look over there.
00:45:56Gus's, like, truck and trailer is in a ditch over.
00:46:00Like, things going terribly wrong.
00:46:03And it didn't need to happen, man.
00:46:05It's, like, it just, have a conversation.
00:46:07Talk about it.
00:46:08We have two days of rest, the 21st and the 22nd.
00:46:10Today is the 20th, right?
00:46:12You don't ride today.
00:46:14You wait for the storm to pass Saturday and Sunday, like, you know, the weather report said it was going to be horrible.
00:46:19And then you ride on the day's of rest.
00:46:21He hit the ditch back there.
00:46:23There's no room for our horses.
00:46:25Yeah, you got to make arrangements.
00:46:26You're going to haul horses there.
00:46:28You know, you're going to stop it.
00:46:29You got to haul them back.
00:46:30Shit, man.
00:46:32You just stopped, stop.
00:46:33We'll keep our riding.
00:46:35I don't know.
00:46:35I got to have my horse safe.
00:46:38Not out in the middle of the road.
00:46:40Makes complete sense to me.
00:46:41But since I'm not involved in this, I'm not a leader, I can't.
00:46:44You are a leader, Adam.
00:46:46We are all leaders.
00:46:47Yeah, we're all leaders.
00:46:48Come on.
00:46:48That's a great saying.
00:46:50And I'd like to believe that.
00:46:52All we're doing here is a lack of communication.
00:46:56That's all we have.
00:46:58I told you guys when we first started, I'm the only person that had the dream.
00:47:05So I try to step back and I try to let these leaders step up.
00:47:10I saw that.
00:47:29She got kicked this morning.
00:47:30The little girl got kicked by Chris's horse.
00:47:36Right in the hand.
00:47:37Right across the knuckles.
00:47:40Where I come from, everybody's mostly still mad about what would happen.
00:47:47And that's probably another reason why I don't really get along with Caucasian people.
00:47:56It's because of the 38?
00:47:58Yeah.
00:48:10They rose up to defend themselves, starving to death, to protect their land, their way of life, and their people.
00:48:33Was it wrong to defend ourselves?
00:48:42That's the question.
00:48:46Within weeks, 500 whites, settlers, soldiers, and government agents were dead,
00:48:52along with a smaller but unknown number of Indians.
00:48:57There were pretty horrendous deeds done on both parts.
00:49:00I mean, some immigrant from Germany who wasn't privy to the signing of Traverse to Sioux Treaty
00:49:07was probably pretty shocked to see his wife's womb cut open and a baby taken out and brained against a tree,
00:49:13just as later when New Ulm people attacked the Indians and killed a woman's child in front of her.
00:49:18When I think about Abraham Lincoln, that's hard to swallow because he freed the slaves,
00:49:32but yet really succumbed to pressure from the people to hang.
00:49:39There were supposed to be over 300 that were supposed to be executed, but he reduced it to 38.
00:49:52We say this is a spiritual right.
00:49:55We're going to be the first ones to ask for forgiveness.
00:50:02We want to say our apologies as the natives.
00:50:07We want to step up and say, hey, we apologize.
00:50:12So we're going to be the first ones to forgive what happened when they hung our ancestors in 1862.
00:50:20We're going to be the first ones to forgive.
00:50:37You know, I have anger in my heart, too, and I took care of it the best I can.
00:50:57And I feel like I've done pretty good in the last 10 years, moved forward pretty good,
00:51:03and it's time to let those things go and press forward, you know, in a positive way.
00:51:09You know, Poncho and I are the ones who are interacting with the family, talking with Eli,
00:51:22talking with Taylor, the daughter she just Facebooked me, talking with Brady, you know,
00:51:27because if we're not talking with them, everybody else, you know, within my opinion of the native community
00:51:35is doing their own little thing in the corners.
00:51:38Dave said he's never been into a white person's home, and he's from Sistan, you know,
00:51:43and that's where all those guys are from.
00:51:45So it's probably hard for them.
00:51:48I know it's hard for them, but those people could not have made it easier.
00:51:51And I'm not saying what they were feeling, but this family, like, they had Wopita for Peace
00:51:56on their shirts with a horse in rainbow letters.
00:52:00It could not have said, like, welcome with their names on the back.
00:52:03I mean, they went to a lot of trouble for this.
00:52:05I don't know if they normally walk around with that or they did it for this ride,
00:52:08but they had, you know, the whole thing going.
00:52:13I feel like we let them down a little bit, actually, as a community.
00:52:17I don't know, it's just how it's grown.
