“Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.”
ATTRIBUTED TO DR. SEUSS
INDIANS. They are so often imagined, but so infrequently well understood.
I grew up in a borderland. My family moved a couple times, but we usually lived on or near the Leech Lake Reservation in northern Minnesota. I went to school in the nearby town of Bemidji with plenty of other native kids and many more whites. The town’s racial composition has changed a lot since then, but in the 1970s and 1980s, it was all whites and Indians. Although the town is surrounded by the three largest reservations in Minnesota (in geographic size and population), the two worlds rarely interacted. The school took kids on field trips to Minneapolis, 225 miles away, rather than to the neighboring native communities. But Indians could be terrifying to members of the white community, and when presented with angry looks and few opportunities to safely learn about their neighbors and the first people of the land, they usually just stuck to their imaginings.
That borderland I grew up in was more than an awkward physical nexus of races and communities. It was a divided and confusing place politically, legally, intellectually, and culturally. The tribes maintained their own governments and rarely got involved in the American political process, especially at the local level. And no outsider ever felt like he or she had any authority to ask about, much less comment on or participate in, anything happening on the rez. The web of contradictory jurisdictions and agencies that dealt with criminal affairs and Indian land never made much sense to anyone of any race.
Indians hadn’t written many books, and school districts and the general public would never open up to Vine Deloria, Jr., and the few other “radical” Indians who had actually managed to get anything in print. Most of the elders on the rez had gone to government-run residential boarding schools. Their children (the parental generation of my youth) had developed a serious distrust of the government and educational institutions as a result. Educators and administrators resented the parents’ absence at school conferences and the truancy issues for many native students, but nobody talked about the bigger issues, which sat like a giant bear in the corner of the room every time the schools and native families interacted. My family and every one of my uncles and aunts harvested wild rice, snared rabbits, and made maple syrup every year, but most of my nonnative peers did not.
Although I had several painful experiences with overt racial discrimination as a young person, I had some great friends in high school. I was truly inspired by my history teacher, Thomas Galarneault, whose lectures and support made a significant contribution to my lifelong interest in education and history. I had encouragement from Marlene Bergstrom in the guidance office. And I was a great student. But the borderland was a bramble on every level. I was tired of the tension, the confusion, and the mean-spirited statements of my peers about “drunken Indians.” I applied to Princeton University on a whim and surprised everyone, from my peers to my parents and especially myself, when I got in. I had found a way out. Or I thought I had.
I was looking forward to a breath of fresh air and a respite from the borderland of my youth as much as I was to the challenges of a new stage of life. And those years remain some of my most treasured. But I still had a profoundly well-educated Princetonian ask me, “Where is your tomahawk?” Another time, a woman approached me in the college gymnasium and exclaimed, “You have the most beautiful red skin.” I was too flabbergasted to respond. I took a friend to see Dances with Wolves and was told, “Your people have a beautiful culture.” My people come from the Great Lakes rather than the Plains and from the modern age rather than the nineteenth century, but again I had no response. I made many lifelong friends at college, and they supported but also challenged me with questions like, “Why should Indians have reservations?”
By my junior year I realized I had not escaped the borderland. No matter how far I traveled, the haze engulfed everyone I met. Indians were imagined, not understood. And there was a dearth of resources and opportunities to do anything about it. I wanted to come home.
Homesick though I was, I was not going to be another statistic by dropping out of school. I toughed it out at college but started a quest to learn more about myself. I no longer wanted to run from the borderland: I wanted to understand it better and do something to make it easier for others to traverse.
While at Princeton, I heard that a Comanche medicine woman named Barrett Eagle Bear was coming to New Jersey from Texas to run sweat lodge ceremonies. Hungry for a taste of home, I drove out to the wooded area where she would conduct her ceremony and found, to my great surprise, over fifty naked white people standing in the woods, waiting. One man was holding a staff adorned with a pair of deer antlers and chicken feathers. With great trepidation, I opened the car door. I was immediately approached by a naked white woman, roughly sixty years of age and around 190 pounds. She folded me into a tight embrace, saying, “I am so sorry for what my people have done to your people.”
Throughout my life, if I have ever thought or said that I had seen it all, I was soon shown something new. Part of me was furious at what looked like a bunch of white people playing Indian. This was not real. I started to question whether Eagle Bear was even Indian for allowing the charade. Part of me wanted to laugh, because anyone who got a hug like that from a naked elder really couldn’t do anything else. But as I carefully separated myself from her embrace, I looked at her face. She was filled with genuine remorse, on the verge of tears. Respect was a value deeply embedded in my being from my upbringing and cultural experience. Lines on her face showed the wisdom of age and experience. I couldn’t laugh. And I couldn’t just yell at her or give her a mean look and drive away. And in a flash, my running from the borderlands and my desire to find a way for others to travel through them brought me an epiphany.
