Apache Tears

Apache Tears

We traveled to Montgomery Alabama to see the Equal Justice Initiative's Museum and Memorial.

I believe that you can't move forward without acknowledging the past, and the memorial site and museum are a powerful way to do that.

But I've been struck by the marked absence of Native American peoples in current discussions about justice and reparations.

Fortunately, there are folks like Wendsler Nosie, Sr., to remind us, and he and his are traveling to DC to participate in the Poor People's Campaign.

He passed through our town on the way, and spoke, sang, and danced with us. He and his fellow travelers are creating and re-affirming bonds with places and people. He is Apache, but his mission is one of healing.

He reminded us that a Nation founded on lies and deceit cannot prosper. And that Colonial history books always omit the First Chapter, about the peoples that inhabited the land before Empire did.

http://arizonasonoranewsservice.com/for-native-americans-racism-hits-home/



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