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5 The Transformations of the Tribe
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Published:July 1990
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Abstract
“Our power is gone and we are dying, for the power is not in us anymore.” Thus said Black Elk, the Oglala medicine man, to John Neihardt in 1931. And perhaps it was so. Black Elk had seen the dead and dying at Wounded Knee and had fought briefly there. He had witnessed in his own life the passage of the Sioux nations from freedom to dependency. In his youth the spirits of the Lakota had given him a magnificent vision, calling him to give aid and leadership to his people, and he felt he had failed in his appointed task. Yet his words of despair came at what, in retrospect, appears to have been a critical time, the start of a decade that would see some crucial developments in an extended Native American renaissance.
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