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71 DAYS in '73

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All pages by DAVYDENKO
Page last updated: Mar 07 2013
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The conflict began on February 27, 1973 and last seventy-one days. The occupation became known in history, as the Siege at Wounded Knee.


During the preceding months of the Wounded Knee occupation, civil war brewed among the Oglala people. There became a clear-cut between the traditional Lakota people and the more progressive minded government supporters. The traditional people wanted more independence from the Federal Government, as well as honoring of the 1868 Sioux treaty, which was still valid. According to the 1868 treaty, the Black Hills of South Dakota still belonged to the Sioux people, and the traditional people wanted the Federal Government to honor their treaty by returning the sacred Black Hills to the Sioux people.

Another severe problem on the Pine Ridge reservation was the strip mining of the land. The chemicals used by the mining operations were poisoning the land and the water. People were getting sick, and children were being born with birth defects. The tribal government and its supporters encouraged the strip mining and the sale of the Black Hills to the Federal Government. It is said that at that point in time, the tribal government was not much more than puppets of the BIA. The sacred Black Hills, along with many other problems, had become a wedge that would tear apart the Lakota Nation. Violent confrontations between the traditional people and the GOONS (Guardians of Our Oglala Nation) became an everyday occurrence.

The warriors inside Wounded Knee demanded an investigation into misuse of tribal funds; the GOON squad's violent aggression against people who dared speak out against the tribal government. In addition they wanted the Senate Committee to launch an investigation into the BIA and the Department of the Interior regarding their handling of the affairs of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. The warriors also demanded an investigation into the 371 treaties between the Native Nations and the Federal Government, all of which had been broken by the United States.

After 71 days, the Siege at Wounded Knee had come to an end; with the government making nearly 1200 arrests. But this would only mark the beginning of what was known as the "Reign of Terror" instigated by the FBI and the BIA. During the three years following Wounded Knee, 64 tribal members were unsolved murder victims, 300 harassed and beaten, and 562 arrests were made, and of these arrests only 15 people were convicted of any crime. A large price to pay for 71 days as a free people on the land of one's ancestors.

The American Indian Movement (AIM) was formed at the end of the '60s, a modern day traditional warrior society. It was one of the outcomes of the civil rights movement and the Vietnam war, where American Indians had fought with the US Military only to come back to their people and to find that they have no rights whatsoever.

The objective of AIM is to build awareness of the ongoing decimation of the Indian people and to advance the goal of a united front of indigenous people around the world, the people who have been driven from and robbed of their lands and livelihoods, people who are being driven in the thousands from their native lands because corporate business covets their resources.


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All pages by DAVYDENKO
Page last updated: Mar 07 2013



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