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Wounded Knee 1973 - Still Bleeding: The American Indian Movement, the FBI, and their Fight to Bury the Sins of the Past (Paperback)
Loot Price: R389
Discovery Miles 3 890
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Wounded Knee 1973 - Still Bleeding: The American Indian Movement, the FBI, and their Fight to Bury the Sins of the Past (Paperback)
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Loot Price R389
Discovery Miles 3 890
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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On the night of Feb. 27, 1973, beat-up cars carrying dozens of
angry young men sped into Wounded Knee village. Members of the
American Indian Movement (AIM) and local Lakotas had come to occupy
the symbolic site on the Pine Ridge Reservation, where the army had
massacred Chief Big Foot and his people in 1890. They would hold
out against the firepower of the U.S. government for 71 days. By
the time the occupiers left, the village had been destroyed, two
were dead, one activist went missing, and a U.S. marshal was left
paralyzed. Thirty-nine years later, key figures from the movement,
Russell Means, Clyde Bellecourt and Dennis Banks arrived at the
Dakota Conference at Augustana College, Sioux Falls, S.D., where
the events and the meaning of the Wounded Knee Occupation would be
discussed. There to greet them were former FBI Special Agent in
Charge Joseph Trimbach and his son John, ardent, life-long critics
of AIM. Never before had so many key occupation figures from the
movement and the government been under the same roof at the same
time. Accusations of murders and cover-ups began to fly from both
sides, and organizers had to beef up security. This would be no
ordinary academic conference. The vitriolic speeches and angry
reactions from both the pro- and anti-AIM participants exposed the
still festering wounds that have wracked Pine Ridge Reservation as
a result of the occupation for four decades. Wounded Knee 1973:
Still Bleeding gives readers an account of the major issues
presented at the conference, along with a summary of the occupation
itself, the Banks and Means leadership trial in St. Paul, Minn.,
and the bloody years on Pine Ridge that followed. It also addresses
the enduring unsolved mystery of civil rights activist Ray
Robinson, who entered the occupied village, and was never seen
alive again.
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