Sitting Bull: His Life and Legacy by Ernie LaPointe with Tom Libby
—
00:00 Welcome and Introduction – Sitting Bull: His Life and Legacy by Ernie LaPointe.
06:00 Native culture allows name changes throughout life.
13:38 Modern technology bridges gaps in cultural understanding.
17:34 American culture lacks traditional family guidance markers.
23:53 Technology access unites kids; written word preserves heritage.
30:55 Totake requests sacred Hunka bond, creating peace.
36:05 Expect deeper bond, like becoming blood brothers.
38:23 Personal monetization involves meaningful, significant exchanges.
47:44 Ernie demands apology for healing reconciliation.
53:07 Ensure cultural traditions endure through generations.
54:31 Individual learns, community member teaches; train trainers.
01:00:12 Women marry later, manage homes; Lakota traditions.
01:07:33 He chose pain despite having other options.
01:14:47 Fertility ceremony with piercing and sun gazing.
01:20:48 Tribal affiliation diluted; strict membership criteria imposed.
01:21:57 Federal government’s actions alienate native people unjustly.
—
Listen to Leadership Lessons From The Great Books #79 – Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West by Dee Brown w/Tom Libby here–>https://share.transistor.fm/s/35ce4ef3
—
Opening and closing themes composed by Brian Sanyshyn of Brian Sanyshyn Music.
—
- Pick up your copy of 12 Rules for Leaders: The Foundation of Intentional Leadership NOW on AMAZON!
- Check out the 2022 Leadership Lessons From the Great Books podcast reading list!
—
- Subscribe to the Leadership Lessons From The Great Books Podcast: https://bit.ly/LLFTGBSubscribe
- Check out HSCT Publishing at: https://www.hsctpublishing.com/.
- Check out LeadingKeys at: https://www.leadingkeys.com/
- Check out Leadership ToolBox at: https://leadershiptoolbox.us/
- Contact HSCT for more information at 1-833-216-8296 to schedule a full DEMO of LeadingKeys with one of our team members.
—
- Leadership ToolBox website: https://leadershiptoolbox.us/.
- Leadership ToolBox LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ldrshptlbx/.
- Leadership ToolBox YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@leadershiptoolbox/videos
- Leadership ToolBox Twitter: https://twitter.com/ldrshptlbx.
- Leadership ToolBox IG: https://www.instagram.com/leadershiptoolboxus/.
- Leadership ToolBox FB: https://www.facebook.com/LdrshpTl
★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
00:00:01,360 –> 00:00:05,200
Hello. My name is Jesan Sorrells, and this is the
2
00:00:05,200 –> 00:00:08,580
Leadership Lessons from the Great Books podcast, episode
3
00:00:08,720 –> 00:00:12,495
number 125. This is
4
00:00:12,495 –> 00:00:16,335
our big 100 and 25th episode. That means that we are
5
00:00:16,335 –> 00:00:19,955
25 episodes away from a 150 episodes, and
6
00:00:20,095 –> 00:00:23,315
that also means we’re 75 episodes away from
7
00:00:24,015 –> 00:00:27,720
200 episodes. I don’t know what we’re gonna do for our 200th. We did
8
00:00:28,260 –> 00:00:31,539
a panel discussion for our 100th episode. I don’t know what we do for 200th,
9
00:00:31,539 –> 00:00:35,059
but we’ll worry about that when we get there. And,
10
00:00:35,300 –> 00:00:38,360
so with our book today, a book that
11
00:00:38,980 –> 00:00:40,040
is a
12
00:00:42,745 –> 00:00:46,265
it’s an extension of some of the information that we
13
00:00:46,265 –> 00:00:49,725
covered in, the episode number 79,
14
00:00:50,344 –> 00:00:53,864
where we talked about Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee with Dee
15
00:00:53,864 –> 00:00:57,690
Brown. This book that we are going to
16
00:00:57,690 –> 00:01:01,530
talk about today and the individual who is talked about in
17
00:01:01,530 –> 00:01:05,150
this book is, as it says on the back of the book, an iconic
18
00:01:05,530 –> 00:01:08,695
legend, particularly in American
19
00:01:08,915 –> 00:01:12,755
history, but also for all of our international listeners who may not know anything
20
00:01:12,755 –> 00:01:16,195
about American history, was very important to the
21
00:01:16,195 –> 00:01:19,895
settling and the resistance towards the settling
22
00:01:20,355 –> 00:01:22,375
of the American west.
23
00:01:24,380 –> 00:01:27,820
This book is written from the perspective of an
24
00:01:27,820 –> 00:01:31,420
individual 3 generations away from
25
00:01:31,420 –> 00:01:35,260
this iconic legend. And one of the things that jumped out
26
00:01:35,260 –> 00:01:38,625
to me today, and I’m gonna talk with, Tom about this today,
27
00:01:40,045 –> 00:01:43,805
it is an attempt to write the ship
28
00:01:43,805 –> 00:01:47,565
of legacy, for not
29
00:01:47,565 –> 00:01:51,010
only this individual and not only for his family,
30
00:01:51,950 –> 00:01:55,410
but also to attempt to write the ship of legacy
31
00:01:55,790 –> 00:01:59,090
for future generations, before time
32
00:01:59,390 –> 00:02:02,925
runs out. So the book that we will be covering
33
00:02:02,925 –> 00:02:06,525
today, and, yes, we are recording this on Indigenous
34
00:02:06,525 –> 00:02:09,885
Peoples’ Day or as some folks still know it in the United States, Columbus
35
00:02:09,885 –> 00:02:13,485
Day, so it’s ironic that we are recording
36
00:02:13,485 –> 00:02:17,230
this today. The book that we will be covering is Sitting
37
00:02:17,230 –> 00:02:20,990
Bull, his life and legacy. See it on
38
00:02:20,990 –> 00:02:24,510
the video there by Ernie Lapointe, the
39
00:02:24,510 –> 00:02:28,030
great grandson, proved through genetic testing, by the way, in
40
00:02:28,030 –> 00:02:31,445
2009, of Sitting Bull.
41
00:02:32,305 –> 00:02:35,285
And, of course, today, we are going to be joined in our conversation
42
00:02:35,745 –> 00:02:39,585
around the legend of Sitting Bull and the life and legacy of
43
00:02:39,585 –> 00:02:43,285
Sitting Bull with our regular cohost, Tom Libby.
44
00:02:43,745 –> 00:02:47,510
How are you doing, Tom? I am doing fantastic today. Hey,
45
00:02:47,510 –> 00:02:49,690
son. Alrighty. So
46
00:02:51,590 –> 00:02:54,390
you will be happy to know, by the way, that I did indeed once I
47
00:02:54,390 –> 00:02:58,070
finished reading this book, I went and cross referenced whatever Dee Brown had been talking
48
00:02:58,070 –> 00:03:01,515
about. Yep. And I was like, oh, that’s where the gaps
49
00:03:01,515 –> 00:03:05,194
are. And so we could talk about we could talk about the gaps in
50
00:03:05,194 –> 00:03:08,875
Dee Brown’s sort of research, which Ernie Lapointe does address a little
51
00:03:08,875 –> 00:03:12,635
bit in here, but that’s not really his main focus. So we can talk a
52
00:03:12,635 –> 00:03:16,360
little bit about that today. And, of course, you know, what does it mean
53
00:03:16,360 –> 00:03:20,060
to have an oral tradition actually actually written down?
54
00:03:21,320 –> 00:03:25,160
There’s another one too by, Robert Utley that was decent as well. I
55
00:03:25,160 –> 00:03:28,920
don’t know if, people I think that was printed in 2008 or something
56
00:03:28,920 –> 00:03:32,515
like that. There was Okay. There was a decent book as well. So between the
57
00:03:32,515 –> 00:03:35,974
3, I think the 3 books paint a a decent picture.
58
00:03:36,194 –> 00:03:39,555
Yeah. Pretty well on picture. And it’s really hard to kinda get
59
00:03:39,555 –> 00:03:43,260
ahold around, Sitting Bull for
60
00:03:43,260 –> 00:03:46,080
a whole variety of reasons.
61
00:03:46,940 –> 00:03:50,560
And, and I think it starts with understanding
62
00:03:55,825 –> 00:03:59,665
I think it starts with understanding who Sitting Bull was and sort
63
00:03:59,665 –> 00:04:03,265
of how he earned his name. So I wanna wanna start
64
00:04:03,265 –> 00:04:07,045
with that because, his name is not Sitting Bull.
65
00:04:07,584 –> 00:04:09,265
That is not that is not his his
66
00:04:11,360 –> 00:04:14,080
what’s the appropriate term? Is that his native name? I I I don’t know what
67
00:04:14,080 –> 00:04:17,680
the appropriate term is there because in in African American culture, we call it something
68
00:04:17,680 –> 00:04:21,279
else. Yeah. So Sitting Bull Sitting Bull is is Sitting Bull is a is a
69
00:04:21,279 –> 00:04:24,960
translation. Right? So his Okay. His actual his actual name and,
70
00:04:24,960 –> 00:04:28,805
again, part part of it is because, and this happens
71
00:04:28,805 –> 00:04:32,565
even today in in translation. Like, when you hear the words, you know,
72
00:04:32,565 –> 00:04:35,545
lost in translation, there’s a reason that that phrase exists
73
00:04:36,005 –> 00:04:39,545
because a lot of times, there are either words or grammatical
74
00:04:39,845 –> 00:04:43,280
structure or just the, you know, the ways in which
75
00:04:43,660 –> 00:04:47,100
we, the way in which we
76
00:04:47,100 –> 00:04:50,860
we talk just changes certain things.
77
00:04:50,860 –> 00:04:54,479
Like, I so I I was, you know, I was very adamant
78
00:04:54,540 –> 00:04:58,044
with, like, with my name that people didn’t reverse it. So my
79
00:04:58,044 –> 00:05:01,725
name in my language, keep up with
80
00:05:01,725 –> 00:05:05,264
that that con is legit, like, literally eagle
81
00:05:05,405 –> 00:05:09,245
rising, and everybody wants to reverse it because the way of the
82
00:05:09,245 –> 00:05:13,050
way that the English sentence structure is, they naturally wanna
83
00:05:13,050 –> 00:05:16,570
say rising eagle. Right? Like it’s like a it’s like a natural thing, and that’s
84
00:05:16,570 –> 00:05:20,250
kinda happened a lot throughout history of of the native. So you’re right.
85
00:05:20,250 –> 00:05:23,150
His his official, his actual,
86
00:05:24,090 –> 00:05:27,265
name is not Sitting Bull. It’s a that is an abbreviated
87
00:05:27,485 –> 00:05:31,245
or, what is the term I would
88
00:05:31,245 –> 00:05:34,625
use, paraphrased, I guess. Like, it’s it’s simplified,
89
00:05:35,085 –> 00:05:38,460
version of his of his actual. And you can you can read you can read
90
00:05:38,460 –> 00:05:40,620
the actual right out of the book, I would imagine, or you already I don’t
91
00:05:40,620 –> 00:05:44,139
know if you already know it. But I I well, and I didn’t. And
92
00:05:44,139 –> 00:05:47,900
so getting the book and reading it, that was first sort
93
00:05:47,900 –> 00:05:51,705
of the first sort of leapfrog, I guess, I had to make
94
00:05:51,705 –> 00:05:55,145
over it over over over a number of different things in the book. But How
95
00:05:55,145 –> 00:05:58,905
about how about his birth name? Because his birth name wasn’t Sitting Bull either.
96
00:05:58,905 –> 00:06:02,745
No. Because we’re doing sensible. And that’s and that’s something that people don’t
97
00:06:02,745 –> 00:06:06,590
understand about the the native culture either is that your name
98
00:06:06,590 –> 00:06:10,210
can change throughout your life, and it’s usually dependent on,
99
00:06:12,110 –> 00:06:15,710
something again, on your birth, it’s something that somebody in
100
00:06:15,710 –> 00:06:19,345
your family as an elder sees in the brand new
101
00:06:19,345 –> 00:06:23,125
baby that some sort of, you know, spiritual component
102
00:06:23,264 –> 00:06:27,025
or physical characteristic or something like that that they named the baby out of
103
00:06:27,025 –> 00:06:30,564
right out the gate. And then you develop into an individual,
104
00:06:30,784 –> 00:06:34,470
a person that, they may rename you because that
105
00:06:34,470 –> 00:06:38,150
name doesn’t apply anymore. Like, the name doesn’t you know, it’s not it’s
106
00:06:38,150 –> 00:06:41,450
not relevant to you or your personality traits or your
107
00:06:41,910 –> 00:06:45,690
accomplishments have given you a higher level of respect
108
00:06:45,750 –> 00:06:49,075
or a higher, you know, status symbol that
109
00:06:49,135 –> 00:06:52,975
requires a a more appropriate name of of sorts. So if
110
00:06:52,975 –> 00:06:55,775
you I don’t know. If you wanna read them, I know, like, you know, his
111
00:06:55,775 –> 00:06:59,455
his birth name is different than his his name after, his,
112
00:06:59,935 –> 00:07:03,020
10th or 14th. It’s either 10th or 14th
113
00:07:03,960 –> 00:07:07,720
birthday where Mhmm. He was really recognized as, you know, becoming a
114
00:07:07,720 –> 00:07:11,320
man and that kind of stuff. So it was Yeah. We’re gonna let’s let’s get
115
00:07:11,320 –> 00:07:14,280
into that part because that’s that’s sort of where we I think we should start.
116
00:07:14,280 –> 00:07:18,025
So I’m going to pick up directly from Sitting Bull, His Life and Legacy
117
00:07:18,025 –> 00:07:21,865
by Ernie Lapointe. And I wanna I wanna talk about the provenance of this book
118
00:07:21,865 –> 00:07:24,505
too and sort of how it came about because I think that’s all very important
119
00:07:24,505 –> 00:07:27,725
for leaders to, to know. And, of course, as usual,
120
00:07:28,250 –> 00:07:31,630
we will find the leadership lessons that are in
121
00:07:31,690 –> 00:07:35,290
this this, this this man’s
122
00:07:35,290 –> 00:07:38,970
life. Alright. From Sidney Bull, his life and
123
00:07:38,970 –> 00:07:40,510
legacy by earning the point.
124
00:07:43,085 –> 00:07:46,225
The life of this Lakota Sundancer began back in 18/31.
125
00:07:47,165 –> 00:07:50,545
This is when the Bad Bow Band of the Hunkpapa tribe of
126
00:07:51,005 –> 00:07:54,685
the Tietunwa Lakota nation was camped on the banks of the
127
00:07:54,685 –> 00:07:57,745
Elk River, now known as the Yellowstone River in Montana.
128
00:07:58,460 –> 00:08:02,139
Tiantunwa means looking for a home site. These people travel
129
00:08:02,139 –> 00:08:05,740
over vast areas pursuing the buffalo and roaming freely through
130
00:08:05,740 –> 00:08:09,580
immense open territories. The whites mispronounced their name and
131
00:08:09,580 –> 00:08:13,195
called them Teton. The child was the 2nd of 4
132
00:08:13,195 –> 00:08:17,035
children born to her holy door woman and returns again and was
133
00:08:17,035 –> 00:08:20,795
to be their only son. His older sister was good feather woman,
134
00:08:20,795 –> 00:08:24,155
while his younger twin sisters were called twin woman and brown
135
00:08:24,155 –> 00:08:27,879
shawl woman. Returns again was very proud
136
00:08:27,879 –> 00:08:31,500
of his newborn son and gave the infant his childhood name, jumping badger.
137
00:08:32,120 –> 00:08:35,799
In Lakota culture, the young boy received his first name from
138
00:08:35,799 –> 00:08:39,640
something his father had seen or experienced. His adult
139
00:08:39,640 –> 00:08:43,304
name was given to acknowledge a noteworthy deed he accomplished
140
00:08:43,684 –> 00:08:46,024
in his adolescence or adulthood.
141
00:08:47,925 –> 00:08:51,764
Now going to make another point here, then I’m
142
00:08:51,764 –> 00:08:55,350
gonna skip to where he gets his his name changed. Jumping
143
00:08:55,350 –> 00:08:59,190
badger was different from other boys his age. Where the others
144
00:08:59,190 –> 00:09:02,950
were adventurous, eager, and often reckless, jumping badger always held back
145
00:09:02,950 –> 00:09:06,790
thinking before he leaped. If he had lived in this century, he would have
146
00:09:06,790 –> 00:09:10,465
been considered a gifted child and would have been praised for his self discipline and
147
00:09:10,465 –> 00:09:13,365
for always analyzing everything before he acted.