I was not just another Indian. No Indian really is. Because we are so often imagined and so infrequently understood, I was (both unfairly and rightly) an ambassador for my people. If the morass of misunderstandings that made growing up native so frustrating for me was ever to be remedied, I would have to do my part to shine some light on the brambles and try to clear a path for others. As that old woman looked up at me, I knew that I was probably the first Indian she had ever met and, though it wasn’t fair to anyone, my reaction would be a testament to the character of my entire race. So I didn’t laugh. I didn’t rise to anger. I didn’t call her out or drive away. I very politely said, “Could you put some clothes on? I would love to talk to you about all of this.”
She put some clothes on. And we talked. I explained that for ceremonies at home we usually covered up in the presence of others, especially with men and women present. We discussed the ceremony, geography, custom, and practice. We talked about history. I explained my feeling that guilt for whites and anger for Indians were doing nothing to make the world a better place, especially for the people who harbored such emotions, understandable though they are. The secret was to turn anger and guilt into positive action.
That’s how I learned a few things from an unexpected and unlikely source in the New Jersey woods. I learned something about the borderland. Communication requires a safe space for discourse, an opportunity for genuine connection, and authentic, reliable information. And I learned something about myself.
When I commit to something, I always go all the way. The decks on my house could withstand an earthquake measuring 6.0 on the Richter scale. I have nine children. I take my job as role model for my children and ambassador for my people seriously. I don’t drink alcohol—not because I am a recovering addict (I have never inhaled anything, nor blacked out or vomited from drink) but because I want to send a message to my own people and to others. I want to redefine suppositions about what it means to be native. Abstaining is also important to the people whom I now serve at ceremonies: they are looking for a clean, sober place to heal, relying upon the integrity of the people who help at those ceremonies to provide that environment.
I gave up on my early plans of becoming an investment banker or lawyer. I never would have been happy in those roles. Instead, I graduated from Princeton with plans to walk the earth, which I did successfully for several months before I had to take a job. But I dedicated myself to the pursuit of my tribal language, culture, and history. I eventually went to graduate school and entered academia. Through it all, I maintained one foot in the wigwam and one in the ivory tower, but I still see the borderland every day out my bedroom window.
This book is designed as a tool to help all people navigate that space. Readers can read straight through, peruse the sections, or use the contents and index to find answers to specific questions. Above all, I want this work to provide a place for people to get answers. It offers a critical first step to comfortably dispel erroneous imaginings and develop deeper understandings.
I have now given hundreds of public lectures on a variety of subjects. This book first emerged as part of the question and answer sessions that followed my presentations. Within these safe spaces, people raised a torrent of questions. Although curricula is constantly under revision in public schools, we still have a long way to go to make it easy for native and nonnative peoples to learn about Indian history, culture, and current events. A good friend of mine, Michael Meuers, eventually suggested the title of this book as the headline for some of my public lectures. Since then, the appeal of this subject has grown dramatically, bringing me all over the United States and Canada to conduct teacher trainings and give public speeches.
Before launching into the substance of the questions and answers that form the guts of this book, I also want to make a major disclaimer. Just as no white person can speak for all white people, I cannot speak for all Indians. It would be unfair to ask, “What do all white people think about abortion?” Of course, there is a diversity of opinion on that subject and nearly every other important subject you may raise. It is the same for Indians. My experiences have taught me what questions people have about Indians, and I am motivated to pull those questions together here and address them. I write mostly about the Ojibwe, because that is what I know, and in many cases you will gain specific rather than generic answers. But I also provide examples and information about a few of the hundreds of other Indian nations that have populated this continent.
Some of the current issues I engage—including subjects of identity, tribal citizenship, casinos, mascots, and cultural revitalization—evoke strong and divergent responses from native people. I am candidly giving my opinions, and the difference between fact and opinion should be clear to you. But I cannot and do not claim to represent “the native view” in this book. My responses reflect only the view of one native person, and they have to be read with this understanding. Perhaps, given answers to the questions in this work, you will feel better able to seek out different opinions from other native people.
Thank you for taking the time to read this book. I sincerely hope that it will make a contribution to breaking down barriers and advancing understanding of Indians for all people.