Wounded Knee Anniversary: A family remembers

A general view of Wounded Knee, South Dakota on March 27, 1973, during
negotiations between members of the American Indian Movement and Federal
Agents. Associated Press Photo

Among Indigenous activist circles it is said that many generations ago
ancestors who experienced the loss of life, land, culture and language
had prayed for the coming generations to take up their causes to seek
redress for injustices. Far into the future, some would.
Jewel McDonald Camp was a strong Ponca Indian woman, the first of her
family born in the dumping grounds of Indian Territory. Her father
Charles McDonald was eight when he, his family and Ponca relatives
walked to what is now Oklahoma from their homelands on the Niobrabra
River in northern Nebraska.As her children grew, Jewel participated with
them in the Ponca culture and recounted their peoples’ history to them:
How the Ponca lived before white settlers came; how Ponca leaders made
treaties with the settlers’ government only to be lied to; how one in
eight died along the Ponca Trail of Tears, the bodies of the dead
carried because Indians could not legally be buried in Nebraska. It is a
testimony to endurance that her family even survived.Whether Jewel
intended to impart a warrior spirit to her offspring is unknown, but the
day would come when their spiritual strength would be tested.In the late
1960s, American Indians began to raise their voices all across the
country. A small group of Indians occupied what had been a federal
prison on Alcatraz Island in the San Francisco Bay. At that time,
Jewel’s grown children were in various stages of awareness of Indian
issues, trying to provide for their own families.In early 1973, a call
for help went out from Lakota elders for the American Indian Movement to
come to Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota to
help them address alleged injustices at the hands of Tribal Chairman
Dick Wilson and his Guardians of the Oglala Nations, GOONS, as they were
known.Carter Camp, probably the most aware and active of Jewel’s six
children in those days heard the call and went straight away. He called
his brothers for help.During the occupation of Alcatraz eldest son Dwain
had taken blankets, groceries and cash to help but did not remain on the
island. By 1973, he was busy in mainstream California as a suit, tie and
tasseled loafer-wearing salesman when he answered Carter’s call.“I was
watching the news and the ‘renegade Indians’ spin being put on the
takeover of Wounded Knee. Carter is saying to me, ‘Hey, brother, we are
in a hell of a fight.’ It sounded like it. Carter’s name was heard more
frequently on national TV as the…newest activist in the Nixon versus the
rest of us era,’” Dwain, also known as Buck, said.Youngest brother
Craig, then a corporate buyer in the Bay Area, headed to South Dakota
too. In the blackness of a freezing winter’s night on the South Dakota
prairie, Craig and Dwain found each other then recognized Carter by his
walk. The brothers would each take roles of responsibility inside “The
Knee,” and find themselves with Viet Nam vets and Indians from all
nations facing the full force of the U.S. military.“We were sworn to
succeed, of that I was sure, but I couldn’t help wondering if we were
prepared. The FBI, BIA and federal marshals had fortified Pine Ridge
with machine gun bunkers and Armored Personnel Carriers with M-60s,”
Carter Camp wrote in a memoir sent to the Native American Times. “They
had unleashed the GOON squad on the people and a reign of terror had
begun. We knew we had to fight but we could not fight on Wasicu [the
white man’s] terms. We were lightly armed and dependent on the weapons
and ammo inside the Wounded Knee trading post. I worried that we would
not get to them before the shooting started.”But they did. Despite false
reports of being heavily armed, the members of the newly formed
Independent Oglala Nation held off the U.S. military with small arms.“We
were armed only with .22-Calibre rifles along with shotguns and a few
ancient 30-30’s and one AK47- our lone automatic weapon, which
incidentally, became quite famous from a widely distributed picture of a
warrior holding it victoriously overhead,” Dwain Camp said in a
telephone interview. “We encountered what has been called the heaviest
firepower this side of Vietnam with, documented from casings counted
afterward, more than 500,000 rounds expended just from their side.”After
a national outcry against the militarism of an Indian reservation in
modern times and the treatment of American Indians in general as well as
those hunkered down at Wounded Knee, the standoff ended after 73
days.Woodrow Camp, the father of the Camp brothers and four other
siblings also briefly participated in the takeover of Wounded Knee but
became ill with pneumonia and was sent first to Rapid City Jail, then
put on a bus to Stillwater where his youngest child, Casey Camp Horinek,
was married and pregnant with her second child. She did as her brothers
asked and helped with communications on the outside.“They wanted me to
be safe and asked me to help from the outside as did many others.”
Camp-Horinek said.Casey Camp-Horinek would make her own mark on Indian
history first as a mother who, with husband Mike, reared four children
who she considers her greatest accomplishment. They now have more than
20 grandchildren.“We’re very blessed. Our kids do wonderful jobs with
their kids. We don’t have to worry,” Camp-Horinek said.After being cast
as a background actor and playing people of varying ethnicities,
Camp-Horinek got a lead role in a theater production about the American
Indian leader Black Elk. She became part of the movement to bring more
American Indians into the acting world, deciding that acting could be a
form of activism. She went on to star in several stage and movie
productions including “Geronimo,” “Lakota Woman,” “Broken Chains,”
“Follow Me Home,” and most recently, “Barking Water,” a film by
Oklahoman Sterling Harjo that won acclaim at the 2009 Sundance Film
Festival.She has won an Emmy and will continue to work on future film
projects while travelling to speak on concerns of Indian communities
throughout the hemisphere. She and brother Dwain also have fought in
support of the Ponca people to address the pollution of the White Eagle
area by the Carbon Black Corporation. Camp also founded the Coyote Creek
Environmental Center on family land near Marland.Brother Carter has
lived in South Dakota for many years now. He has been active in trying
to stop the slaughter of bison that wander out of Yellowstone National
Park in the winter to forage for food. He also has been part of a group
trying to stop the building of corporate hog farms near reservation
lands.Dwain Camp recently moved from a rental in Ponca City to a home in
rural Marland. He said he now has a sense of freedom like he felt at
Wounded Knee, knowing he is somewhere he belongs. He hopes that young
Indian people will study history from the Indian perspective, even
though distracted by mainstream media and new technology that seems to
be more interesting.“Back in 60s and 70s, we were learning to ask
questions and to not accept the old answers that seemed to be good
enough before that when it was safer to just be good little Indians,” he
noted, citing several Indian rights organizations that were founded
then. Now, he thinks that some youth seem to think they are entitled.
Instead of questioning authority, there appears to be no respect for
authority in the form of parents and elders. Camp said the problem lies
not only with Native youth but is pervasive, watching television,
engaging in current media technology “till all hours of the night and
then sleeping all day and getting by with doing few constructive
things.”It all begins at home. He thinks Indian youth should be kept
more active “inside the circle,” participating in cultural events.Camp
spoke of an oral tradition that explains how culture is imparted: Those
at the center, near the ceremonial fire, will learn the most. Those who
participate further and further out from the center will know less and
less.Some will leave the circle.But some will return, as Jewel’s
descendants did.For more stories like this one, download a free copy of
Oklahoma Native Times Magazine
at:http://www.nativetimes.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&id=74&Itemid=100047
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