148
00:09:14,465 –> 00:09:17,825
His own people, though, misunderstood thinking his behavior was
149
00:09:17,825 –> 00:09:21,585
hesitant and feeble. They gave him a nickname. They started calling
150
00:09:21,585 –> 00:09:25,280
him Hunkensy. No. Sorry. Hunk Kesne.
151
00:09:25,420 –> 00:09:28,080
Sorry. Slow moving or weak.
152
00:09:29,500 –> 00:09:32,620
Now in Lakota culture, when a boy reached a certain age, his father would approach
153
00:09:32,620 –> 00:09:35,980
either a brother or a brother-in-law. He would give this trusted man a gift and
154
00:09:35,980 –> 00:09:39,575
a filled pipe. Then the father would ask for his help in sharing with his
155
00:09:39,575 –> 00:09:43,335
son the Lakota way of being. Through example and stories, the uncle will
156
00:09:43,335 –> 00:09:46,295
show the boy how to be a man, a warrior, and a provider for his
157
00:09:46,295 –> 00:09:50,075
family. For a Lakota boy, while his father was a familiar
158
00:09:50,135 –> 00:09:53,839
figure for whom he might feel great affection, His uncle was
159
00:09:53,839 –> 00:09:57,680
an authority, a person to be respected and admired. A
160
00:09:57,680 –> 00:10:00,500
boy would listen to his uncle.
161
00:10:02,560 –> 00:10:06,015
Now I’m gonna pause there. That’s the first thing that jumped out to me,
162
00:10:07,135 –> 00:10:10,915
primarily because, oh, in our postmodern
163
00:10:11,055 –> 00:10:14,655
culture, one of the massive challenges we have with masculinity, and it is a
164
00:10:14,655 –> 00:10:18,255
gigantic challenge that no one wants to talk about, is we do not
165
00:10:18,255 –> 00:10:19,795
have any transitional
166
00:10:23,280 –> 00:10:27,040
traditions for young men. If you look at any
167
00:10:27,040 –> 00:10:30,640
tradition rights of passage. Rights of passage. Exactly. If you look at any traditional
168
00:10:30,640 –> 00:10:34,480
culture, particularly traditional religious cultures, I always I often think
169
00:10:34,480 –> 00:10:38,265
of Judaism. Right? Sure. You know, they’re going to have,
170
00:10:38,965 –> 00:10:42,725
you know, the the what is it called? The word
171
00:10:42,885 –> 00:10:46,485
now now I’m gonna lose the word. But they’re bat mitzvah. There you
172
00:10:46,485 –> 00:10:49,949
go. Bat mitzvah. They’re gonna have a bat mitzvah or a bar mitzvah for,
173
00:10:50,110 –> 00:10:53,389
bat mitzvahs for the girls. They’re gonna have a bar mitzvah. Well, e even there,
174
00:10:53,389 –> 00:10:57,170
they’re going to have a transitional ceremony for for a young man.
175
00:10:57,550 –> 00:11:00,910
Mhmm. But in African American
176
00:11:00,910 –> 00:11:04,665
culture, in majority, Caucasian culture,
177
00:11:05,524 –> 00:11:08,904
in particular in our postmodern times where we don’t value tradition,
178
00:11:09,685 –> 00:11:13,365
we’ve abandoned these transitional steps. I mean, yes, you transition
179
00:11:13,365 –> 00:11:16,725
from high school to college. You know, that’s a major transition that a lot of
180
00:11:16,725 –> 00:11:20,380
people celebrate. But at the end of the day, for a
181
00:11:20,380 –> 00:11:24,220
young man, there’s no markers or there’s very few in our
182
00:11:24,220 –> 00:11:26,940
society and culture. And that was one of the first things that jumped out to
183
00:11:26,940 –> 00:11:30,160
me about this book, and about the value
184
00:11:30,380 –> 00:11:34,125
in telling Sitting Bull’s story and
185
00:11:34,125 –> 00:11:37,485
relating that story. And it describes in
186
00:11:37,485 –> 00:11:41,185
detail his transitional, experience
187
00:11:41,565 –> 00:11:43,825
going from being a boy to being a man.
188
00:11:46,320 –> 00:11:50,080
So one of the questions I wanted to ask you before we really fully fall
189
00:11:50,080 –> 00:11:53,840
into this is, did you have a transitional experience in going from being a
190
00:11:53,840 –> 00:11:57,680
boy to being a man? And if you didn’t, why didn’t
191
00:11:57,680 –> 00:12:01,135
you? Because I didn’t have one. I just my mom was
192
00:12:01,135 –> 00:12:04,435
just like, Hey, congratulations. Go pay your bills.
193
00:12:05,135 –> 00:12:08,735
Get out. Well, I mean, that’s terrible. It wasn’t nearly like that.
194
00:12:08,735 –> 00:12:11,055
It, I, I, I shouldn’t throw my brother on the bus like that. It wasn’t
195
00:12:11,055 –> 00:12:14,460
nearly like that, but there wasn’t, there were no significant
196
00:12:14,680 –> 00:12:18,360
markers to say you’ve hit this spot in the road. There were
197
00:12:18,360 –> 00:12:21,560
no benchmarks as we say in sales. Right? To say you’ve hit this spot and
198
00:12:21,560 –> 00:12:25,240
now you can go accomplish another goal. And for me, that’s
199
00:12:25,240 –> 00:12:28,460
something that I’ve struggled with or I did struggle with for a long time,
200
00:12:29,035 –> 00:12:31,055
even going into even going into my
201
00:12:32,875 –> 00:12:36,635
adulthood. So let
202
00:12:36,635 –> 00:12:40,475
me I I I I wanna clarify, a couple things
203
00:12:40,475 –> 00:12:44,060
real quick before I answer the question. So number 1 number 1,
204
00:12:44,060 –> 00:12:47,820
just as you read this and just remember, you
205
00:12:47,820 –> 00:12:51,440
know, Sitting Bull was Hunkpapa, Sioux or Lakota
206
00:12:51,500 –> 00:12:55,180
rather. Sorry. It was a Sioux and, speaking, tribal
207
00:12:55,180 –> 00:12:58,560
affiliation out in the western part of our country. So,
208
00:12:59,655 –> 00:13:03,335
my people where I come from is in here in the northeast. So
209
00:13:03,335 –> 00:13:07,035
my people would have been, in Southeastern Canada, Northeastern
210
00:13:07,095 –> 00:13:10,695
United States, so Nova Scotia, along the main
211
00:13:10,695 –> 00:13:14,100
coastline down to about the northernmost part of Massachusetts
212
00:13:14,320 –> 00:13:17,700
around Salisbury, Gloucester, that area. And
213
00:13:18,240 –> 00:13:21,780
so the although there are some universal
214
00:13:22,880 –> 00:13:24,500
thinking, there’s some universal
215
00:13:26,634 –> 00:13:29,855
kind of stereotypes that get thrown on us.
216
00:13:30,555 –> 00:13:34,154
The actual there were actual cultural differences, right,
217
00:13:34,154 –> 00:13:37,375
between the northeast here and and the the western part of the country.
218
00:13:37,675 –> 00:13:41,290
Yeah. Today, that gap has slowed or
219
00:13:41,290 –> 00:13:44,730
shrinking, shrunken just because of the advent of modern
220
00:13:44,730 –> 00:13:48,330
technology. Like, we can see what’s happening in, with our brothers and
221
00:13:48,330 –> 00:13:51,450
sisters out in the western part of the country very easily. We have the Internet,
222
00:13:51,450 –> 00:13:55,125
things and so and so and so forth. All that being said,
223
00:13:55,345 –> 00:13:58,245
I also wanna remind our listeners here that,
224
00:13:58,865 –> 00:14:01,765
although I was when I was younger and born,
225
00:14:03,185 –> 00:14:06,945
and I was told very early on that I was native, but my biological mother
226
00:14:06,945 –> 00:14:10,750
who raised me was not native and did not subscribe to
227
00:14:10,750 –> 00:14:13,970
any of the culture or teachings, as such.
228
00:14:14,590 –> 00:14:18,110
I didn’t meet my biological father until I was 21 years
229
00:14:18,110 –> 00:14:21,790
old. And already knowing I was native, I just
230
00:14:21,790 –> 00:14:25,612
started asking a bunch of questions about how, who, what, where, how, why,
231
00:14:25,612 –> 00:14:29,415
whatever. Like, what does this mean for me? So I’ve spent the last
232
00:14:29,415 –> 00:14:33,217
30 years catching up, or at least I felt like I’ve been catching
233
00:14:33,217 –> 00:14:36,839
up over the last 30 So to answer so to answer your
234
00:14:36,839 –> 00:14:40,600
question, now so no. I didn’t have any of that
235
00:14:40,600 –> 00:14:43,899
either. I didn’t have any of that coming of age, kind of situation
236
00:14:44,360 –> 00:14:47,960
at at in the traditional way. What I did have,
237
00:14:47,960 –> 00:14:51,605
though, was and, again, I have no problem throwing
238
00:14:51,605 –> 00:14:55,285
my biological mother under the bus. Your mom sounds like a wonderful human being, and
239
00:14:55,285 –> 00:14:58,085
I would encourage you not to do that, Ehsan. And I have never met the
240
00:14:58,085 –> 00:15:01,525
woman, but she sounds, from what you’ve told me, very nice. Anyway, my
241
00:15:01,525 –> 00:15:05,045
biological mother, on the other hand, I actually remember the day
242
00:15:05,430 –> 00:15:09,110
to the day. I remember the actual day, and I won’t bore everybody with
243
00:15:09,110 –> 00:15:12,950
the, the actual logistics. I will just tell you that
244
00:15:12,950 –> 00:15:16,710
I remember the day that I went into my mother and I asked her a
245
00:15:16,710 –> 00:15:20,435
question, and she had zero answer for me,
246
00:15:20,435 –> 00:15:23,155
and I had to go figure it out on my own, and I did. And
247
00:15:23,155 –> 00:15:26,295
once I figured it out on my own, I realized I didn’t need her anymore.
248
00:15:27,475 –> 00:15:31,230
I was 11. So I was 11,
249
00:15:31,230 –> 00:15:35,070
just about turning 12, and I I felt like I needed
250
00:15:35,070 –> 00:15:38,269
her for this particular thing. And, again, I’m not going into logistics because you don’t
251
00:15:38,269 –> 00:15:41,790
need Sure. And I also don’t need listeners thinking it’s a sob story. It’s not
252
00:15:41,870 –> 00:15:45,125
Yeah. Yeah. That’s not the point of it. My point is that that coming of
253
00:15:45,125 –> 00:15:48,965
age thing for me actually did happen, but not in a traditional
254
00:15:48,965 –> 00:15:52,645
sense. It was a very postmodern sense. Like, it was Yeah. The
255
00:15:52,645 –> 00:15:56,060
very thing where I I went to her and I said I need help. I
256
00:15:56,060 –> 00:15:59,740
was in charge of my brother and sister. My brother and sister were younger. Mhmm.
257
00:15:59,740 –> 00:16:03,100
I wasn’t I wasn’t sure how to handle a particular situation. I went to her
258
00:16:03,100 –> 00:16:06,860
for help and guidance. She had no response and not even a care
259
00:16:06,860 –> 00:16:09,680
enough to try to help me find the right answer.
260
00:16:10,704 –> 00:16:14,305
So I felt like I had to figure it out on my own. I did.
261
00:16:14,305 –> 00:16:17,825
And once I did and once I realized that that what I learned and what
262
00:16:17,825 –> 00:16:20,785
I figured out was right enough
263
00:16:21,985 –> 00:16:25,620
I’m just being very careful with my words here. Absolutely. Yes. It was
264
00:16:25,620 –> 00:16:29,300
right enough that it wasn’t that it that that it made me able to move
265
00:16:29,300 –> 00:16:32,600
forward with my life. Mhmm. At that point, I literally
266
00:16:32,820 –> 00:16:36,580
stopped asking my biological mother for help. I stopped asking her for
267
00:16:36,580 –> 00:16:39,720
advice. I stopped asking her for guidance.
268
00:16:40,635 –> 00:16:43,615
She was of no use to me at that point other than
269
00:16:45,115 –> 00:16:48,555
an adult body that I needed. And I did need her adulthood because I I
270
00:16:48,555 –> 00:16:52,395
couldn’t sign documents at that point. Right. Yeah. But when I, you know, when
271
00:16:52,395 –> 00:16:56,040
it when I when I had to when it meant taking my brother or
272
00:16:56,040 –> 00:16:59,579
sister to the doctor or understanding what their medical
273
00:17:00,040 –> 00:17:03,880
needs were, I literally just needed her there to sign the document at the end
274
00:17:03,880 –> 00:17:07,345
of the day. Otherwise, it was all on me. Right.
275
00:17:07,565 –> 00:17:10,385
Right. Yeah. Mhmm. Okay. So, I mean,
276
00:17:11,085 –> 00:17:14,865
that so, again, that lack of transition.
277
00:17:15,085 –> 00:17:17,265
Right? That lack of you know?
278
00:17:20,440 –> 00:17:24,039
And I think a lot of people I don’t think your story is unusual. I
279
00:17:24,039 –> 00:17:27,400
think a lot of people have that experience. I
280
00:17:27,400 –> 00:17:31,020
agree. I also think that a lot more people have that experience
281
00:17:31,080 –> 00:17:34,775
than what we actually want to acknowledge. I agree with that too.
282
00:17:34,915 –> 00:17:38,295
Because I don’t think
283
00:17:38,675 –> 00:17:42,455
that and I’m gonna particularly
284
00:17:42,515 –> 00:17:46,055
pick on America. I don’t think that American culture has done a particularly
285
00:17:46,275 –> 00:17:49,860
great job of providing those
286
00:17:49,860 –> 00:17:53,480
markers for people because American culture didn’t think you needed them
287
00:17:54,100 –> 00:17:57,780
overall. I also
288
00:17:57,780 –> 00:18:01,215
think that well,
289
00:18:01,534 –> 00:18:05,215
traditionally, there’s a lot of weight put on Christianity and religion to
290
00:18:05,215 –> 00:18:08,755
kind of provide these markers and these pushes forward.
291
00:18:10,654 –> 00:18:13,955
And, you know, traditional Catholicism, orthodox
292
00:18:14,095 –> 00:18:17,769
Protestantism will indeed do
293
00:18:17,769 –> 00:18:21,610
some of that. But at the end of the day, to your
294
00:18:21,610 –> 00:18:25,210
point, it’s gotta come from family. And I think this is reflected in
295
00:18:25,210 –> 00:18:28,490
Sitting Bull’s story. It has to come from family and what he says about or
296
00:18:28,490 –> 00:18:32,174
what they what Ernie Lapointe says
297
00:18:32,174 –> 00:18:36,015
about the Lakota way of being. Through example, in stories, the uncle
298
00:18:36,015 –> 00:18:38,735
would show the boy how to be a man, a warrior, and a provider for
299
00:18:38,735 –> 00:18:42,575
his family, which I found that to be interesting as well because we don’t
300
00:18:42,575 –> 00:18:46,370
actually talk a whole lot about extended family. Like, I was raised by by extended
301
00:18:46,370 –> 00:18:50,130
family. Right? Like, I grew up with my grandma. And
302
00:18:50,130 –> 00:18:51,889
so I was aware that,
303
00:18:56,210 –> 00:18:58,690
well, I was aware that there were other people other than just my mother and
304
00:18:58,690 –> 00:19:02,425
my father in the world. Right? And I think with
305
00:19:02,425 –> 00:19:05,885
the atomization and the individualization of American culture,
306
00:19:06,905 –> 00:19:10,265
a lot of people aren’t getting that. Right? They’re getting it’s it’s
307
00:19:10,265 –> 00:19:14,025
it’s mom and dad, the kids of this unit, and then they’re and they’re cut
308
00:19:14,025 –> 00:19:17,460
off from the community, and then there’s none of these transitions that take place. And
309
00:19:17,460 –> 00:19:21,220
so how do you how do you navigate that, you know, in a in a
310
00:19:21,220 –> 00:19:24,900
really, quite frankly, complicated environment? And I think that’s why some many
311
00:19:24,900 –> 00:19:28,100
families one of the many reasons why families are floundering and have been for quite
312
00:19:28,100 –> 00:19:31,685
some time. Well and and I I I think the other thing too
313
00:19:31,845 –> 00:19:35,685
and and this we can talk about this probably all by itself. I hate this
314
00:19:35,685 –> 00:19:39,365
particular topic because within one generation of
315
00:19:39,365 –> 00:19:43,205
parenting, I’ve seen just drastic differences. Like, if you ask
316
00:19:43,205 –> 00:19:46,830
my my all of my kids are in their early twenties. Right?
