Remembering Russell Means
By Stephen Lendman
October 25, 2012 "Information
Clearing House"
- Over a year ago, he knew he had inoperable esophageal
cancer. It spread to his tongue, lymph nodes and lungs. It
was just a matter of time. On October 22, it took him. His
journey to the spirit world began.
In August 2011, he said:
"I'm not going to argue with the Great Mystery. Lakota
belief is that death is a change of worlds. And I believe
like my dad believed."
"When it's my time to go, it's my time to go. I've told
people after I die, I'm coming back as lightning. When it
zaps the White House, they'll know it's me."
Earlier he said:
"The Universe which controls all life, has a female and male
balance that is prevalent throughout our Sacred Grandmother,
the Earth."
"This balance has to be acknowledged and become the
determining factor in all of one’s decisions, be they
spiritual, social, healthful, educational or economical."
On October 24, he'll be honored in Pine Ridge, SD, the
Republic of Lakota. Other gatherings will also celebrate his
life and work.
Speaking for herself and children, Means' wife, Pearl Daniel
Means, said the following:
"Hello our relatives. Our dad and husband, now walks among
our ancestors. He began his journey to the spirit world at
4:44 am, with the Morning Star, at his home and ranch in
Porcupine."
"There will be four opportunities for the people to honor
his life, to be announced at a later date. Thank you for
your prayers and continued support. We love you. As our dad
and husband would always say, 'May the Great Mystery
continue to guide and protect the paths of you and your
loved ones.' "
World headlines spread the news. The New York Times said
"Russell Means, Who Clashed With Law as He Fought for
Indians, Is Dead at 72." He was America's "best known Indian
since Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse."
In 1968, he joined the American Indian Movement (AIM). In
1970, he became its national director. In 1995, he published
his autobiography titled, "Where White Men Fear to Tread."
"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" author Dee Brown said
"reading Means' story is essential for any clear
understanding of American Indians during the last half of
the twentieth century."
New York Times writer Robert McFadden said:
Shortly before being diagnosed with inoperable throat
cancer, he "cut off his braids. (It was) a gesture of
mourning for his people. In Lakota lore, he explained, the
hair holds memories, and mourners often cut it to release
those memories, and the people in them, to the spirit
world."
The Washington Post headlined "Russell Means dies at 72;
American Indian activist helped lead uprising at Wounded
Knee," saying:
"(S)elf-styled modern Indian warrior….forced international
attention on the plight of Native Americans for more than
four decades."
Reuters headlined "American Indian activist Russell Means
dead at 72," saying:
He waged a "lifelong campaign (struggling for) the rights
and dignity of his people…."
AP called him "a modern Indian warrior. He railed against
broken treaties, fought for the return of stolen land, and
even took up arms against the federal government."
The Los Angeles Times said "he helped thrust the plight of
Native Americans into the national spotlight."
Press TV called him "an outspoken champion of American
Indian rights."
Means once said, "Every policy now the Palestinians are
enduring was practiced on the American Indians."
"What the American Indian Movement says is that the American
Indians are the Palestinians of the United States, and the
Palestinians are the American Indians of Europe."
He called Indian lands open air concentration camps, saying:
"If you chose to stay on the reservation, you are guaranteed
to be poor, unless you are part of the colonial apparatus
set up by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, set up the United
States."
Prisoner of conscience Leonard Peltier issued a statement,
saying in part:
"I wish I was there to talk with you in person and share
with you the sorrow that I feel with the passing of Russell
Means, my brother, my friend, and inspiration on many
levels."
"Russell Means will always be an icon whenever the American
Indian Movement is spoken of and whenever people talk about
the changes that took place, the changes that are taking
place now for Indian people."
"We'll see you again my brother Russell, in some other time
and in some other place, we will always be your friend, and
we will always look forward to seeing your face. Mitakuye
Oyasin (All Are Related from a traditional Lakota Sioux
prayer)."
Russell Means.com said he "lived a life like few others in
this century…" He disliked being called a Native American.
"The one thing I've always maintained is that I'm an
American Indian."
"Everyone who's born in the Western Hemisphere is a Native
American. We are all Native Americans."
He also said he put "American" before ethnicity. "I'm not a
hyphenated African-American or Irish-American or
Jewish-American or Mexican-American."
