Dakota Sioux Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Dakota Sioux. Here they are! All 20 of them:

Whipple, as an old man nearing death, would recall her words to him as a child: “Never hesitate to defend the weak.
Gustav Niebuhr (Lincoln's Bishop: A President, A Priest, and the Fate of 300 Dakota Sioux Warriors)
Whipple called him by his Indian name: Enmegahbowh, which translates from the Ojibwe language as He Who Prays for His People While Standing.
Gustav Niebuhr (Lincoln's Bishop: A President, A Priest, and the Fate of 300 Dakota Sioux Warriors)
Specifically he was Dakota but in those days they were known as Sioux. He didn’t like being called an Indian which was understandable given the image that had been acid-burned with ridicule and hatred into the minds of white Americans. In the valley of the Minnesota River—hell, maybe everywhere back then—it was dangerous to be an Indian.
William Kent Krueger (Ordinary Grace)
[Bluestone's] dark eyes, which had been focused on the blue sky outside the cellblock window, shifted to Wicklow. "A lot of white folks in these parts, their ancestors were killed in what your history books call the Great Sioux Uprising. In schools, they teach that the Dakota were savages, that we rose up against our neighbors and slaughtered them." "The Sioux--Dakota--here probably have ancestors killed by whites." "But the Dakota didn't win that war. In the end, a war is always about who wins. My people had no chance. It doesn't matter that they had every reason to be angry and desperate. They'd been lied to, cheated, starved, their land and everything on it stolen. So they fought. And they lost. But the history has been written by the whites. In Black Earth County, it's the whites who believe they were set on unfairly, cruelly, and have the right to carry all that hatred in their hearts.
William Kent Krueger (The River We Remember)
Our People were imprisoned within the most difficult of the Indian languages, so difficult indeed that no other tribe except one related branch, the Gros Ventres, ever learned to speak it. It stood by itself, a language spoken by only 3300 people in the world: that was the total number of Our People. The enemy tribes were not much larger: the Ute had 3600; the Comanche, 3500; the Pawnee, about 6000. The great Cheyenne, who would be famous in history, had only 3500. The Dakota, known also as the Sioux, had many branches, and they totaled perhaps 11,000.
James A. Michener (Centennial)
Many whites attributed the violence to the Indians’ nature. By contrast, the bishop continued to blame the government corruption and mistreatment of the Indians, and he publicly told the stories of Dakotas who had risked their lives to rescue whites. His narrative was a lonely one, cutting against the grain of the dominant story. He persisted in telling it, without apology, while also showing his sympathy for the suffering of white civilians. Given the extremity of the circumstances, publicly following the path he did meant risking his reputation and even his physical well-being.
Gustav Niebuhr (Lincoln's Bishop: A President, A Priest, and the Fate of 300 Dakota Sioux Warriors)
Just across from Bismarck stood Fort Lincoln where friends and relatives of Custer’s dead cavalrymen still lived, and these emigrating Sioux could perceive such bitterness in the air that one Indian on the leading boat displayed a white flag. Yet, in accordance with the laws of human behavior, the farther downstream they traveled the less hostility they encountered, and when the tiny armada reached Standing Rock near the present border of South Dakota these Indians were welcomed as celebrities. Men, women and children crowded aboard the General Sherman to shake hands with Sitting Bull. Judson Elliot Walker, who was just then finishing a book on Custer’s campaigns, had to stand on a chair to catch a glimpse of the medicine man and reports that he was wearing “green wire goggles.” No details are provided, so green wire goggles must have been a familiar sight in those days. Sitting Bull mobbed by fans while wearing green wire goggles. It sounds like Hollywood.
Evan S. Connell (Son of the Morning Star: General Custer and the Battle of the Little Bighorn)
The Dakota 38 refers to thirty-eight Dakota men who were executed by hanging, under orders from President Abraham Lincoln. To date, this is the largest “legal” mass execution in US history. The hanging took place on December 26, 1862—the day after Christmas. This was the same week that President Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. --- These amended and broken treaties are often referred to as the Minnesota Treaties. The word Minnesota comes from mni, which means water; and sota, which means turbid. Synonyms for turbid include muddy, unclear, cloudy, confused, and smoky. Everything is in the language we use. -- Without money, store credit, or rights to hunt beyond their ten-mile tract of land, Dakota people began to starve. The Dakota people were starving. The Dakota people starved. In the preceding sentence, the word “starved” does not need italics for emphasis. -- Dakota warriors organized, struck out, and killed settlers and traders. This revolt is called the Sioux Uprising. Eventually, the US Cavalry came to Mnisota to confront the Uprising. More than one thousand Dakota people were sent to prison. As already mentioned,“Real” poems do not “really” require words. --- I am a citizen of the United States and an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, meaning I am a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation—and in this dual citizenship, I must work, I must eat, I must art, I must mother, I must friend, I must listen, I must observe, constantly I must live.
Layli Long Soldier (Whereas)
there would have been no warfare. One of the great Indian warriors of history was Red Cloud of the Oglala Dakota Sioux tribe, who had a reputation for daring and ferocity. In June of 1866, Sherman called Red Cloud and several other Lakota Sioux leaders to Fort Laramie to discuss a new treaty to permit a new road to be built through Sioux territory. Even before an agreement had been reached, however, a battalion
Robert A. Carter (Buffalo Bill Cody: The Man Behind the Legend)
They canoed past a point of land and found themselves in a place where the natural acoustics produced what Whipple called “a wonderful echo.”28 And, he wrote, “[w]e saw quantities of the wild plum, cherries, currants, gooseberries, whortle and blueberries; also black and red cherries, and the finest hazelnuts I ever saw.