317
00:19:46,830 –> 00:19:50,190
Actually, I lied. 1 of my sons is 29. But aside from him, they’re all
318
00:19:50,190 –> 00:19:53,790
in their they’re in their early twenties. And if you ask them what their
319
00:19:53,790 –> 00:19:57,090
childhood was like in the extended family sense,
320
00:19:57,615 –> 00:20:01,375
Extended family to them did not stop at aunts, uncles because
321
00:20:01,375 –> 00:20:05,135
it wasn’t a blood thing. It was more like you know? So, like,
322
00:20:05,135 –> 00:20:08,975
I I my my son will be very quick to tell you the difference between
323
00:20:08,975 –> 00:20:12,415
today. Like, if he was at a powwow when he was 5 or 6 or
324
00:20:12,415 –> 00:20:16,090
7 years old, every single person on that field had
325
00:20:16,090 –> 00:20:19,450
something to say about what he could or couldn’t do. Like Right. Whether they were
326
00:20:19,450 –> 00:20:22,730
whether they were blood family or not, if they were on the powwow field and
327
00:20:22,730 –> 00:20:26,544
he got yelled at by one of the elders, he was
328
00:20:26,765 –> 00:20:30,525
hesitant to come back to me to tell me what was going
329
00:20:30,525 –> 00:20:34,285
on because he knew that if that was an elder
330
00:20:34,285 –> 00:20:37,804
that I respected and he did something to offend them or to hurt their
331
00:20:37,804 –> 00:20:41,610
feeling or whatever or irritate them or whatever, that that was
332
00:20:41,610 –> 00:20:45,130
gonna be the end of his day. Like Right. Yeah. You know, like, there there
333
00:20:45,130 –> 00:20:48,810
was gonna be some severe and swift and cruel pun swift and
334
00:20:48,810 –> 00:20:52,030
cruel punishment because that and that’s how he
335
00:20:52,570 –> 00:20:56,190
developed that understanding that the elders matter. Right? Like,
336
00:20:56,250 –> 00:20:59,685
because, Right. Now he looks at kids showing up to powwows
337
00:20:59,685 –> 00:21:03,525
today, and our generation looking
338
00:21:03,525 –> 00:21:06,725
at these kids going, hey. Hey. Don’t do that. And the kid flipping us off
339
00:21:06,725 –> 00:21:10,165
or the kid saying go f whatever. My son’s sitting there
340
00:21:10,165 –> 00:21:13,870
going, oh my good lord. I’d have been dead. Like, I would’ve somebody would’ve killed
341
00:21:13,870 –> 00:21:17,070
me if I did that in my and that’s one generation. He’s only my the
342
00:21:17,070 –> 00:21:19,650
one I’m talking about. My youngest son is only 25.
343
00:21:20,590 –> 00:21:24,130
He’s he’s 25, and he notices he noticed that dramatic
344
00:21:24,270 –> 00:21:28,065
difference between when you know, 20 years ago when he was 5 versus
345
00:21:28,065 –> 00:21:31,665
today in a 5 or 6 year old. It’s insane to to to
346
00:21:31,665 –> 00:21:35,265
him to to see that difference. The whole it takes a
347
00:21:35,265 –> 00:21:38,865
village to raise a child is out the window because you’re not
348
00:21:38,865 –> 00:21:42,430
willing to have somebody else teach your
349
00:21:42,430 –> 00:21:46,110
child a lesson of right and wrong Right. Because because of
350
00:21:46,110 –> 00:21:49,710
why? Because I don’t understand. Like, if if if it’s because you don’t
351
00:21:49,710 –> 00:21:53,470
agree with their right and wrong, but that doesn’t mean that you don’t
352
00:21:53,470 –> 00:21:57,154
take it as an opportunity to teach your child that there’s a there’s
353
00:21:57,154 –> 00:22:00,835
also a difference of opinions, and people that have different opinions than
354
00:22:00,835 –> 00:22:04,294
you still matter. There’s other lessons to learn there.
355
00:22:04,434 –> 00:22:08,034
So I I don’t under I don’t you know, I see it my
356
00:22:08,034 –> 00:22:11,475
nephew my nephew has a daughter. She’s almost 3 years old, and I see it
357
00:22:11,475 –> 00:22:15,020
even with him. And and her she was at my house
358
00:22:15,020 –> 00:22:18,300
yesterday, and she went to throw some little temper tantrum at the, you know, 2
359
00:22:18,300 –> 00:22:21,740
and a half year old’s throw. And I went, oh, no. No. Not in this
360
00:22:21,740 –> 00:22:25,260
house. And, you know, my nephew’s
361
00:22:25,260 –> 00:22:29,015
reaction was, oh my god. What’s the matter? Are you alright? What
362
00:22:29,015 –> 00:22:32,054
are you thinking right now? She’s 2a half. Just tell her to cut the crap.
363
00:22:32,054 –> 00:22:34,875
Well, you know what I mean? Like, don’t So is this and so this is
364
00:22:35,255 –> 00:22:37,195
a this is something that,
365
00:22:39,495 –> 00:22:43,290
African Americans have long noted about, and I’m gonna I
366
00:22:43,370 –> 00:22:46,090
hate to do this to you folks, but I’m gonna make a racial distinction here,
367
00:22:46,090 –> 00:22:49,630
that African Americans have noted about about Caucasian parents.
368
00:22:51,450 –> 00:22:54,030
There are all kinds of things that they will do
369
00:22:55,050 –> 00:22:58,855
that are, quite frankly, racially and culturally
370
00:22:58,995 –> 00:23:02,755
based that if the skin color were different, those kids
371
00:23:02,755 –> 00:23:06,195
wouldn’t be getting away with it. They did. They just, they just wouldn’t.
372
00:23:06,195 –> 00:23:09,750
Now what’s interesting is as I’ve
373
00:23:09,750 –> 00:23:13,430
gotten older, I attribute that less to race and more
374
00:23:13,430 –> 00:23:17,030
to class because I see classes of people doing different
375
00:23:17,030 –> 00:23:20,810
things regardless of race that other classes
376
00:23:20,950 –> 00:23:24,044
won’t do regardless of race. Right? Yeah.
377
00:23:25,385 –> 00:23:29,144
And so I don’t know how you I have no
378
00:23:29,144 –> 00:23:31,965
idea. I I I mean, to your point, like, I
379
00:23:32,825 –> 00:23:34,605
I have no idea how
380
00:23:41,080 –> 00:23:43,659
I have no idea how you preserve tradition and culture,
381
00:23:47,799 –> 00:23:51,639
walking up ill against everything that you see in
382
00:23:51,639 –> 00:23:54,415
the dominant structure. Right?
383
00:23:55,195 –> 00:23:58,635
Because to your, you know, or maybe not to your point, but the fact
384
00:23:58,635 –> 00:24:02,395
is, like, all all kids, regardless of ethnic or
385
00:24:02,395 –> 00:24:05,855
racial makeup, all have access to iPhones. They’re all on the Internet.
386
00:24:06,235 –> 00:24:08,910
Yep. And so the great flattening,
387
00:24:10,170 –> 00:24:13,930
that occurred or that began to occur in our generation has just
388
00:24:13,930 –> 00:24:17,210
has just continued to steamroll, you know, across the,
389
00:24:17,450 –> 00:24:21,230
across the generations, which I think that’s one of the reasons why
390
00:24:22,295 –> 00:24:26,054
Erna Lapointe, wrote this book or or maybe dictated
391
00:24:26,054 –> 00:24:29,174
this book, and I wanna talk a little bit about that. But I also think
392
00:24:29,174 –> 00:24:32,155
that it’s why he considered it to be very important
393
00:24:32,855 –> 00:24:36,650
to get this down, because
394
00:24:37,110 –> 00:24:40,950
there’s there’s something to be said
395
00:24:40,950 –> 00:24:44,790
for it being in the written word versus being in an oral
396
00:24:44,790 –> 00:24:48,150
tradition because an oral tradition could just fritter away as oral traditions, by the way,
397
00:24:48,150 –> 00:24:51,934
have done across the globe, because once the people’s voices
398
00:24:51,934 –> 00:24:55,375
are gone, then then what is there left to,
399
00:24:55,774 –> 00:24:58,514
what is there left to say? Right.
400
00:25:00,815 –> 00:25:04,500
Okay. Back to the book. Back to Sitting Bull, his life and legacy. I wanna
401
00:25:04,500 –> 00:25:07,880
pick up a little bit with, earning his name. So,
402
00:25:11,220 –> 00:25:13,779
and I’m gonna refer to him as Sitting Bull just for the for the for
403
00:25:13,779 –> 00:25:16,935
the moment here. Well, jumping badger, actually. I’m going to I’m gonna do this.
404
00:25:17,895 –> 00:25:21,675
So returns again is jumping badger’s, father,
405
00:25:21,735 –> 00:25:25,575
and returns again approached his brother 4 horns. 4 horns
406
00:25:25,575 –> 00:25:29,255
took jumping badger underneath his wing at around 7 years
407
00:25:29,255 –> 00:25:33,039
old, And then jumping badger had
408
00:25:33,039 –> 00:25:36,580
a number of different experiences, that demonstrated
409
00:25:36,799 –> 00:25:40,559
his compassion, and his wise behavior both with his
410
00:25:40,559 –> 00:25:44,320
peers, and with into the space of
411
00:25:44,320 –> 00:25:47,835
hunting, which was important to the, the Lakota,
412
00:25:50,535 –> 00:25:54,375
and in engaging with, his mother,
413
00:25:54,375 –> 00:25:57,735
which I’m gonna talk a little bit about the the family structure here too, but
414
00:25:57,735 –> 00:26:00,235
engaging with his mother and his teepee, by the way.
415
00:26:01,470 –> 00:26:05,010
Jumpy badger, later later Sitting Bull,
416
00:26:05,230 –> 00:26:08,610
when he got married, I marked that chapter up extensively.
417
00:26:09,390 –> 00:26:12,610
And I was talking with my wife about it, and I said,
418
00:26:13,665 –> 00:26:17,345
I said, this is why this is why polygamy, regardless of
419
00:26:17,345 –> 00:26:20,865
culture, does not work. I don’t I don’t care. I mean,
420
00:26:20,865 –> 00:26:24,465
like, I know you don’t wanna read the, the
421
00:26:24,465 –> 00:26:28,220
Caucasian man’s book, but read their book because it doesn’t work out in their
422
00:26:28,220 –> 00:26:31,980
book either. It doesn’t it doesn’t work out. There’s a reason
423
00:26:31,980 –> 00:26:32,640
for this.
424
00:26:35,980 –> 00:26:39,375
And so, so he’s got this compassion.
425
00:26:39,434 –> 00:26:43,135
Right? And he’s got jumping ball. He’s got this compassion. He’s got this generosity.
426
00:26:43,995 –> 00:26:44,495
And,
427
00:26:48,315 –> 00:26:51,915
well, it’s important how all this factors into getting his name. So in the chapter
428
00:26:51,915 –> 00:26:55,720
earning his name, it says this returns again, Jumping Badger’s father was
429
00:26:55,720 –> 00:26:59,180
a deeply spiritual man and had the ability to communicate with the 4 legged.
430
00:26:59,880 –> 00:27:03,180
One time, around the time Jumping Badger killed his first buffalo,
431
00:27:03,640 –> 00:27:07,405
returns again was part of a scouting group looking for buffalo. The
432
00:27:07,405 –> 00:27:10,765
group had camped for the night when a big white buffalo bull suddenly appeared at
433
00:27:10,765 –> 00:27:14,545
the edge of campfire. The scouting party was startled, and they scattered
434
00:27:14,605 –> 00:27:17,965
except for returns again. The
435
00:27:17,965 –> 00:27:21,660
buffalo bull reared up on its haunches and bellowed as he stomped down
436
00:27:21,660 –> 00:27:25,040
on his fore hooves. He did this 4 times and then turned and disappeared
437
00:27:25,260 –> 00:27:29,100
into the night. The rest of the scouts returned to the fire
438
00:27:29,100 –> 00:27:32,300
wondering about the reason the bull did this. Returns again said the bull had come
439
00:27:32,300 –> 00:27:35,725
to give him a gift. The gift was four names the buffalo had
440
00:27:35,725 –> 00:27:39,485
bellowed. The first name was Tatanka Iotake. The
441
00:27:39,485 –> 00:27:43,185
second was Tatanka Ska. The third was Tatanka Wajila.
442
00:27:43,485 –> 00:27:46,785
The 4th was Tatanka Wijuha Naji.
443
00:27:47,510 –> 00:27:51,030
The names were Buffalo Bowl Sits Down, Sitting Bowl, Jumping
444
00:27:51,030 –> 00:27:54,870
Bull, 1 Bull, and Bull Stands With Crow. I’m sorry. With Cow.
445
00:27:54,870 –> 00:27:58,630
Not Crow. Bull stands with Cow. Returns again told his friends this
446
00:27:58,630 –> 00:28:02,404
was a special blessing and a gift from the Buffalo Nation, and he
447
00:28:02,404 –> 00:28:06,245
took the first name for himself. He said, from this day forward, I will
448
00:28:06,245 –> 00:28:10,085
be known as Tatanka Iotake. And
449
00:28:10,085 –> 00:28:13,684
so this is sort of how jumping
450
00:28:13,684 –> 00:28:17,190
badger sort of wandered I shouldn’t say
451
00:28:17,570 –> 00:28:21,250
wandered. Sort of, this is this is the providence. That that’s the
452
00:28:21,250 –> 00:28:25,090
term I’m looking for. The providence of, of Sitting Bull’s name. And,
453
00:28:27,490 –> 00:28:31,135
he has to go through a series of trials in order to
454
00:28:31,195 –> 00:28:34,255
be recognized as a warrior. And,
455
00:28:36,154 –> 00:28:39,995
he also has to I won’t say live in the shadow of his
456
00:28:39,995 –> 00:28:42,255
father, but he has to he has to
457
00:28:43,640 –> 00:28:47,320
become more than what his father than what his father
458
00:28:47,320 –> 00:28:50,840
is. And he’s going to do that in a in an
459
00:28:50,840 –> 00:28:52,940
interesting, in an interesting way.
460
00:28:55,405 –> 00:28:59,165
He’s going to become a leader. Right? He’s gonna become the leader of the Strong
461
00:28:59,165 –> 00:29:02,684
Heart Society, and he was elevated to a
462
00:29:02,684 –> 00:29:06,385
position in his twenties, because of
463
00:29:06,525 –> 00:29:10,285
how he led and because of how he positioned himself. That was
464
00:29:10,285 –> 00:29:13,690
unusual for a young man of his age
465
00:29:13,690 –> 00:29:14,750
and experience.
466
00:29:17,130 –> 00:29:20,430
Now there’s a challenge
467
00:29:21,370 –> 00:29:21,870
here,
468
00:29:27,275 –> 00:29:28,975
that allowed,
469
00:29:31,035 –> 00:29:32,815
that allowed to talk to
470
00:29:35,115 –> 00:29:38,700
develop a support system around him and not really a challenge, but
471
00:29:38,940 –> 00:29:42,460
an opportunity that was given to allow him to develop a support system around
472
00:29:42,460 –> 00:29:45,919
him, and that is related here.
473
00:29:46,620 –> 00:29:49,500
So in the chapter that says jumping ball, and I’m gonna quote directly from this.
474
00:29:49,500 –> 00:29:52,845
This will set up my next question here for Tom. In the late 18 fifties,
475
00:29:52,845 –> 00:29:56,685
an important event occurred in the family life of Tatanka Iotake. The
476
00:29:56,685 –> 00:30:00,465
Strong Heart Society traveling north of the Missouri River encountered an asinero
477
00:30:00,845 –> 00:30:04,660
an Assiniboine camp. It
478
00:30:04,660 –> 00:30:08,500
was a single family camped on the riverbank, and the Strongheart Warriors surprised the family
479
00:30:08,500 –> 00:30:11,300
members. The family attempted to defend its camp, but it was no match for the
480
00:30:11,300 –> 00:30:14,840
warriors who wiped out the whole family except for one young boy.
481
00:30:15,460 –> 00:30:19,060
He was about 11 years old, still with only a child’s bow and
482
00:30:19,060 –> 00:30:22,675
arrows. Even so, he kept attempting to shoot at the warriors.
483
00:30:23,375 –> 00:30:26,975
The warriors decided to wait for Titaka Iotake to arrive and let him
484
00:30:26,975 –> 00:30:29,475
decide the fate of this bold and desperate child.