Means was born on November 10, 1939 in Wanblee, SD, on the
Pine Ridge Oglala Lakota Sioux Indian Reservation. With
Dennis Banks and Leonard Peltier, he participated in the
1973 Wounded Knee siege and tragedy.
For 71 days, they and other AIM activists held off hundreds
off FBI thugs, federal marshals, National Guard troops, and
complicit Indian vigilantes. They were called "GOONS
(Guardians of Our Oglala Nation)." They sold out for
whatever benefits they got in return.
On February 27, Oglala Sioux activists reclaimed Wounded
Knee. They wanted their 1868 treaty rights honored.
It stated that "(t)he government of the United States
desires peace, and its honor is hereby pledged to keep it."
It also reaffirmed all Indian rights granted under the 1851
Treaty.
From 1778 - 1871, Washington negotiated 372 treaties. All
were systematically spurned.
At Wounded Knee, AIM represented over 75 Indian Nations. For
nearly two and a half months, they held on. They were free.
It wasn't easy. Washington cut off electricity. Food and
other essential deliveries were blocked.
Activists were shot and killed. When it ended, hundreds of
arrests followed. An FBI/Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
reign of terror began. It lasted three years.
Roving death squads murdered at least 342 AIM members and
supporters. Hundreds more were harassed and beaten. Many
more were arrested. Their crime was wanting to live free on
their own land.
Leonard Peltier was victimized. He was wrongfully convicted
on two first-degree murder counts. On June 1, 1977, he got
two consecutive life sentences.
Despite bogus charges and prosecutorial injustice, he's been
denied parole, retrial, clemency, or a pardon. Other
nations, past and present congressional members, and
hundreds of world dignitaries say he should be
unconditionally released.
Means was more fortunate. He stayed free to remain active.
In 1978, he joined The Longest Walk. Participants protested
racist anti-Indian legislation at that time. It included
forced sterilization of Indian women.
Earlier in 1964, Means, his father, and others occupied
Alcatraz. They did so peacefully in accordance with their
rights. According to broken treaty obligations, abandoned
prison property belongs to Indian tribes.
On December 17, 2007, Means and other Lakota people went to
Washington. They declared independence. They called it "the
latest step in the longest running legal battle" in history.
It's not a cessation, they said. It's a lawful "unilateral
withdrawal" from treaty obligations permitted under the 1969
Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.
Means said:
"We are no longer citizens of the United States of America
and all those who live in the five-state area that
encompasses our country are free to join us."
"We offer citizenship to anyone provided they renounce their
US citizenship."
"United States colonial rule is at an end."
Signed documents were delivered to the State Department.
Sovereignty was declared. The Republic of Lakota was
established. It's based on the 1851 Treaty of Fort Laramie.
It created the Great Lakota (Sioux) Nation. It states in
part:
"The territory of the Sioux or Dahcotah Nation, commencing
the mouth of the White Earth River, on the Missouri River;
thence in a southwesterly direction to the forks of the
Platte River; thence up the north fork of the Platte River
to a point known as the Red Buts, or where the road leaves
the river; thence along the range of mountains known as the
Black Hills, to the head-waters of Heart River; thence down
Heart River to its mouth; and thence down the Missouri River
to the place of beginning."
It gave Lakota people portions of northern Nebraska, half of
South Dakota, one-fourth of North Dakota, one-fifth of
Montana, and 20% of Wyoming.
It didn't matter. Unilateral withdrawal from all treaties
and agreements became policy. America never honored its own.
On September 29, 2012 Means reiterated what he and others
declared in December 2007, saying:
"We are no longer citizens of the United States of America
and all those who live in the five state area that
encompasses our country are free to join us."
He cited longstanding problems and grievances. They include
land theft, resource plunder, poverty, unemployment,
repression, and overall human deprivation. All of it remains
out of sight and mind.
Means had three weeks to live. Lakota spokesman Salomon
called his death a "great loss." It came a day after former
Senator George McGovern died. He and former Senator James
Abourezk tried to negotiate an equitable Wounded Knee
settlement.
Commenting on Means and McGovern, Abourezk said he "lost two
good friends in a matter of two to three days. I don't
pretend to understand it."
Death, of course, has final say. What matters most is
showing up every day and working for right over wrong. Means
said he wants to be remembered as an American Indian
patriot. He spent most of his adult life proving it.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen
[at] sbcglobal.net. His new book is titled "How Wall
Street Fleeces America: Privatized Banking, Government
Collusion and Class War"
http://www.claritypress.com/Lendman.html
Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to
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