00:52:19So not having them trust us or thinking we're going to steal something
00:52:23or, you know, something was going to go missing and they were going to blame us.
00:52:27So I didn't really feel comfortable stopping at all those houses.
00:52:31I mean, it's cool that they did that, man.
00:52:34I like that a lot.
00:52:36It's pretty crazy how it all worked out for the horses and for us.
00:52:46What are you doing?
00:52:48What's your name?
00:52:50I'm just going to stick a...
00:52:52Amber?
00:52:52Are you going to ride, Amber?
00:52:54Are you?
00:52:55Are you excited?
00:52:56Yeah.
00:52:57You're part of this group now, so, like, don't be afraid to tell them how you feel
00:53:02because they don't know that, you know?
00:53:04Well, to, like, do it publicly is a big...
00:53:07Yeah, but...
00:53:08...is a big thing.
00:53:08But now you're part of the group, so...
00:53:10But am I?
00:53:12Do you know what I'm saying?
00:53:13Yeah.
00:53:14I feel like I am, but then it's kind of like, you know, am I?
00:53:22A lot of us are getting sore throats and headaches and stuff,
00:53:38and it's kind of hard to be in this climate if we're not used to it.
00:53:43And I know the Canadians, they don't care.
00:53:44They go around naked.
00:53:45I've seen Carl walking down the creek with just a blanket on this morning.
00:53:55He was going to chop a hole in the ice and take a bath, he said.
00:54:00But I think one of our leaders here made some medicine in that container over there.
00:54:06Feel free to get some, especially now when it's really warm.
00:54:10I mean, that's, uh, us guys take medicine as hard as we can take it.
00:54:18Get some more in.
00:54:20Let's do this, buddy.
00:54:21Let's go over there.
00:54:22Come on.
00:54:26I mean, I don't want this ride to end.
00:54:28I want to keep this ride going because this is the only time I ever felt happy.
00:54:34Because back home, it's really hard and it makes me feel good riding for my people.
00:54:49Our people suffer from something.
00:54:55An elderly woman, a full-blood Dakota, from where I'm from in Crow Creek.
00:55:04I was with her one time and, uh, a lot of bad things were going on.
00:55:09A lot of bad things.
00:55:10And I had asked her, uh, why does this always happen to us?
00:55:14Why do we do these things to each other?
00:55:16Why does it always happen?
00:55:20And she didn't say nothing.
00:55:21She was driving a car for a while.
00:55:23I looked over at her.
00:55:26She was crying.
00:55:28And she said in her language,
00:55:30Ioki Shicha.
00:55:33A deep, embedded, genetic depression.
00:55:39See, our people at one time, the Dakota people,
00:55:41or all Native Americans,
00:55:44had a very strong connection with the Creator.
00:55:48A very strong connection with Mother Earth.
00:55:50A very strong connection with nature,
00:55:54the forces of nature,
00:55:55all living things on this planet.
00:55:58And all this was taken from us.
00:56:00Like that.
00:56:01And we lost this connection with everything that we had.
00:56:10That's where this depression comes from.
00:56:13A lot of our people are severely depressed.
00:56:15They don't even know it.
00:56:17This depression is just now clinically diagnosed
00:56:21as the same thing soldiers suffer from
00:56:23when they return from combat.
00:56:24And we'll see you next time.
00:56:54In 1967,
00:57:181967'da 1968'da
00:57:23Viet Nam'dan.
00:57:26Yine young people don't know where that's at.
00:57:30And at that time
00:57:33I
00:57:36took 38 lives.
00:57:40Had no connection.
00:57:43Didn't make no connection with Mankato.
00:57:46Didn't know about Mankato till I had this dream in 2005.
00:57:56There's 38 that were hung and
00:58:00how does that all tie in?
00:58:03I can't say that I know. I mean I really don't.
00:58:07But he had an experience
00:58:10around the fire
00:58:12which I'm not going to go into deeply
00:58:14because it's his experience
00:58:17which clearly showed him some things that he needed to do to release the 38 Vietnamese men that had been killed, you know, killed by him.
00:58:27And all of this was told to him by his mother and his mother passed away when he was 10.
00:58:37But she came out of the fire and told him he needed to do this.
00:58:41I'm kind of an emotional guy.
00:58:42I'm kind of an emotional guy.
00:58:43I'm kind of an emotional guy.
00:58:44I'm kind of an emotional guy.
00:58:53Those coming down the road, my boarding school days kicked in, my days in Vietnam kicked in, riding into the city.
00:59:08So all of my abandonment issues, the hurts and the pains that I went through, coming down the highway this morning.