485
00:30:30,975 –> 00:30:34,590
When Titaka Iotake arrived and dismounted his horse, the
486
00:30:34,590 –> 00:30:38,350
young hohei, seized his only chance to survive. He ran to the strong
487
00:30:38,350 –> 00:30:42,029
hearted leader, embraced him around the waist, and pleaded with him saying, big brother,
488
00:30:42,029 –> 00:30:45,804
save me. Though the boy could not have known it, he spoke
489
00:30:45,804 –> 00:30:49,404
directly to the heart of Totanka Iyotake. He just finished
490
00:30:49,404 –> 00:30:53,245
warning the death of his firstborn son. In addition, he himself was
491
00:30:53,245 –> 00:30:56,304
an only son. He did not have any younger brothers. Totake
492
00:30:57,340 –> 00:31:00,139
told the warriors he wanted to spare the boy’s life and that he wished to
493
00:31:00,139 –> 00:31:03,000
take him as his brother. The
494
00:31:04,139 –> 00:31:07,659
request to make the little, his
495
00:31:07,659 –> 00:31:11,360
brother was brought in front of the elders since it would require a
496
00:31:27,380 –> 00:31:31,140
The purpose of the Hunka Yaw Bay is for the Lakota to make relatives among
497
00:31:31,140 –> 00:31:34,660
warring tribes, to eliminate wars, and create peace among the
498
00:31:34,660 –> 00:31:38,500
nations. Because of this, it is a serious undertaking. Those
499
00:31:38,500 –> 00:31:42,180
who have a Hunka relationship have deliberately chosen to be responsible for each
500
00:31:42,180 –> 00:31:45,835
other. Their ties are deeper and even more important than the relationship between
501
00:31:45,835 –> 00:31:49,675
blood kin. The elders examined and debated the issue to make sure both
502
00:31:49,675 –> 00:31:52,415
Tatanka, Iotake, and the young Asseniboine
503
00:31:53,115 –> 00:31:56,680
desired desired the hunka. And so they go
504
00:31:56,680 –> 00:31:57,900
through the ceremony,
505
00:32:00,600 –> 00:32:04,220
and, and they become, they become bonded
506
00:32:04,440 –> 00:32:06,940
together. And
507
00:32:08,280 –> 00:32:12,024
the and after soon after this
508
00:32:12,024 –> 00:32:14,284
happens, Tatanka Iotake’s,
509
00:32:15,544 –> 00:32:19,325
father passes away and they engage in the ceremony
510
00:32:19,465 –> 00:32:22,125
of what’s called the keeping of soul.
511
00:32:23,600 –> 00:32:26,900
So the reason I’m bringing this up is because
512
00:32:28,400 –> 00:32:31,860
we’re talking initially about passages and transitions from
513
00:32:32,320 –> 00:32:35,920
childhood into into adulthood. But then there’s these other
514
00:32:35,920 –> 00:32:39,554
passages that are marked in, to talk
515
00:32:39,554 –> 00:32:43,315
to your talk his life that set him up
516
00:32:43,315 –> 00:32:43,815
for
517
00:32:47,635 –> 00:32:50,115
well, I can’t really tell. I can’t really tell if they set him up for
518
00:32:50,115 –> 00:32:53,870
for future success or future failure. Like, I can’t. Actually,
519
00:32:53,870 –> 00:32:57,149
you could probably make the argument of both. Okay. Yeah. So that was one of
520
00:32:57,149 –> 00:33:00,990
the that was sort of my question is is there’s
521
00:33:00,990 –> 00:33:03,789
a sense of and maybe it’s because I know the history and I know what’s
522
00:33:03,789 –> 00:33:06,990
going to happen next. Like, I know what the clearing at the end of this
523
00:33:06,990 –> 00:33:10,705
path is. And so I’m not coming to the material pure. I mean,
524
00:33:10,705 –> 00:33:13,685
we’ve read bury my heart and wounded knee. We know what happens. Right?
525
00:33:16,625 –> 00:33:20,305
But there’s a sense of, I don’t know,
526
00:33:20,305 –> 00:33:23,045
tragedy to to to these transitions.
527
00:33:23,950 –> 00:33:27,790
And is that something that I don’t know.
528
00:33:27,790 –> 00:33:31,630
Is that is that what is that the appropriate kind of sense to
529
00:33:31,630 –> 00:33:35,150
take from from from thinking about these
530
00:33:35,150 –> 00:33:37,890
transitions, or or is there something more there?
531
00:33:39,085 –> 00:33:42,605
I think it’s a lot deeper than just
532
00:33:42,605 –> 00:33:46,125
simply success and failure or tragedy or, you
533
00:33:46,125 –> 00:33:49,965
know, comedy and tragedy, so, you know, whatever. So the the theater versions
534
00:33:49,965 –> 00:33:53,405
of it. But I I think it’s a lot deeper than that. I think that
535
00:33:53,485 –> 00:33:55,960
you know, because there are
536
00:33:57,380 –> 00:34:00,740
there are versions of that ceremony that are throughout the country. I mean, they’re called
537
00:34:00,740 –> 00:34:04,340
a little bit different depending on which tribal affiliation you’re talking about, but the sentiment
538
00:34:04,340 –> 00:34:07,780
is always there. And every just about every tribal affiliation across the
539
00:34:07,780 –> 00:34:10,925
continent has had some form of that ceremony.
540
00:34:11,225 –> 00:34:15,005
Mhmm. For me for me, that ceremony, I believe,
541
00:34:15,705 –> 00:34:19,465
goes way deep. It it’s it’s almost
542
00:34:19,465 –> 00:34:22,364
like removing the barriers of emotion
543
00:34:22,824 –> 00:34:26,609
altogether from an from from a person. So somebody alright. I’ll give you
544
00:34:26,609 –> 00:34:29,650
an example. Like Mhmm. You and you and I have known each other a couple
545
00:34:29,650 –> 00:34:33,489
of years. Yeah. The level and depth of which we’ve known each
546
00:34:33,489 –> 00:34:37,109
other has increased just through our interactions.
547
00:34:37,889 –> 00:34:41,665
Right. Yeah. If we ever got to a point where we wanted to go
548
00:34:41,665 –> 00:34:45,425
through the ceremony, then we would have to be willing to take down all
549
00:34:45,425 –> 00:34:49,264
of those emotional walls all at once versus going through
550
00:34:49,264 –> 00:34:52,885
this over the course of however many years that you and I are gonna be
551
00:34:53,079 –> 00:34:56,839
connected in this way. Right? Whether, you know, you and I, I we’ve
552
00:34:56,839 –> 00:35:00,599
we’ve been going on 2, 3 years at this point. Right?
553
00:35:00,599 –> 00:35:03,819
Something like that. Yeah. Yeah. So if some
554
00:35:03,960 –> 00:35:07,099
event or something pushes us
555
00:35:08,025 –> 00:35:11,704
together more rapidly. Mhmm. The the death this
556
00:35:11,704 –> 00:35:15,305
particular case, it’s the death of somebody. He does it later in life where,
557
00:35:16,025 –> 00:35:19,464
he moves his entire village across the Canadian
558
00:35:19,464 –> 00:35:23,244
border, and he goes through a very similar circumstance with,
559
00:35:23,840 –> 00:35:27,380
an enemy tribal affiliation that they were warring with for
560
00:35:27,760 –> 00:35:31,200
generations, but he goes through it with the leader of that group in order
561
00:35:31,200 –> 00:35:35,040
to essentially save his entire village in the move into can into
562
00:35:35,040 –> 00:35:38,805
Canada. I’m oversimplifying, folks. I I understand. So if you’ve read the book,
563
00:35:38,805 –> 00:35:42,185
hopefully, you don’t under you you know what I’m trying to get at here. But
564
00:35:42,725 –> 00:35:46,565
it’s these events in life that that are catalysts for
565
00:35:46,565 –> 00:35:49,829
this particular ceremony. Those events
566
00:35:50,369 –> 00:35:53,810
matter. It’s so in this particular case where you have a young boy
567
00:35:53,810 –> 00:35:57,569
who’s essentially trying to save his own skin, but
568
00:35:57,569 –> 00:36:01,250
he’s doing it in in what we would consider the right way. To your point,
569
00:36:01,250 –> 00:36:04,875
he he goes right to the the person that they’re thinking is the leader.
570
00:36:05,335 –> 00:36:08,775
I, I call you brother now at this point because I got nothing
571
00:36:08,775 –> 00:36:12,535
left. And now I expect you know, my expectation of you is
572
00:36:12,535 –> 00:36:16,135
different than what your expectation of me was when you first drove up. Right? When
573
00:36:16,135 –> 00:36:19,870
you first drove up. So if
574
00:36:19,870 –> 00:36:22,910
if you’re looking again, I I I take this back to our relationship and knowing
575
00:36:22,910 –> 00:36:26,510
each other for a few years. If some catalyst were to happen to
576
00:36:26,510 –> 00:36:30,190
push us closer together more rapidly, and we
577
00:36:30,190 –> 00:36:33,995
wanted to go through this, this ceremony, you would have to be willing or
578
00:36:33,995 –> 00:36:37,835
we would have to be willing to allow all of those guards that we typically
579
00:36:37,835 –> 00:36:41,675
put up on a very regular basis, even with our own family, by
580
00:36:41,675 –> 00:36:45,275
by the way. So you you may have you may have you may wanna go
581
00:36:45,275 –> 00:36:48,819
through this, ceremony even with a cousin or an
582
00:36:48,819 –> 00:36:52,359
uncle or something like that because you want the walls removed. You want
583
00:36:52,579 –> 00:36:56,099
the closeness to be more, deeper than just
584
00:36:56,099 –> 00:36:59,380
superficial or just surface level. So it’s
585
00:36:59,780 –> 00:37:03,519
it it it kinda goes back to I remember hearing
586
00:37:03,519 –> 00:37:06,895
when I was a kid a lot of people talking about, this thing like blood
587
00:37:06,895 –> 00:37:10,275
brothers. Right? You cut each other open. You become blood brothers.
588
00:37:10,655 –> 00:37:14,415
And what does that mean in that sense? I
589
00:37:14,415 –> 00:37:17,375
have no idea, but I know what it means in our sense here as an
590
00:37:17,455 –> 00:37:21,030
in the native community, And I wouldn’t I wouldn’t just go do that with
591
00:37:21,030 –> 00:37:24,790
anybody. Now now knowing now knowing
592
00:37:24,790 –> 00:37:28,550
what I know and and and forget all the, you know, blood borne pathogens
593
00:37:28,550 –> 00:37:32,325
and all that other BS that can possibly happen. I understand that’s a different
594
00:37:32,485 –> 00:37:36,005
a completely different, you know, conversation. But the reality of it
595
00:37:36,005 –> 00:37:39,625
is that is also the level of trust you’re putting into that person
596
00:37:40,085 –> 00:37:43,710
if if you’re going through some of these, ceremonies. And and there
597
00:37:43,710 –> 00:37:47,410
are are parts of the country that it’s not a simple passing of a pipe.
598
00:37:47,630 –> 00:37:50,930
There are sacrifices of flesh. There are sacrifices
599
00:37:51,150 –> 00:37:54,910
of, monetary values. And I don’t mean literally
600
00:37:54,910 –> 00:37:58,585
you’re handing somebody a $100 bill. I’m talking about personal monetary
601
00:37:58,585 –> 00:38:02,345
values, whether it’s, your own, I think there
602
00:38:02,345 –> 00:38:06,185
was a a a part in Sitting Bull’s life where his father
603
00:38:06,185 –> 00:38:09,945
gifted him a buffalo shield that was Yes. Originally his. So
604
00:38:10,250 –> 00:38:14,030
Yes. You know, so that that kind of right right right of passage.
605
00:38:14,089 –> 00:38:16,650
I believe it was the same time frame that he gave him his first eagle
606
00:38:16,650 –> 00:38:20,250
feather. So, if I’m remembering correctly, so when I
607
00:38:20,250 –> 00:38:23,849
say, you know, monetary, that’s what I’m talking about. I’m talking about
608
00:38:23,849 –> 00:38:27,505
personal monetization where you’re giving and or
609
00:38:27,505 –> 00:38:30,565
gifting somebody something that’s of extreme value to yourself.
610
00:38:31,905 –> 00:38:35,665
Giving somebody you know, if if I were to
611
00:38:35,665 –> 00:38:39,490
give somebody one of my eagle feathers, I
612
00:38:39,490 –> 00:38:43,110
think that would have to there there would have to be something significant
613
00:38:43,330 –> 00:38:46,870
to happen for me to give one of those away. So Yeah.
614
00:38:47,490 –> 00:38:51,250
So, again, in these types of environments, if I’m gonna go through that process though,
615
00:38:51,250 –> 00:38:54,625
if I found somebody that I wanted to go through that that ceremonial
616
00:38:54,845 –> 00:38:58,365
process with, giving up my eagle feather would be very easy for me to
617
00:38:58,365 –> 00:39:01,565
do. That’s that’s kind of the point I’m trying to make here, that some of
618
00:39:01,565 –> 00:39:05,405
those guarded things, some of those things that you keep so close to the
619
00:39:05,405 –> 00:39:09,025
vest that you would prefer not anybody know them about you at all,
620
00:39:09,540 –> 00:39:12,900
those things go away when you go through these ceremonies. And both parties have to
621
00:39:12,900 –> 00:39:16,740
be willing and open to take the, all the good with the bad
622
00:39:16,740 –> 00:39:20,200
because it’s not all just, you know, you know,
623
00:39:20,260 –> 00:39:24,105
roses and and, you know, rainbows and roses. You also take on some
624
00:39:24,105 –> 00:39:27,705
of the baggage for that person and you share the the pain of of
625
00:39:27,705 –> 00:39:31,545
whatever is going through with that that person’s life and, you
626
00:39:31,545 –> 00:39:35,305
know, in future. Like, you take on a lot of future things. This
627
00:39:35,305 –> 00:39:38,490
is this is not a simple thing. I just wanna really just try to emphasize
628
00:39:38,490 –> 00:39:42,170
to the people. Yeah. This is not a simple thing that you just
629
00:39:42,170 –> 00:39:45,450
pass the pipe, smoke the pipe, everybody’s happy, and you go out. Now we’re brothers.
630
00:39:45,450 –> 00:39:49,210
No. It’s not that simple. It’s much more in-depth than that, and you
631
00:39:49,210 –> 00:39:52,525
have essen essentially make yourself extraordinarily
632
00:39:52,825 –> 00:39:56,505
vulnerable to that person. So you have to make sure you
633
00:39:56,505 –> 00:40:00,345
understand what you’re getting yourself into before you say yes on both both parts,
634
00:40:00,345 –> 00:40:03,885
on both parties’ sides. So
635
00:40:04,025 –> 00:40:05,405
in thinking about
636
00:40:08,720 –> 00:40:12,160
these types of ceremonies or these types of not even the ceremonies, but these types
637
00:40:12,160 –> 00:40:13,700
of transitions. Right?
638
00:40:20,125 –> 00:40:23,725
If you’re going to engage in something like that, you have to meet it. You
639
00:40:23,725 –> 00:40:27,405
know? And not only do you have to meet it, but you have to meet
640
00:40:27,405 –> 00:40:30,945
it at a level that is more than just a casual
641
00:40:31,245 –> 00:40:34,980
transactional level. Right? For sure. This
642
00:40:34,980 –> 00:40:38,420
is not buying a pack of gum at the grocery store. This is
643
00:40:38,420 –> 00:40:42,260
not, It’s also not not borrowing a tool and never
644
00:40:42,260 –> 00:40:45,885
returning it. Right? Like, they were you know, you you might lend
645
00:40:45,885 –> 00:40:49,645
somebody you might lend somebody a tool or money. And
646
00:40:49,645 –> 00:40:52,445
if you get it back, great. And if you don’t, you’re okay with it. You’re
647
00:40:52,445 –> 00:40:56,045
not gonna let it ruin your relationship. Right? Right. It it it’s
648
00:40:56,045 –> 00:40:59,425
it’s way beyond that too. Like, it’s it’s it just goes way beyond
649
00:41:00,099 –> 00:41:03,000
the simplicity of what we’re thinking. It’s it’s
650
00:41:06,339 –> 00:41:07,000
it’s it’s
651
00:41:11,060 –> 00:41:14,420
it’s the principle of family, but but at
652
00:41:14,420 –> 00:41:18,075
a at an even more grounded level than
653
00:41:18,075 –> 00:41:21,375
that because and and English is terrible for these kinds of terms,
654
00:41:21,835 –> 00:41:25,275
for for what it is that we’re For sure. We’re seeking to get. You know?
655
00:41:25,275 –> 00:41:27,675
The, you know, the thing I always I always say, and I don’t know. It’s
656
00:41:27,675 –> 00:41:30,359
been a while since I’ve said it on this podcast, but, you know, we have
657
00:41:30,359 –> 00:41:34,200
one word for love in the English language, and yet that covers
658
00:41:34,200 –> 00:41:38,039
a multitude of sins. Right? We have one
659
00:41:38,039 –> 00:41:41,799
word for family, and yet that that’s supposed to
660
00:41:41,799 –> 00:41:45,255
cover a multitude of meanings as well. And it doesn’t because it’s
661
00:41:45,494 –> 00:41:48,795
it’s it’s it’s hyper it’s hyper contextual,
662
00:41:50,535 –> 00:41:53,894
and it’s hyper engaged just as you as you just
663
00:41:53,894 –> 00:41:57,734
said. That’s why we add words to it. Right? We have our family.
664
00:41:57,734 –> 00:42:01,240
We have our extended family. We have, like, we add words to it to try
665
00:42:01,240 –> 00:42:04,440
to make it mean other things. Other things. Yeah. Or to try to or to
666
00:42:04,440 –> 00:42:07,640
try or not even just try to make that mean on things. Try to try
667
00:42:07,640 –> 00:42:11,240
to bolster it. Try to give it some some meat on those better define it.
668
00:42:11,240 –> 00:42:12,940
Yeah. Better define it. Right.
669
00:42:15,375 –> 00:42:18,835
There’s also this idea, and this is something that that cuts through
670
00:42:19,615 –> 00:42:23,295
not only all of what city bowl experience, but
671
00:42:23,295 –> 00:42:26,975
it it cuts through even what we read about in episode number
672
00:42:26,975 –> 00:42:30,260
79 and bury my heart at wounded knee. There’s
673
00:42:31,040 –> 00:42:32,580
a sense of interweaving,
674
00:42:35,760 –> 00:42:39,060
among native tribes
675
00:42:39,840 –> 00:42:43,220
and native tribal cultures. That is
676
00:42:44,235 –> 00:42:47,615
sort of an anathema to people who are industrialized.
677
00:42:48,395 –> 00:42:51,915
Like we live, we live in an industrial we’re well post we’re post
678
00:42:51,915 –> 00:42:55,535
industrialized culture. Right? So scientific materialism,
679
00:42:55,915 –> 00:42:58,255
whether you like it or not has won the day.
680
00:43:00,190 –> 00:43:02,930
And so we
681
00:43:06,110 –> 00:43:09,710
and by the way, scientific materialism has won the day for a whole variety of
682
00:43:09,710 –> 00:43:13,275
really good reasons. Like, it gave us antibiotics
683
00:43:14,455 –> 00:43:17,975
and it gave us cell phones, and it’s given us this
684
00:43:17,975 –> 00:43:21,495
ability to record this podcast. Now the
685
00:43:21,495 –> 00:43:24,395
downside of that is it’s also given us things like,
686
00:43:26,240 –> 00:43:29,599
pornography and seed oils and all of our foods that make
687
00:43:29,599 –> 00:43:33,280
us fat and sick. You know? Well, I’m just quoting my
688
00:43:33,280 –> 00:43:36,880
wife here because this is what she would say. And, you
689
00:43:36,880 –> 00:43:40,640
know, and and all these other negative things. Right? Nuclear warfare. You know? I mean,
690
00:43:40,640 –> 00:43:43,465
like, it’s given us the these are the downsides, right, of,
691
00:43:44,265 –> 00:43:47,865
of scientific materialism. But no one no
692
00:43:47,865 –> 00:43:51,385
one seriously, anyway. You have a lot of activists who will say a lot of
693
00:43:51,385 –> 00:43:53,645
things, but no one seriously is talking about
694
00:43:54,985 –> 00:43:58,420
regressing backwards to something that is,
695
00:43:58,800 –> 00:44:02,640
you know, pre modern, like, deeply pre modern. We’re we’re all
696
00:44:02,640 –> 00:44:06,400
expecting we’re all expecting some apocalyptic thing to happen to bring us there.
697
00:44:06,400 –> 00:44:09,540
We’re not gonna do it on purpose. Yeah. No one’s gonna do it on purpose.
698
00:44:09,680 –> 00:44:13,120
Right. We’re waiting for the left shoe to fall before you know, we’re just gonna
699
00:44:13,120 –> 00:44:15,955
end up there. Yeah. And we’re just hoping that enough people are ready for it
700
00:44:15,955 –> 00:44:19,635
and understand how to live through it that we that we survive. Right. Because we
701
00:44:19,635 –> 00:44:23,175
don’t wanna fully commit to the pre modern thing because we know how we recognize
702
00:44:23,235 –> 00:44:26,215
in our souls how hard it’s going to be. Exactly.
703
00:44:29,070 –> 00:44:32,850
But the challenge or the struggle and you see this not only in
704
00:44:33,150 –> 00:44:36,750
in in Ernie Lapointe’s rendition of, of his,
705
00:44:37,070 –> 00:44:40,590
of his great grandfather’s life, but you see it in a lot of other different
706
00:44:40,590 –> 00:44:44,195
places in our culture. The fact of the matter is
707
00:44:44,335 –> 00:44:47,855
we want to go back and get some of the traditions from those pre modern
708
00:44:47,855 –> 00:44:51,535
places and, and bring them forward. And yet
709
00:44:51,535 –> 00:44:55,315
we can’t because the underpinnings, the
710
00:44:55,630 –> 00:44:59,150
the things that allowed those, those traditions to
711
00:44:59,150 –> 00:45:02,990
exist have passed into history. And so
712
00:45:02,990 –> 00:45:06,830
maybe that’s the, the touch of tragedy that I’m
713
00:45:06,830 –> 00:45:08,609
feeling. You know, when I read,
714
00:45:10,535 –> 00:45:13,435
when I read this this story and I read how
715
00:45:14,135 –> 00:45:17,655
this how this is laid out for,
716
00:45:17,975 –> 00:45:21,735
for Sitting Bull. There’s also
717
00:45:21,735 –> 00:45:25,240
a sense and it’s it’s something else that I picked up from the book. And
718
00:45:25,240 –> 00:45:28,119
I wanna talk about wives and children in a minute. We’re gonna gonna talk about
719
00:45:28,119 –> 00:45:31,960
that, and then we’ll get into you know, I I wanna talk about his vision
720
00:45:31,960 –> 00:45:34,059
quest, which I made some notes on that,
721
00:45:35,495 –> 00:45:39,115
and, and talk about his first encounter with the Americans today.
722
00:45:39,335 –> 00:45:42,695
But one of the points that Ernie makes
723
00:45:42,855 –> 00:45:45,275
and let me see if I marked it here.
724
00:45:49,170 –> 00:45:50,550
Let’s see.
725
00:45:53,170 –> 00:45:56,790
I almost did this, podcast with Mike Estawi on 2, by the way.
726
00:45:56,930 –> 00:45:58,390
Oh, well, that would be
727
00:46:00,930 –> 00:46:04,744
that’d be awesome. I was gonna wear it today. There we
728
00:46:04,744 –> 00:46:08,505
go. That’s awesome. I was gonna wear it, and then
729
00:46:08,505 –> 00:46:12,345
I decided, nah. Everyone’s seen me so far in my regular clothes. I’m
730
00:46:12,345 –> 00:46:14,605
just gonna keep it simple. Just keep it simple.
731
00:46:20,350 –> 00:46:21,730
Oh, where is it?
732
00:46:29,755 –> 00:46:33,455
Yeah. Talked about enrollment. Hold on. I’m trying to find
733
00:46:34,635 –> 00:46:38,395
the point that he makes about the ancestors because
734
00:46:38,395 –> 00:46:42,075
it’s it’s here we go. Yes. Here we go. So it’s at the
735
00:46:42,075 –> 00:46:45,910
end of the book. And La La Pointe says this, and it’s sort of
736
00:46:45,910 –> 00:46:49,430
in the, in the afterward called living the legacy. And this was one of the
737
00:46:49,430 –> 00:46:52,650
things that jumped out at me. Right. And he talks about sort of
738
00:46:53,349 –> 00:46:57,049
the reception, not sort of the reception that he has received,
739
00:46:58,745 –> 00:47:02,265
from standing rock reservation, which we’ve talked about. We’ve talked about sort
740
00:47:02,265 –> 00:47:06,105
of the the the challenges of reservations, to
741
00:47:06,105 –> 00:47:09,165
put it moderately, in American culture.
742
00:47:10,970 –> 00:47:14,730
And, he talked about how or he talked about how he had
743
00:47:14,730 –> 00:47:18,569
submitted, Ernie did, an application for enrollment at Standing Rock
744
00:47:18,569 –> 00:47:21,710
in 1997, and then there was some
745
00:47:23,130 –> 00:47:26,325
dispute. And it was not a dispute between,
746
00:47:27,585 –> 00:47:31,265
Ernie and, you know, the federal government or something like
747
00:47:31,265 –> 00:47:34,625
that. It was a dispute between the standing
748
00:47:34,625 –> 00:47:37,525
reservation government, I guess,
749
00:47:38,305 –> 00:47:41,880
and Ernie, and talking about who Sitting Bull
750
00:47:41,880 –> 00:47:45,640
was and what he was. And it says here at the
751
00:47:45,640 –> 00:47:48,940
end, in those years, and I quote,
752
00:47:52,805 –> 00:47:55,525
that was when Ernie decided there would be no way to heal the anchor at
753
00:47:55,525 –> 00:47:58,645
this time. He has said repeatedly that he is still open to any of the
754
00:47:58,645 –> 00:48:02,245
hostility, but it will require an apology for those who have wronged his great
755
00:48:02,245 –> 00:48:06,085
grandfather. When a Lakota takes the life of another Lakota, he is
756
00:48:06,085 –> 00:48:09,900
banished from the tribe. If this individual survives the elements and the
757
00:48:09,900 –> 00:48:13,380
4 legged and he returns to the tribe, he returns with gifts to the family
758
00:48:13,380 –> 00:48:17,020
of the person he killed. He also will bring a bladder full of
759
00:48:17,020 –> 00:48:20,744
water because that is the amount of tears that will be shed. Then he takes
760
00:48:20,744 –> 00:48:24,105
the place of the person he killed, but he is also required to take care
761
00:48:24,105 –> 00:48:27,785
of his own family. What he did will create a difficult life for this
762
00:48:27,785 –> 00:48:31,224
individual for the rest of his life. Most people do not survive after they have
763
00:48:31,224 –> 00:48:34,900
been banished. In those years when the Lakota accepted the
764
00:48:34,900 –> 00:48:38,660
role of being Sioux Indians as was as in the case of the betrayers
765
00:48:38,660 –> 00:48:42,340
of Tatanka Iotake, they were not banished. What
766
00:48:42,340 –> 00:48:45,240
they did is this is it. They cursed their descendants.
767
00:48:46,100 –> 00:48:49,674
This curse is 4 generations long. Their descendants cannot
768
00:48:49,674 –> 00:48:53,275
perform the sacred ceremonies nor have, kanupa that
769
00:48:53,275 –> 00:48:56,875
is Wakan. It is simple to ask for forgiveness of what their
770
00:48:56,875 –> 00:49:00,635
ancestors did, yet they find it hard to do. Either these people do not
771
00:49:00,635 –> 00:49:04,430
know of this curse or they are just ashamed of their ancestors. The spirits
772
00:49:04,430 –> 00:49:08,109
say these are the people with quote unquote blood on their hands. And if they
773
00:49:08,109 –> 00:49:11,869
do not ask for forgiveness for their ancestors after the 4th generation
774
00:49:11,869 –> 00:49:14,609
is gone, they cannot ever perform the sacred ceremonies.
775
00:49:15,789 –> 00:49:19,395
This is one of the reasons the Lakota culture will cease to
776
00:49:19,395 –> 00:49:22,775
exist. It has been said before the healing begins,
777
00:49:23,235 –> 00:49:25,655
you first have to feel the pain.
778
00:49:27,795 –> 00:49:31,415
And I wrote in the corner there, Jesus said, repent
779
00:49:33,119 –> 00:49:36,819
and be saved, not
780
00:49:36,960 –> 00:49:40,579
I’m just gonna give you forgiveness. No. No. No. You gotta repent first,
781
00:49:41,039 –> 00:49:43,059
and repenting is always about pain.
782
00:49:45,144 –> 00:49:47,644
But we’ll leave that point aside for just a moment.
783
00:49:48,825 –> 00:49:52,585
This idea of, and it gets back to this, to what
784
00:49:52,585 –> 00:49:56,265
we were talking about, about, the
785
00:49:56,265 –> 00:49:59,890
binding of people together. It’s not just the binding of the people together of
786
00:49:59,890 –> 00:50:03,650
1 generation. We’re talking about intergenerational ideals. Talk a little
787
00:50:03,650 –> 00:50:07,410
bit about that because again, we don’t have, we don’t really have
788
00:50:07,410 –> 00:50:11,115
a, we don’t have a conception of that. That blows away the postmodern mind because
789
00:50:11,115 –> 00:50:14,555
we’re individualistic along with being scientific materialists or
790
00:50:14,555 –> 00:50:17,615
individualistic. Like I don’t have any.
791
00:50:20,155 –> 00:50:22,875
Would it be nice if my mom clapped for me all the time or to
792
00:50:22,875 –> 00:50:25,595
your point, your mom? Sure. It would be nice. But at the end of the
793
00:50:25,595 –> 00:50:29,330
day, like, I’m an individual. Right?
794
00:50:29,330 –> 00:50:32,930
Like, I gotta be responsible for my family. And then when I’m dead and
795
00:50:32,930 –> 00:50:36,550
gone, that’s it. Like, the door is just closed.
796
00:50:36,690 –> 00:50:40,370
Right? I can do as much as I could possibly think of
797
00:50:40,370 –> 00:50:43,495
doing for my children in my time when I’m alive.
798
00:50:45,075 –> 00:50:48,675
But I know that in 2 generations, my name is gonna fall out of their
799
00:50:48,675 –> 00:50:52,355
memory and 4 generations forget it. Like, I
800
00:50:52,355 –> 00:50:55,415
don’t ever think about my great great grandfather. Like, never.
801
00:50:56,250 –> 00:50:59,450
And I know the person existed. I don’t even, I will be blunt. I don’t
802
00:50:59,450 –> 00:51:03,070
even know his name. He was for sure. A slave
803
00:51:04,730 –> 00:51:07,310
probably in the early
804
00:51:09,545 –> 00:51:12,765
19th century, probably somewhere in
805
00:51:13,385 –> 00:51:15,385
what at the time would have been the,
806
00:51:17,224 –> 00:51:20,664
the Kentucky Ohio territory, probably somewhere
807
00:51:20,664 –> 00:51:24,400
there. But beyond that, at least on my father’s side, on my
808
00:51:24,400 –> 00:51:27,920
mother’s side, who knows? But I don’t, I don’t, I don’t know that
809
00:51:27,920 –> 00:51:30,580
person’s name. I have zero connection to them.
810
00:51:32,160 –> 00:51:35,920
So walk me through sort of how this works, because those bonds seem to be
811
00:51:35,920 –> 00:51:39,665
a lot tighter in not just in Lakota culture, but in
812
00:51:39,665 –> 00:51:43,445
Native American culture overall. So we
813
00:51:44,385 –> 00:51:48,145
I don’t think I don’t think what you’re saying is
814
00:51:48,145 –> 00:51:51,640
far off in in one sense, which
815
00:51:51,640 –> 00:51:55,480
is it’s not about so
816
00:51:55,480 –> 00:51:59,020
for me, it’s not about my name. Right? Like, so generationally
817
00:51:59,240 –> 00:52:01,320
speaking, it’s not about if if
818
00:52:02,840 –> 00:52:06,255
we’re taught that we are responsible for the next 7
819
00:52:06,255 –> 00:52:09,875
generations. Right? So we’re we’re taught that. So my responsibility
820
00:52:10,654 –> 00:52:14,255
goes deeper than to just my kids. It’s their
821
00:52:14,255 –> 00:52:18,095
children’s children’s children, so on and so forth. So but
822
00:52:18,095 –> 00:52:21,650
by to your point, by the time that 4th generation pops
823
00:52:21,650 –> 00:52:25,490
up, they’re not gonna remember my name. I don’t feel
824
00:52:25,490 –> 00:52:28,710
like that’s as important as if they remember
825
00:52:30,130 –> 00:52:33,650
the teachings. That’s more important to me than them
826
00:52:33,650 –> 00:52:37,305
remembering my name. Okay. So so for it’s
827
00:52:37,305 –> 00:52:40,665
it’s it’s kinda like and I
828
00:52:40,665 –> 00:52:43,805
I I don’t have grandkids yet, but
829
00:52:44,425 –> 00:52:48,105
to your point to your point a few seconds ago, you know, teaching your kids
830
00:52:48,680 –> 00:52:52,360
it’s not just about teaching your kids simply. It’s
831
00:52:52,360 –> 00:52:56,040
about teaching your kids well enough that you feel it’s it’s a it’s a
832
00:52:56,120 –> 00:52:59,400
let’s let’s bring it back to the leadership lessons from the great books here for
833
00:52:59,400 –> 00:53:03,100
a second, Asan. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It’s not about teaching them
834
00:53:03,885 –> 00:53:07,645
the this one. It’s about training the trainer. Right? Right. You’re basically
835
00:53:07,725 –> 00:53:11,325
you’re essentially so the way I look at my kids and my
836
00:53:11,325 –> 00:53:14,945
responsibility is to get them to the point where they can
837
00:53:15,165 –> 00:53:19,000
do these things so rhythmically. The muscle memory
838
00:53:19,000 –> 00:53:22,440
is so easy for them that it’s going to be easy for them to teach
839
00:53:22,440 –> 00:53:26,119
the next generation to do the same things. Right? Okay. Yep.