00:59:26I was wondering what our people went through the day before the hanging. What were their thoughts?
00:59:42Their feelings.
00:59:43In the early hours of Friday, the 26th, as the time of the execution approached, some of the Dakota men lay sleeping on the floor.
00:59:59At dawn, many of the condemned men said goodbye to their captors in a display that fascinated the reporters.
01:00:09They shook hands with the officers who came in among them, bidding them goodbye as if they were going on a long and pleasant journey.
01:00:29And they all wanted their medicine man to speak on their behalf.
01:00:36The words are, don't let your heart be sad.
01:00:39We're going to see each other again.
01:00:41And when we see each other again, your heart and my heart's going to be so happy it's going to cry when we come together again.
01:00:48That's what the song says.
01:00:50Altho it's been said many times Many ways Merry Christmas
01:03:27İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:03:29Teşekkürler. Teşekkürler.
01:03:31Teşekkürler.
01:03:33Teşekkürler.
01:03:35Teşekkürler.
01:03:51On that fateful day,
01:03:53they were let out of the prison compound.
01:03:57They were shackled and chained together.
01:04:01They had hoods on them.
01:04:03The women
01:04:05began waiting
01:04:07and weeping.
01:04:09One of the prisoners in a loud voice said,
01:04:11Namah umpo me taku epi.
01:04:13Hear me my people.
01:04:15Today is not a day
01:04:19of defeat.
01:04:21It is a day of victory.
01:04:23For we have made our
01:04:25peace with our Creator
01:04:27and now go to be with Him forever.
01:04:31Remember this day to tell our children
01:04:33so they can tell their children
01:04:35that we are
01:04:37people who die in over death.
01:04:39Do not mourn for us.
01:04:41Rejoice with us.
01:04:43It's a good day to God.
01:04:45And then he lifted up his voice
01:04:57and began singing.
01:04:59and sings.
01:05:01Go out of the sea.
01:05:03Baus sing.
01:05:05And now he's alive.
01:05:07Let's go.
01:05:09Let's go.
01:07:29dakota people have suffered unimaginadil hardship over a long period of time as the land and riches
01:07:36they once had we gradually removed from their control and whereas the dakota people have
01:07:42many times been forcibly relocated at the whim of the united states government and whereas
01:07:48one outcome of their trials was the largest mass execution ever reported in u.s. history
01:07:52during which 38 dakota were hanged and whereas the dakota people have put forth tremendous
01:07:58Kişisel dönüştürme.
01:08:00Dikkatalına devam edebilirsiniz.
01:08:02Dikkatalının bir,
01:08:04ve bu üyelerin kuruluşu,
01:08:06ve bu,
01:08:08bu,
01:08:08bu,
01:08:09bu,
01:08:09bu,
01:08:09bu,
01:08:11bu,
01:08:13bu,
01:08:14bu,
01:08:14bu,
01:08:16bu,
01:08:16bu,
01:08:17bu,
01:08:17bu,
01:08:18bu,
01:08:19bu,
01:08:19bu,
01:08:20bu,
01:08:21bu,
01:08:21bu,
01:08:22bu,
01:08:22bu,
01:08:22bu,
01:08:23bu,
01:08:23bu,
01:08:24bu,
01:08:24bu,
01:08:25bu,
01:08:26bu,
01:08:26bu,
01:08:26bu,
01:08:26bu,
01:08:26bu,
01:08:27bu,
01:08:27bu,
01:08:28Yine Bureau burada,
01:08:35İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:08:40Açıya Deci.
01:08:43İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:08:47İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:09:17İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
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01:10:31İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:33İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:35İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:37İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:39İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:41İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
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01:10:45.
01:10:46İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:48İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:49.
01:10:50İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:52.
01:10:53İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
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01:10:55İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:56İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:57İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:58İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:10:59İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:11:00I ain't going to leave my emotions right there and just go back home to what I was doing.
01:11:05I'm going to take it with me. I'm just going to come home with me.
01:11:09We got to strive for that reconciliation.
01:11:14Let's go home and reconcile our families, our differences.
01:11:20Let's go home and hug our children.
01:11:23Tell them that we love them.
01:11:30Love their children.
01:11:34Be the poor children.
01:11:36God bless you.
01:11:39God bless you.
01:11:40God bless you.
01:11:43I love you.
01:11:45I thank you.
01:11:47Good morning.
01:11:52Let me see you.
01:11:56İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
01:12:26İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
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