840
00:53:26,119 –> 00:53:29,740
Take a ceremony, for example, a particular ceremony that we find valuable.
841
00:53:30,825 –> 00:53:34,445
It’s my responsibility to make sure that my children know that
842
00:53:34,585 –> 00:53:38,425
ceremony well enough to teach their next generation, to
843
00:53:38,425 –> 00:53:41,865
teach their next generation so that that culture just doesn’t
844
00:53:42,185 –> 00:53:45,545
that ceremony will never die. I need to be able to go to my
845
00:53:45,545 –> 00:53:47,900
grave with a a heart
846
00:53:49,560 –> 00:53:53,320
knowing that at least for the next 7 generations, that ceremony
847
00:53:53,320 –> 00:53:56,599
is not gonna die. And if I do my job right, it’s never gonna die
848
00:53:56,599 –> 00:54:00,405
for an eternity because my my children will
849
00:54:00,405 –> 00:54:03,865
feel the same way I feel, which means the 7 generations
850
00:54:04,005 –> 00:54:07,765
from them will feel it and so on and so forth. Right? So
851
00:54:07,765 –> 00:54:10,905
it’s Okay. It’s a it’s a it’s a connection
852
00:54:11,125 –> 00:54:14,359
to it’s a connection to the,
853
00:54:15,140 –> 00:54:18,740
the that whole I the whole concept of you’re
854
00:54:18,740 –> 00:54:22,200
not it’s not just about you. The whole individual
855
00:54:22,339 –> 00:54:26,085
thing, yes. I get it. Individually, it’s up to
856
00:54:26,085 –> 00:54:29,765
me to learn it. But non individually, it’s also up to me to
857
00:54:29,765 –> 00:54:32,885
teach it. Right. So it’s like so I it’s the
858
00:54:34,645 –> 00:54:38,245
it’s it’s my responsibility as a individual to learn it.
859
00:54:38,245 –> 00:54:41,920
It’s my responsibility as a community member to teach it.
860
00:54:42,220 –> 00:54:45,920
So that’s where the the the separation actually happens. So,
861
00:54:46,060 –> 00:54:49,599
again, going back to the whole train the trainer thing,
862
00:54:49,980 –> 00:54:53,795
if you’re training somebody to the if you’re
863
00:54:53,795 –> 00:54:57,555
training somebody to the point where you want them to go and do
864
00:54:57,555 –> 00:55:01,234
a task and you’re you’re teaching them how to, you know,
865
00:55:01,234 –> 00:55:05,040
pick this up and move it over here, and you’re feel comfortable that they that
866
00:55:05,040 –> 00:55:08,720
they they get down the the the functionality of
867
00:55:08,720 –> 00:55:12,420
of picking this up and moving it over here, and you’re good with it, fine.
868
00:55:12,960 –> 00:55:16,660
Do you think they could train somebody? Maybe not
869
00:55:16,925 –> 00:55:20,285
because they don’t have the trainer mentality. Whatever excuse you give yourself in the back
870
00:55:20,285 –> 00:55:24,045
of your mind, well, that’s the part that we wanna train. Right? We wanna
871
00:55:24,045 –> 00:55:27,724
train the trainer because we want them and expect them to be teaching other people
872
00:55:27,724 –> 00:55:31,359
to do this. It goes beyond just yourself. And the
873
00:55:31,599 –> 00:55:35,280
again, the difference in corporate America is you get paid to be a trainer. We’re
874
00:55:35,280 –> 00:55:38,820
not paying you to teach the next 7 generations. That’s a responsibility
875
00:55:39,040 –> 00:55:41,920
that you take on the day you’re born whether you like it or not. Right.
876
00:55:41,920 –> 00:55:45,460
Yeah. That’s just part of the that’s just part of part of the cultural responsibility.
877
00:55:45,520 –> 00:55:49,265
Now, that being said, I guarantee you there are tribal members that walk away
878
00:55:49,265 –> 00:55:52,945
from that. They don’t feel they’re responsible. They don’t feel the the
879
00:55:53,025 –> 00:55:56,865
they don’t feel the connection to the responsibility. Then they they leave the
880
00:55:56,865 –> 00:56:00,464
reservation or they leave their family units with the or they leave it up to
881
00:56:00,464 –> 00:56:04,240
somebody else. Right? So I have 5 I have 5 children. I guarantee you. I
882
00:56:04,240 –> 00:56:07,700
promise you. At least one of them don’t care.
883
00:56:08,000 –> 00:56:11,839
They don’t care about passing it along. They don’t care about keeping
884
00:56:11,839 –> 00:56:15,619
it intact. At least one of them. I think there’s
885
00:56:16,025 –> 00:56:19,545
2 of them that absolutely care, and they take
886
00:56:19,545 –> 00:56:23,145
it they take it beyond the the the sense of
887
00:56:23,145 –> 00:56:26,825
responsibility. They take it to the point where it it’s a part of
888
00:56:26,825 –> 00:56:30,300
who they are. Right. And then the other 2 are probably somewhere in between.
889
00:56:30,599 –> 00:56:33,980
They feel it. They’re not sure about it yet. I think their minds will shift
890
00:56:34,119 –> 00:56:37,640
as they get a little older or they’re you know, they they start having kids
891
00:56:37,640 –> 00:56:41,400
or whatever. Something will happen that they’ll decide one way or the other on
892
00:56:41,400 –> 00:56:45,135
what they’re gonna do. But I definitely have 2 that it is just part of
893
00:56:45,135 –> 00:56:47,935
their soul. It’s part of their being. I can already see it in them. They
894
00:56:47,935 –> 00:56:51,775
already they already have 2 of my kids have already
895
00:56:51,775 –> 00:56:55,590
been invited to do lectures at colleges. They’ve been invited. So I
896
00:56:55,590 –> 00:56:59,350
know that that’s in them, that they want to be there to to be up
897
00:56:59,590 –> 00:57:03,190
upfront teaching people, you know, and and getting that that level
898
00:57:03,190 –> 00:57:06,890
of, in-depthness to to move forward. So,
899
00:57:07,190 –> 00:57:10,195
you know, it’s it’s it’s a matter of it’s
900
00:57:11,635 –> 00:57:15,095
the way that we talk about it is just different than saying,
901
00:57:15,315 –> 00:57:18,375
oh, we have a family tradition that every year at Thanksgiving,
902
00:57:18,915 –> 00:57:22,619
uncle Ronnie is gonna carve the turkey. Right. Yeah.
903
00:57:22,619 –> 00:57:26,059
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It’s it’s deeper than that. Like I said, it’s
904
00:57:26,059 –> 00:57:29,680
it’s it’s it’s it’s part of it it it follows
905
00:57:29,900 –> 00:57:32,559
the arc of the
906
00:57:33,420 –> 00:57:37,244
binding of a random person to you at
907
00:57:37,244 –> 00:57:40,765
a deeper level than just merely friendship. Like, it it follows the arc of all
908
00:57:40,765 –> 00:57:44,125
that. Like, one thing layers into the one thing layers into the
909
00:57:44,125 –> 00:57:47,265
other, and then it also
910
00:57:48,045 –> 00:57:51,820
tracks to, oh, what Ernie Lapointe
911
00:57:51,820 –> 00:57:54,960
is trying to do with talking about,
912
00:57:55,660 –> 00:57:59,340
his, his great grandfather and laying
913
00:57:59,340 –> 00:58:00,720
out the
914
00:58:04,545 –> 00:58:07,525
the truth behind the tradition.
915
00:58:07,905 –> 00:58:11,585
Right? Laying out the truth, as it
916
00:58:11,585 –> 00:58:14,725
has been dictated to him, behind
917
00:58:15,800 –> 00:58:19,240
the, the legend, right. That has grown up,
918
00:58:19,560 –> 00:58:22,380
around. Sitting bull. Right.
919
00:58:22,920 –> 00:58:26,440
So one thing follows from another it’s it’s it’s not, it’s
920
00:58:26,440 –> 00:58:29,835
not logically incoherent, nor is it
921
00:58:29,835 –> 00:58:33,275
inconsistent. It it kinda it kinda it’s sort of where you would wind up in
922
00:58:33,275 –> 00:58:35,275
a clearing at the end of the path. Right? Like if you’re gonna go down
923
00:58:35,275 –> 00:58:38,715
that you’re there’s a certain clearing you’re just gonna wind up at if you were
924
00:58:38,715 –> 00:58:42,335
committed to, to going down that, to going down that path. So no, it doesn’t,
925
00:58:42,970 –> 00:58:46,810
it doesn’t sound it doesn’t sound odd to me. It doesn’t it
926
00:58:46,810 –> 00:58:49,950
doesn’t ring false. It rings it rings absolutely true.
927
00:58:54,330 –> 00:58:57,464
So let’s talk a little bit about those generations and how you get them. Let’s
928
00:58:57,464 –> 00:59:01,224
talk a little bit about wives and children. I gotta admit this this
929
00:59:01,224 –> 00:59:04,845
chapter here made it it made me crack up. It did
930
00:59:05,065 –> 00:59:08,665
just for a whole variety of reasons, and I’m going to talk about them maybe
931
00:59:08,665 –> 00:59:09,645
a little bit here.
932
00:59:13,420 –> 00:59:17,180
Back to the book, back to Sitting Bull, his life and legacy by Ernie
933
00:59:17,180 –> 00:59:20,940
Lapointe. Hitaka Iotake showed a maturity and understanding of
934
00:59:20,940 –> 00:59:24,779
life that far exceeded other young men his age. His level of responsibility was
935
00:59:24,779 –> 00:59:28,435
also much higher. He was required to care for his people at many levels. His
936
00:59:28,435 –> 00:59:31,555
position also required him to make wise decisions on behalf of the group, and he’s
937
00:59:31,555 –> 00:59:35,155
responsible for their overall well-being. That’s leadership, by the way,
938
00:59:35,155 –> 00:59:38,855
folks. Chitanka Iyotake needed the help of a wife
939
00:59:39,050 –> 00:59:42,490
to fulfill all the duties of caring for the people. As a result, he was
940
00:59:42,490 –> 00:59:46,330
married while still in his twenties. This was unusual for Lakota men of
941
00:59:46,330 –> 00:59:49,210
that time since they did not consider marriage until a man was in his thirties
942
00:59:49,210 –> 00:59:52,730
or even his forties. The woman he chose to become his wife
943
00:59:52,730 –> 00:59:56,265
was light hair. Now just gonna
944
00:59:56,265 –> 00:59:59,945
pause here for a second. I find it to be interesting that as a culture,
945
00:59:59,945 –> 01:00:02,765
we are transitioning to people getting married later and later.
946
01:00:04,665 –> 01:00:08,280
But not necessarily men because men have always
947
01:00:08,280 –> 01:00:11,880
gotten married whenever they wanted to get married. That’s not been a real
948
01:00:11,880 –> 01:00:15,240
thing. We’re transitioning into women getting married later and
949
01:00:15,240 –> 01:00:19,080
later, which has, which has interesting implications for
950
01:00:19,080 –> 01:00:22,835
childbearing and creating the next, the next infertility and creating
951
01:00:22,835 –> 01:00:26,454
the next generation. Alright. Back to the book.
952
01:00:26,755 –> 01:00:30,194
Living arrangements were made for the married couple living
953
01:00:30,194 –> 01:00:33,474
arrangements for married couples among Lakota were based on the fact that the women owned
954
01:00:33,474 –> 01:00:36,869
the teepee. Women were in charge of the shelter of their families and everything that
955
01:00:36,869 –> 01:00:39,990
went with that. Only if a woman asked a man for help, could he take
956
01:00:39,990 –> 01:00:43,590
a part in these tasks? And when and then he was limited to limited to
957
01:00:43,590 –> 01:00:47,349
a few things like helping put up the teepee or helping with such household
958
01:00:47,349 –> 01:00:51,185
chores as gathering wood or hauling water. When to
959
01:00:51,185 –> 01:00:54,865
Tonka EOTAKA and light hair married, she owned their
960
01:00:54,865 –> 01:00:58,645
home and she would be completely in charge of it. Pause for just a moment.
961
01:00:59,665 –> 01:01:03,365
That’s feminism, by the way, that’s even more important than voting.
962
01:01:06,589 –> 01:01:10,269
We can get into the whole, so most people don’t realize that, you know,
963
01:01:10,269 –> 01:01:13,789
again, they were a matriarchal society except when it came to
964
01:01:13,789 –> 01:01:17,444
essentially one thing, which was war. Which is
965
01:01:17,444 –> 01:01:20,984
war. Right. Well well, for for very
966
01:01:21,684 –> 01:01:25,364
well, anyway. Yes. Yes. And that is something that has
967
01:01:25,444 –> 01:01:28,005
that jumped out to me, and I’ll talk about that maybe in a in a
968
01:01:28,005 –> 01:01:31,740
little bit of your context here coming up. So light hair,
969
01:01:32,440 –> 01:01:36,280
and to Tante Yotake got married. Light hair
970
01:01:36,280 –> 01:01:39,720
bore him his first child, a son. She did not
971
01:01:39,720 –> 01:01:42,060
survive the birth of her son.
972
01:01:44,075 –> 01:01:47,595
And then when a man with a young with young children loses his
973
01:01:47,595 –> 01:01:51,355
wife, you know, immediate family members among the
974
01:01:51,355 –> 01:01:54,895
Lakota, would be there to help care for him and his children.
975
01:01:55,595 –> 01:01:59,270
Now the whole
976
01:01:59,270 –> 01:02:02,810
village would come together to take help, take care of these children.
977
01:02:03,190 –> 01:02:03,690
And,
978
01:02:07,990 –> 01:02:11,735
but that did not not end. That did not prevent the the
979
01:02:11,735 –> 01:02:15,575
man from getting married again, and Tatankay Otake did
980
01:02:15,575 –> 01:02:19,355
marry again. And he chose a woman named Snow on her.
981
01:02:19,735 –> 01:02:23,495
She bore him 2 daughters, many horses, born in 18/65, and walks
982
01:02:23,495 –> 01:02:27,290
looking, born in 18/68. The Tanki Iotake, a man who
983
01:02:27,290 –> 01:02:30,890
loved children, was very fond of his daughters. And now this is
984
01:02:30,890 –> 01:02:34,650
where then I started laughing. In 18/66, he decided to take
985
01:02:34,650 –> 01:02:38,415
a second wife. He chose to marry a red woman, and this
986
01:02:38,415 –> 01:02:41,375
is where this is where I chuckled. It was one of the few times in
987
01:02:41,375 –> 01:02:44,515
his life that Tatanka Iotake made a mistake in judgment.
988
01:02:49,455 –> 01:02:53,240
The 2 women did not get along. Usually, when a man chooses multiple wives,
989
01:02:53,240 –> 01:02:56,840
they were sisters so they could work together in harmony. The first wife, usually
990
01:02:56,840 –> 01:02:59,420
older, was senior and usually held a slightly higher position.
991
01:03:01,240 –> 01:03:04,859
Snow on her was not happy to have the assistance Red Woman could provide.
992
01:03:05,195 –> 01:03:08,235
Instead, she was extremely jealous of the new wife, especially since the 2 of them
993
01:03:08,235 –> 01:03:11,855
were the same age, reducing her natural authority over the other woman.
994
01:03:12,795 –> 01:03:16,395
Further, the Tanki Yotake seemed to show a market preference for Red
995
01:03:16,395 –> 01:03:20,069
Woman’s company. Snow on her became bitter and hostile. She caused
996
01:03:20,069 –> 01:03:23,450
great disturbances in camp with her anger towards red woman.
997
01:03:24,069 –> 01:03:27,510
And then I, I laughed at this one too. Her displays of emotion were most
998
01:03:27,510 –> 01:03:31,109
unseemly and shocking to everybody within the
999
01:03:31,109 –> 01:03:34,815
village. Instead of promoting her husband’s position within
1000
01:03:34,815 –> 01:03:38,655
the tribe and providing example of a harmonious household, snow on her caused
1001
01:03:38,655 –> 01:03:42,495
considerable social disapproval. The Tanka Iotake, for
1002
01:03:42,495 –> 01:03:46,195
all his peacemaking skills, was not able to curb his bad behavior by his wife,
1003
01:03:46,530 –> 01:03:50,290
And to make matters worse, he really did prefer red
1004
01:03:50,290 –> 01:03:50,790
woman.
1005
01:03:56,050 –> 01:03:59,875
And I go back to my original assertion. This is why you
1006
01:03:59,875 –> 01:04:03,555
don’t get to stop. 1 one woman. One woman
1007
01:04:03,555 –> 01:04:06,914
is enough. That’s gonna give you all of the challenges you could
1008
01:04:06,914 –> 01:04:10,595
possibly need. And by the way, I’ve said this to Mormons. I’ve said
1009
01:04:10,595 –> 01:04:14,119
this to traditional folks in other
1010
01:04:14,119 –> 01:04:17,259
religious spaces that tend to tend to favor polyamory
1011
01:04:17,799 –> 01:04:20,460
or or polygamy, actually not polyamory. Sorry. Polygamy,
1012
01:04:21,559 –> 01:04:25,155
Muslims. I, it doesn’t work. I’ve never heard of a
1013
01:04:25,155 –> 01:04:28,835
time when this actually worked, where there’s less conflict because you married
1014
01:04:28,835 –> 01:04:32,275
multiple women. I’ve never heard of it. There’s never been a
1015
01:04:32,275 –> 01:04:35,255
time. I got no opinion on this.
1016
01:04:38,995 –> 01:04:42,650
No. I I I agree. Be I I go I I
1017
01:04:42,650 –> 01:04:45,630
always go one step further in this, Seisan, too, which is, like,
1018
01:04:46,490 –> 01:04:50,329
when you’re married like, I don’t even I don’t even understand of having that, like,
1019
01:04:50,329 –> 01:04:54,025
the the the side piece. Right? Like, you you’re gonna you’re cheating your
1020
01:04:54,025 –> 01:04:56,905
wife with some girl that nobody knows about. Even if you’re trying to hide it
1021
01:04:56,905 –> 01:05:00,665
from your whole family, whatever. I I have a hard enough time
1022
01:05:00,665 –> 01:05:04,125
keeping one happy. Why would I wanna add why would I wanna multiply
1023
01:05:04,185 –> 01:05:07,865
this? I don’t understand why anybody thinks that they can get
1024
01:05:07,865 –> 01:05:11,680
away with this to any kind of positive light. But now that
1025
01:05:11,680 –> 01:05:15,520
being said, again, I’m not gonna say anything bad or negative
1026
01:05:15,520 –> 01:05:19,200
about my brothers and sisters out there in in the Lacoda world. I I
1027
01:05:19,200 –> 01:05:22,720
think if that’s, you know, if that’s if that’s the way they did it, that’s
1028
01:05:22,720 –> 01:05:26,494
the way they did it. And I I I I do understand that there’s
1029
01:05:28,954 –> 01:05:32,555
I I I I I understand. I I don’t know what I don’t know. Let’s
1030
01:05:32,555 –> 01:05:35,515
put it out. Well, I understand. I I will
1031
01:05:36,630 –> 01:05:40,390
I understand that I don’t know what I don’t know, and I’ve never
1032
01:05:40,390 –> 01:05:43,029
heard of a time because who thinks it’d be true at the same time? I’ve
1033
01:05:43,029 –> 01:05:46,470
never heard of a time where it works out. 2 things can be true at
1034
01:05:46,470 –> 01:05:49,130
the same time. Yes. I agree. I agree.
1035
01:05:50,395 –> 01:05:54,075
You know, aside even I I think back even
1036
01:05:54,075 –> 01:05:57,915
back in the like, think about before modern medicine, before modern
1037
01:05:57,915 –> 01:06:01,755
medicine. Right? I would understand if you had
1038
01:06:01,755 –> 01:06:04,650
a wife. You’ve tried to have children several times, and she was never able to
1039
01:06:04,650 –> 01:06:08,490
carry. You marry another woman that can have children, and they’re all
1040
01:06:08,490 –> 01:06:12,170
okay with that. Okay. Now you have children, and
1041
01:06:12,170 –> 01:06:15,950
now the whole house is responsible for raising those children.
1042
01:06:16,734 –> 01:06:19,714
But, again, that that’s a very particular circumstance.
1043
01:06:21,055 –> 01:06:24,815
I I’m I don’t know. I I just My name is
1044
01:06:24,815 –> 01:06:28,575
Paul, and that sounds like a you problem. You you know,
1045
01:06:28,575 –> 01:06:30,675
I just I don’t I
1046
01:06:33,150 –> 01:06:36,609
I will say this. I have never,
1047
01:06:37,790 –> 01:06:41,250
I cannot conceive of a potential upside to any of this.
1048
01:06:43,395 –> 01:06:47,155
It seems as though all of the challenges that you would
1049
01:06:47,155 –> 01:06:50,375
have with authority, with
1050
01:06:50,595 –> 01:06:54,295
understanding another person, with understanding
1051
01:06:54,435 –> 01:06:57,895
the various intricacies of another person’s emotional life,
1052
01:07:00,030 –> 01:07:01,650
You compound these,
1053
01:07:04,350 –> 01:07:07,810
with a with with marrying multiple
1054
01:07:07,870 –> 01:07:11,454
women. And and by the way, I’m talking from the man’s
1055
01:07:11,454 –> 01:07:15,135
perspective, from the woman’s perspective, it’s a problem too. Because
1056
01:07:15,135 –> 01:07:18,915
really, how well could you know a dude? Like, I don’t care how matriarchal
1057
01:07:19,055 –> 01:07:22,815
your society is. Really? How well can you know a dude? Like,
1058
01:07:22,815 –> 01:07:26,369
really? So let me, let’s be real
1059
01:07:26,369 –> 01:07:30,210
here. So my, my, my
1060
01:07:30,210 –> 01:07:34,049
observation of this is yes. This was
1061
01:07:34,049 –> 01:07:36,790
the time when he made a terrible mistake at judgment
1062
01:07:38,565 –> 01:07:42,265
2, I get, I guess at a, at a cultural
1063
01:07:42,405 –> 01:07:46,085
level, why it was deemed necessary to sort of
1064
01:07:46,085 –> 01:07:49,605
follow this path, but it doesn’t seem as
1065
01:07:49,605 –> 01:07:53,420
though he was browbeaten or forced into it. It seemed
1066
01:07:53,420 –> 01:07:55,200
like he had choices and had options.
1067
01:07:57,099 –> 01:08:00,540
And because he had choices and had options, he could have chosen to
1068
01:08:00,540 –> 01:08:03,200
not, you know, go down that road,
1069
01:08:04,300 –> 01:08:05,599
and instead, he
1070
01:08:08,005 –> 01:08:11,605
he chose the way of pain. Well, familial pain. And so
1071
01:08:11,605 –> 01:08:15,445
from this, just speaking about leadership, this is this is it’s something that
1072
01:08:15,445 –> 01:08:18,885
I tell entrepreneurs, and Tom’s heard me heard me tell entrepreneurs this, and I even
1073
01:08:18,885 –> 01:08:22,340
tell this to entrepreneurs who I mean in real life. You’ve got it the the
1074
01:08:22,340 –> 01:08:25,619
only negotiation that you have actually, I don’t the first sale you have to make
1075
01:08:25,619 –> 01:08:28,179
is a sale of your wife or your partner or whatever you’ve got going on
1076
01:08:28,179 –> 01:08:31,779
in your house. Period. Full stop. If you don’t make that
1077
01:08:31,779 –> 01:08:35,595
sale, all the rest of the sales, you could become a billionaire. You
1078
01:08:35,595 –> 01:08:39,274
could become and I always pick on Elon because he’s the most popular person right
1079
01:08:39,274 –> 01:08:42,875
now. Elon Musk has been married. Married. Has been
1080
01:08:42,875 –> 01:08:46,314
married twice, I think, and has been in, like, 4 different relationships and has produced,
1081
01:08:46,314 –> 01:08:50,149
like, 8 kids. And the man sleeps on
1082
01:08:50,149 –> 01:08:52,969
the floor of the Tesla Gigafactory because he can’t go home.
1083
01:08:54,710 –> 01:08:58,469
How good a salesman could he be? Can’t sell a
1084
01:08:58,469 –> 01:09:01,850
woman? What? One of them?
1085
01:09:03,385 –> 01:09:06,205
Not that one? Right. So
1086
01:09:07,225 –> 01:09:10,505
Tom’s being because he’s conspicuously quiet on this. He’s letting me talk, which is fine.
1087
01:09:10,505 –> 01:09:13,485
He’s letting me hang myself. That’s fine. I’ll do it. It’s my podcast.
1088
01:09:14,265 –> 01:09:18,069
Bury the one woman, the one time, figure out your house
1089
01:09:18,069 –> 01:09:21,850
first, and then you could be a better lead. That’s my that’s my own.
1090
01:09:24,550 –> 01:09:28,229
What’s next? Ah, Tom
1091
01:09:28,229 –> 01:09:29,689
goes suspiciously silent.
1092
01:09:32,885 –> 01:09:36,325
There there’s been again, if you look in the course of history, again, from a
1093
01:09:36,325 –> 01:09:39,685
cultural perspective, there’s some things that that happened
1094
01:09:39,685 –> 01:09:43,125
that there there’s been I’ve seen and heard of people taking
1095
01:09:43,125 –> 01:09:46,565
multiple wives, but their wives in the sense
1096
01:09:46,565 –> 01:09:50,130
of visibility but not not
1097
01:09:53,390 –> 01:09:56,990
relationship meaning so, like, you you go something
1098
01:09:56,990 –> 01:10:00,830
happens to your brothers something happens to your brother. You adopt his family
1099
01:10:00,830 –> 01:10:04,445
as yours. Technically, you marry his wife so that she becomes part of your
1100
01:10:04,445 –> 01:10:08,045
family and you can take care of her, but there’s nothing there. There’s no,
1101
01:10:08,045 –> 01:10:11,665
like, there’s no physical relationship. There’s no sexual
1102
01:10:11,885 –> 01:10:15,725
tension. There’s no there’s none of that. There’s a level of responsibility that you have
1103
01:10:15,725 –> 01:10:19,489
just adopted Mhmm. Because of that, but it but that’s
1104
01:10:19,489 –> 01:10:23,329
where it ends. And and and that you do willingly because that’s
1105
01:10:23,329 –> 01:10:27,010
the the the honorable thing to do, to to take your brother’s family
1106
01:10:27,010 –> 01:10:30,610
in and and and, you know, and and help them manage along. You
1107
01:10:30,610 –> 01:10:34,365
gotta remember, we’re not talking about a time where the woman could just
1108
01:10:34,365 –> 01:10:37,325
go, oh, I don’t have a man anymore. I’ll just go get my own job.
1109
01:10:37,325 –> 01:10:41,165
And also, that’s not how it worked. So somebody had
1110
01:10:41,165 –> 01:10:43,245
to buy Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Somebody somebody had to go out and
1111
01:10:43,245 –> 01:10:47,005
provide meat and whatever. The teepee though. Like, she’s in charge of
1112
01:10:47,005 –> 01:10:50,840
the teepee. You’re gonna tell me that that doesn’t Not in that sense. In
1113
01:10:50,840 –> 01:10:54,360
those circumstances where where you’re you’re you’re adopted in the
1114
01:10:54,360 –> 01:10:58,120
family and because of a a death or because again, you you
1115
01:10:58,120 –> 01:11:01,260
read something earlier where if I killed somebody,
1116
01:11:01,945 –> 01:11:05,785
now I’m gonna be responsible for their family. Right. You know,
1117
01:11:05,785 –> 01:11:09,625
like, that there’s no hierarchy there in in wifehood. You’re
1118
01:11:09,625 –> 01:11:13,325
only married to one wife. You’re married to the other family.
1119
01:11:13,465 –> 01:11:17,190
So it’s a different it’s a different it’s a different term. It’s
1120
01:11:17,190 –> 01:11:20,949
the same term, different definition, I guess, is the the better way to
1121
01:11:20,949 –> 01:11:24,710
say it. Now in this particular case, again, I’m not defending Sitting Bull
1122
01:11:24,710 –> 01:11:28,409
here. In this particular case, that was not the case. It was where
1123
01:11:28,824 –> 01:11:32,425
he just felt like he wanted another wife. I I you know, whatever. And by
1124
01:11:32,425 –> 01:11:35,065
the way, if he were alive today, we were to ask him, I’m not so
1125
01:11:35,065 –> 01:11:38,264
sure he would say that it was the one of his biggest mistakes. That that
1126
01:11:38,264 –> 01:11:41,324
might just be us judging him at this point.
1127
01:11:46,960 –> 01:11:50,320
We don’t know what what Sitting Bull was thinking at that point. Okay? You’re right.
1128
01:11:50,320 –> 01:11:53,760
We have we have no idea. We cannot speak to the mental
1129
01:11:53,760 –> 01:11:56,739
capacity of the person that’s not in the room to defend himself.
1130
01:11:57,440 –> 01:12:01,055
K. Sure. So We’re
1131
01:12:01,055 –> 01:12:04,655
stating opinion, not fact. I’m just saying. Grant you that. You’re
1132
01:12:04,655 –> 01:12:08,255
correct. We are stating opinion. We have no idea the
1133
01:12:08,255 –> 01:12:11,730
facts of the case, but we do know what
1134
01:12:11,890 –> 01:12:15,330
was actually done. Like, we do know what And we do know how his great
1135
01:12:15,330 –> 01:12:18,610
great grandson feels about it because he wrote in the book saying it was one
1136
01:12:18,610 –> 01:12:22,450
of his mistakes. There you go. That’s right. So We’ll take it. We’ll take
1137
01:12:22,450 –> 01:12:25,775
we’ll take his word on that. How’s that? Yeah. There you go. Ernie Ernie has
1138
01:12:25,775 –> 01:12:27,875
an opinion. Okay.
1139
01:12:30,735 –> 01:12:34,094
Get your house in order, entrepreneurs. Alright. Now the the
1140
01:12:34,094 –> 01:12:37,790
other the other thing I’d like to
1141
01:12:37,790 –> 01:12:41,150
focus on because we have a limited amount of time left, and and I would
1142
01:12:41,150 –> 01:12:44,530
recommend getting this book, City Bowl, his life and legacy. Pick it up.
1143
01:12:45,150 –> 01:12:48,670
It’s, like, $15 on Amazon. I think I got it for, like, 7 or
1144
01:12:48,670 –> 01:12:52,435
something, because I got it used. But pick it up, read it.
1145
01:12:52,435 –> 01:12:54,695
I would I would encourage you to read it,
1146
01:12:55,955 –> 01:12:59,475
alongside bury my heart at wounded knee, just to see the
1147
01:12:59,475 –> 01:13:03,235
gaps between what Dee Brown, says
1148
01:13:03,235 –> 01:13:06,690
about Sitting Bull and what, Sitting Bull’s great
1149
01:13:06,690 –> 01:13:10,450
grandson actually says, you know, about, about Sitting
1150
01:13:10,450 –> 01:13:13,910
Bull. There are some, there are some there are some interesting
1151
01:13:13,970 –> 01:13:16,150
differences, there.
1152
01:13:21,985 –> 01:13:25,605
What are the requirements of a leader of the Lakota
1153
01:13:25,665 –> 01:13:29,505
was to go on a, what’s called
1154
01:13:29,505 –> 01:13:32,945
a, a wee wong was
1155
01:13:32,945 –> 01:13:36,660
CP, which is a gazing
1156
01:13:36,660 –> 01:13:40,500
at the sun as you dance or abbreviated for white culture, a
1157
01:13:40,500 –> 01:13:44,120
sun dance. This is a powerful ceremony.
1158
01:13:44,740 –> 01:13:48,535
That’s similar to, I I use the term
1159
01:13:48,535 –> 01:13:51,675
already vision quest. That’s sort of where my brain went.
1160
01:13:52,295 –> 01:13:55,815
One of the things that I noted was there’s no psychedelics attached to
1161
01:13:55,815 –> 01:13:58,875
this. However, there are,
1162
01:14:00,790 –> 01:14:04,330
again, acts of not acts of benchmarks,
1163
01:14:04,710 –> 01:14:08,550
right, that that move you forward in the ceremony and tell you where
1164
01:14:08,550 –> 01:14:11,210
you are and what you are doing. And,
1165
01:14:12,575 –> 01:14:16,175
and so the made a commitment to perform this
1166
01:14:16,175 –> 01:14:19,935
ceremony. To do this, he first performed, by the way, sort of the book,
1167
01:14:19,935 –> 01:14:23,535
Sitting Bull by Ernie Lapointe. To do this, he first performed the
1168
01:14:23,535 –> 01:14:26,755
INIPI, the sweat lodge ceremony used to purify the soul.
1169
01:14:27,830 –> 01:14:31,430
Then he undertook the, I’m not gonna be able to pronounce that crying for a
1170
01:14:31,430 –> 01:14:34,890
vision through the night or vision quest seeking guidance from the spirits.
1171
01:14:35,750 –> 01:14:39,290
And then once he did that, then he went on into
1172
01:14:39,590 –> 01:14:43,415
the, we won the wasippy ceremony, which is
1173
01:14:43,415 –> 01:14:47,035
a ceremony an individual performs for the health and welfare of the people.
1174
01:14:47,815 –> 01:14:51,655
It is also a fertility ceremony for the continued existence of the nation. The
1175
01:14:51,655 –> 01:14:55,335
pleasure dances while staring at the sun and offering prayers through the Eagle
1176
01:14:55,335 –> 01:14:57,890
bone whistle. Now I highlighted,
1177
01:14:58,910 –> 01:15:02,350
the steps in the ceremony and there were about 6 or 7
1178
01:15:02,350 –> 01:15:06,030
steps, in the ceremony, which were all very interesting to
1179
01:15:06,030 –> 01:15:09,790
me. And at the, towards the end of
1180
01:15:09,790 –> 01:15:11,970
it, it, it frames it out this way.
1181
01:15:13,725 –> 01:15:16,545
The pleasure and that’s, that would be, to Tonka
1182
01:15:17,405 –> 01:15:21,025
commits to extensive suffering for his people and allows his upper body
1183
01:15:21,165 –> 01:15:23,824
flesh to be pierced by sharpened bones or sticks.
1184
01:15:25,330 –> 01:15:28,530
Piercing bones are attached to leather ropes that are connected to Buffalo skulls that the
1185
01:15:28,530 –> 01:15:32,290
pleasure will drag around the circular arena, or they may be attached to
1186
01:15:32,290 –> 01:15:35,830
the wee Wong was a PP pole that is in the center of the grounds.
1187
01:15:36,450 –> 01:15:40,255
In either case, the gazer, the dancer gazes into the sun, blowing
1188
01:15:40,255 –> 01:15:43,935
on an eagle bone whistle and pulls against the piercing bones until they tear free
1189
01:15:43,935 –> 01:15:47,775
from his skin. Tatanka Eotaka committed to be pierced
1190
01:15:47,775 –> 01:15:51,295
on his back and chest and to be suspended above the ground, hanging by the
1191
01:15:51,295 –> 01:15:55,060
skewers that impaled him. The pain was tremendous, and he
1192
01:15:55,060 –> 01:15:58,820
went into a shock induced trance state. In this trance, he
1193
01:15:58,820 –> 01:16:02,500
envisioned himself as a young boy resting by a tree. And then it
1194
01:16:02,500 –> 01:16:05,080
talks about the vision that he said that he had,
1195
01:16:06,900 –> 01:16:10,605
including The grasshoppers the grasshoppers falling from the sky. Yes.
1196
01:16:10,605 –> 01:16:13,665
The grasshoppers falling from the sky. Exactly. Yep.
1197
01:16:15,324 –> 01:16:18,764
And then at the end, when he had finished, the
1198
01:16:18,764 –> 01:16:22,304
Wakasa walk and said, your honor is great, but your responsibilities
1199
01:16:23,165 –> 01:16:26,750
are greater. And that was sort of the big thing that he pulled
1200
01:16:26,750 –> 01:16:30,530
from his ceremony, that his responsibilities to his people,
1201
01:16:32,270 –> 01:16:35,870
would, would be great, would be even greater than
1202
01:16:35,870 –> 01:16:39,390
his than his honor. And it is from that chapter then
1203
01:16:39,390 –> 01:16:42,875
forward that we talk about or Ernie talks about
1204
01:16:43,094 –> 01:16:46,395
encountering the Americans, Arrow Creek,
1205
01:16:46,455 –> 01:16:48,155
broken promises,
1206
01:16:51,014 –> 01:16:54,534
the battle of the greasy grass, which is also
1207
01:16:54,534 –> 01:16:58,040
known as Little Bighorn. Little Bighorn, right,
1208
01:16:58,040 –> 01:17:01,820
with a long hair Custer, and
1209
01:17:02,360 –> 01:17:06,199
then moving into military custody and
1210
01:17:06,199 –> 01:17:10,040
dealing with the Canadians. This is where the long downhill slide
1211
01:17:10,040 –> 01:17:13,695
begins, for the Lakota people, and I don’t think I’m
1212
01:17:13,695 –> 01:17:17,155
being too dramatic when I say downhill slide.
1213
01:17:18,975 –> 01:17:21,875
Well, some would argue that the downhill slide hasn’t stopped yet.
1214
01:17:22,895 –> 01:17:26,335
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I could definitely there’s I I would definitely
1215
01:17:27,670 –> 01:17:31,270
most people don’t realize agree with that argument. Yeah. Most people don’t realize that if
1216
01:17:31,270 –> 01:17:34,950
you took the Pine Ridge reservation and you put it anywhere
1217
01:17:34,950 –> 01:17:37,850
else on the planet, it would be considered a third world country.
1218
01:17:38,470 –> 01:17:42,275
Right. There’s level of poverty and everything else that goes
1219
01:17:42,275 –> 01:17:45,975
along with it. Most people don’t have a concept
1220
01:17:46,034 –> 01:17:49,554
of that within the United States. Right. I think of if you live in the
1221
01:17:49,554 –> 01:17:53,074
United States, you’re you’re doing okay. You may not be great. You may not be
1222
01:17:53,074 –> 01:17:56,179
rich. You may not be wealthy, but you can at least survive on a, you
1223
01:17:56,179 –> 01:18:00,020
know, a norm on under some sense of normalcy and not have
1224
01:18:00,020 –> 01:18:03,460
to, you know, kick and scream and fight on a daily basis for your own
1225
01:18:03,460 –> 01:18:07,300
existence. In the Pine Ridge Reservation, there’s a lot
1226
01:18:07,300 –> 01:18:10,455
of people that feel like that is their struggle every day.
1227
01:18:12,995 –> 01:18:13,495
So
1228
01:18:18,115 –> 01:18:20,115
I so okay. So I am
1229
01:18:22,890 –> 01:18:26,730
well, let’s do this. So because we only have 4 minutes left
1230
01:18:26,730 –> 01:18:30,170
because I’ve got I’ve got an appointment, and you’ve got things you gotta do.
1231
01:18:30,170 –> 01:18:33,770
And this is a much longer conversation, which we’ll probably pick we are gonna pick
1232
01:18:33,770 –> 01:18:36,750
up a part 2 of this because there’s other things I wanna talk about this
1233
01:18:38,764 –> 01:18:42,204
because we only we barely touched on the surface of of all of
1234
01:18:42,204 –> 01:18:43,665
this. So
1235
01:18:46,764 –> 01:18:50,304
walk me through the
1236
01:18:50,685 –> 01:18:54,390
the the the reason for let’s introduce this
1237
01:18:54,390 –> 01:18:58,170
idea. The reason for the rejection of Sitting Bull
1238
01:18:58,710 –> 01:19:01,770
by certain individuals in the Lakota
1239
01:19:02,710 –> 01:19:06,185
nation. Like, what is the what is the reason for that?
1240
01:19:06,245 –> 01:19:10,005
Because Ernie lays out some things in here, but he’s not very clear. He does
1241
01:19:10,005 –> 01:19:13,685
talk about the 2009 DNA testing that proves that
1242
01:19:13,685 –> 01:19:17,465
he is, oh, the, the great grandson
1243
01:19:17,605 –> 01:19:21,340
of, of Sitting Bull. I do recall when we were talking
1244
01:19:21,340 –> 01:19:23,980
about bury my heart at wounded knee, you talked about,
1245
01:19:25,420 –> 01:19:29,260
the identification situation, with, with native
1246
01:19:29,260 –> 01:19:32,940
Americans and tribal identification and sort of how if the
1247
01:19:32,940 –> 01:19:36,745
federal government says you’re this thing, I believe this was the point you were making.
1248
01:19:36,745 –> 01:19:40,425
If the federal government says this thing, but the tribe says
1249
01:19:40,425 –> 01:19:44,125
that thing, what the tribe says goes. Is that correct?
1250
01:19:44,665 –> 01:19:47,465
I mean, for the most part. The other thing too is it’s not even it’s
1251
01:19:47,465 –> 01:19:51,230
it’s a little even less complicated than that. So the the federal
1252
01:19:51,390 –> 01:19:55,230
the government, they don’t really care. The government doesn’t care one
1253
01:19:55,230 –> 01:19:58,590
way or the other, honestly. Right. Okay. They they leave it they essentially leave it
1254
01:19:58,590 –> 01:20:01,730
to the tribal governments to determine their
1255
01:20:02,350 –> 01:20:05,685
their their their,
1256
01:20:06,405 –> 01:20:08,745
membership or roles Right. Their their
1257
01:20:09,925 –> 01:20:13,765
population. Right? Population. Yep. So but what they the way in which
1258
01:20:13,765 –> 01:20:16,825
the federal government kinda gets involved in this is saying,
1259
01:20:17,340 –> 01:20:20,700
you you as a tribal people have this allotment of
1260
01:20:20,700 –> 01:20:24,300
land. Mhmm. It’s gonna be divided equally
1261
01:20:24,300 –> 01:20:28,060
amongst your people. Each family each family is
1262
01:20:28,060 –> 01:20:31,820
gonna have a certain parcel. So and what we have think
1263
01:20:31,820 –> 01:20:35,364
about it, like try to think of it in a smaller scale. Think of it
1264
01:20:35,364 –> 01:20:39,205
like your say you have 2 acres of land in your home, and
1265
01:20:39,205 –> 01:20:42,965
you have 4 kids that live on it. You die. Now
1266
01:20:42,965 –> 01:20:46,645
you wanna leave the 2 acres a half an acre each to your
1267
01:20:46,645 –> 01:20:50,340
kids. Now they have kids, and they’re
1268
01:20:50,340 –> 01:20:54,100
leaving their half an acre to 2 kids. So
1269
01:20:54,100 –> 01:20:56,980
now each one of them have 2 and and so on and so on and
1270
01:20:56,980 –> 01:21:00,820
so forth. So now if you have been if you have not had anything
1271
01:21:00,820 –> 01:21:03,160
to do with this tribal affiliation for
1272
01:21:05,034 –> 01:21:08,315
3, 4, 5, 6 generations, and now all of a sudden you’re trying to claim
1273
01:21:08,315 –> 01:21:11,915
claim ownership to your tribal affiliation, now the tribal
1274
01:21:11,915 –> 01:21:15,695
affiliation government has to look at this and go, we let them in.
1275
01:21:15,835 –> 01:21:19,510
Whatever family they belong to gets diluted. Right.
1276
01:21:19,890 –> 01:21:23,170
Yeah. So so, essentially, the
1277
01:21:23,490 –> 01:21:27,170
it the way that the US government gives the power to the tribal
1278
01:21:27,170 –> 01:21:29,670
government to determine who their population is,
1279
01:21:30,850 –> 01:21:34,515
they they give it they do that in a way that makes it
1280
01:21:34,995 –> 01:21:38,615
not advantageous for them to open up the doors for people,
1281
01:21:39,635 –> 01:21:43,235
which so which just so your just so our listeners
1282
01:21:43,235 –> 01:21:46,375
here understand this Mhmm. I am fully
1283
01:21:46,675 –> 01:21:50,375
qualified, and I can prove absolute without a doubt
1284
01:21:50,480 –> 01:21:53,840
my tribal affiliation, I can actually go to our tribal
1285
01:21:53,840 –> 01:21:56,500
government and get that tribal card recognition.
1286
01:21:57,520 –> 01:22:01,280
I choose not to because I think it’s an atrocity the
1287
01:22:01,280 –> 01:22:04,260
way that the federal government has allowed or has
1288
01:22:04,685 –> 01:22:08,125
implemented a processes in which we alienate our own
1289
01:22:08,125 –> 01:22:11,825
people, just for benefit of the people that are on the
1290
01:22:11,965 –> 01:22:15,805
on the reservation. Right? Yeah. So in in the one sense, the tribal government
1291
01:22:15,805 –> 01:22:19,600
looks like they’re from the inside looking
1292
01:22:19,600 –> 01:22:23,440
out, it looks like the tribal government is trying to protect their own. From
1293
01:22:23,440 –> 01:22:26,960
the outside looking in, it looks like the tribal government is trying to gatekeep
1294
01:22:26,960 –> 01:22:30,705
something gatekeep something they don’t need to gatekeep. Because I’m not
1295
01:22:30,705 –> 01:22:34,385
looking to get take land from our people. I’m not looking I don’t want I
1296
01:22:34,385 –> 01:22:38,145
I I own a house. I’m sitting at my house. I own I own 2
1297
01:22:38,145 –> 01:22:41,845
acres of land right now. I don’t need our tribal land for me to survive,
1298
01:22:42,305 –> 01:22:45,940
but but it’s up to the but but because the way the federal
1299
01:22:45,940 –> 01:22:49,700
government writes those treaties, they’re required by their tribal government to
1300
01:22:49,700 –> 01:22:52,040
allot me something that I don’t need.
1301
01:22:53,700 –> 01:22:57,060
We but and then the US government won’t let them change
1302
01:22:57,060 –> 01:23:00,895
those parameters. So Right. Again, until
1303
01:23:00,895 –> 01:23:04,735
we’re allowed to govern ourselves in a way that that makes sense for our
1304
01:23:04,735 –> 01:23:08,575
people, then I’m not gonna bother with that with that tribal recognition at
1305
01:23:08,575 –> 01:23:11,750
at all. I I don’t Yeah. I know who I am. I don’t need the
1306
01:23:11,750 –> 01:23:15,510
federal government or anybody else to tell me who I am. And I think that’s
1307
01:23:15,510 –> 01:23:19,270
part of what Ernie’s talking about, at least from his perspective. And he
1308
01:23:19,270 –> 01:23:22,650
has DNA evidence that he’s actually a direct descendant. That’s
1309
01:23:23,105 –> 01:23:26,784
I I don’t understand how you can dispute that. Right? Like, this is that doesn’t
1310
01:23:26,784 –> 01:23:30,465
make any sense. Now that being said, whether or not Sitting
1311
01:23:30,465 –> 01:23:34,145
Bull’s descendants should be allowed in, that’s a tribal government
1312
01:23:34,145 –> 01:23:37,960
issue. That’s not my issue to fight. So Right. Whether whether he
1313
01:23:37,960 –> 01:23:41,640
should or should not have been allowed in based on who Sitting
1314
01:23:41,640 –> 01:23:45,480
Bull was, what his actions were, how he treated the tribal government,
1315
01:23:45,480 –> 01:23:49,240
all that stuff, that is a completely different and separate issue. Because
1316
01:23:49,240 –> 01:23:52,885
that is something that could be a determining factor on whether or
1317
01:23:52,885 –> 01:23:56,585
not you’re you know, if your family was basically
1318
01:23:56,725 –> 01:24:00,085
disowned by the tribal government, then you’re not being allowed in for a
1319
01:24:00,085 –> 01:24:03,445
reason. There’s nothing there’s not a lot you can do about that, but I,
1320
01:24:04,540 –> 01:24:07,600
couldn’t fathom a reason why Sitting Bull would be excommunicated
1321
01:24:07,980 –> 01:24:11,660
for, you know anyway. But Well, we’re
1322
01:24:11,660 –> 01:24:14,780
going to we’re gonna revisit this because we need to begin to the leadership lessons
1323
01:24:14,780 –> 01:24:18,335
from Sitting Bull, which I wanted to get into as well. And, unfortunately,
1324
01:24:18,635 –> 01:24:22,135
tragically, we have run out of time today. So,
1325
01:24:22,955 –> 01:24:26,095
we’re gonna pick up part 2 of this. Probably be episode 126.
1326
01:24:26,795 –> 01:24:30,555
So we’re gonna pick up part 2 of this. So look for that, coming
1327
01:24:30,555 –> 01:24:34,250
in the next couple of weeks. But for the moment, this is
1328
01:24:34,250 –> 01:24:38,010
the Leadership Lessons from the Great Books podcast, and Tom and
1329
01:24:38,010 –> 01:24:40,110
I, well, we’re out.