Gustav Niebuhr (Lincoln's Bishop: A President, A Priest, and the Fate of 300 Dakota Sioux Warriors)
The use of the peace pipe was held sacred by the Indians. Usually it was used in ceremonies of religious, political, or social nature. The decorations on the pipe’s bowl and stem, and even the method of holding or passing the pipe on to the next person, held great ceremonial significance. The pipe was never laid on the ground. To smoke it was a signal that the smoker gave his pledge of honor. It was also believed that the smoke made one think clearly and endowed him with great wisdom. In a treaty ceremony, the pipe usually was passed around to everyone, even before the speeches were made and the problems discussed. Some pipes were made out of wood, clay, or bone. But the most popular and the most treasured were those made of the soft catlinite mined in the pipestone quarries of Minnesota. These red stone quarries were considered sacred by the Dakotas (Sioux), and were traditionally neutral ground for all tribes. Indians traveled many miles to get this pipestone, and it was a medium of barter between various tribes. The stone was so soft that it could be cut and worked into designs with a knife when freshly quarried. Some pipes were inlaid with lead. It is said that some of the Indian raids on small western town newspapers were made by the Indians to get type lead with which to inlay their pipes.
W. Ben Hunt (Indian Crafts & Lore)
By late January 2014, Tesla had completed the construction of a cross-country Supercharger corridor that would allow Model S drivers to get from Los Angeles to New York without having to spend a penny on energy. The electric highway took a northern route through Colorado, Wyoming, South Dakota, Minnesota, and Illinois, before approaching New York from Delaware. The path it cut was similar to a trip taken by Musk and his brother, Kimbal, in a beat-up 1970s BMW 320i in 1994. Within days of the route’s completion, Tesla staged a cross-country rally to show that the Model S could easily handle long-distance driving, even in the dead of winter. Two hot-pepper-red Model S’s, driven by members of the Supercharging team, left Tesla’s Los Angeles–based design studio just after midnight on Thursday, January 30. Tesla planned to finish the trip at New York’s City Hall on the night of February 1, the day before Super Bowl XLVIII, which would take place at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, just across the state line. Along the way, the cars would drive through some of the snowiest and most frigid places in the country, in one of the coldest weeks of the year. The trip took a little longer than expected. The rally encountered a wild snowstorm in the Rocky Mountains that temporarily closed the road over Vail Pass and then provided an icy entrance to Wyoming. Somewhere in South Dakota, one of the rally’s diesel support vans broke down, forcing its occupants to catch a flight from Sioux Falls to rejoin the rest of the crew in Chicago. And in Ohio, the cars powered through torrential rains as the fatigued crew pressed on for the final stretch. It was 7:30 A.M. on Sunday, February 2, when the Teslas rolled up to New York’s City Hall on a bright, mild morning. The 3,427-mile journey had taken 76 hours and 5 minutes—just over three days. The cars had spent a total of 15 hours and 57 seconds charging along the way,
Hamish McKenzie (Insane Mode: How Elon Musk's Tesla Sparked an Electric Revolution to End the Age of Oil)
Jesse turned and stopped. Susannah dipped her head and motioned for him to continue walking. Too late. He’d noticed her tears. He set down the lunch basket and guitar and opened his arms. Closing her eyes, she steeled herself for his touch. One hand rubbed her back, the other pushed her hat off and guided her head to his shoulder. “Go ahead, cry it all out.” He kissed the top of her head. The wind wrapped her skirt around his legs. She gulped. “I’m sorry. I’m not usually like this.” “You’re upset because Marta doesn’t speak English.” This man. Could he read her thoughts? He continued, “Ivar learned pretty quick. We got along fine. So will you and Marta.” She nodded. “Foolish of me to assume she’d already know.” “Guess you’ve missed Ellen.” His warm fingers rubbed a knot in her neck. “Know what Dakota means? It’s Sioux for ‘friend.’ All this week I’ve talked until my throat’s sore, but you’ve hardly said a word. I’ll be your friend, if you’ll talk to me.
Catherine Richmond (Spring for Susannah)
Another inspiring example is Standing Rock,” I said, referencing the 2016 protests to stop construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline that would likely threaten the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation’s primary water source and desecrate their sacred sites. “The police used pepper spray, tear gas, rubber bullets, and even sprayed the protestors with water in the freezing winter, and still the protestors stayed. Thinking about that now, it was the young people of Standing Rock who emerged as leaders in that occupation.
Jane Goodall (The Book of Hope: A Survival Guide for Trying Times)
The first wave of guilt came with images of the protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline in 2016. The pipeline was constructed to transport crude oil through the Dakotas into Illinois. It was voted on and decided by White men and given permission not through voluntary easements, as was originally required, but instead through forced condemnations and evictions. The Standing Rock Sioux disagreed with the pipeline, as it was likely to destroy their ancestral burial grounds and taint their water supply with viscous, black poison. Their voices went unheard.
Leah Myers (Thinning Blood: A Memoir of Family, Myth, and Identity)
When the construction was announced to continue as planned, the tribe and their allies came together. People from across two hundred tribes and beyond to other communities came together to try and protect their water, their lives. They were met with forces from the National Guard and seventy-five other law enforcement agencies across the country. These forces used concussion grenades and automatic rifles against civilians. They spent hours shooting them with water cannons in subfreezing temperatures to try and make them give in.
Leah Myers (Thinning Blood: A Memoir of Family, Myth, and Identity)
When the bell rings she hurries up to me with more than twenty sheets of paper. She’s Indian—Hidatsa, maybe, or Sioux—and the other children let her pass as if she were invisible. The morning star dances in a red circle, singing a song about his girlfriend Sheila; the angel Gabriel stands before Mary, his blue wings ablaze with stars. His mouth is open wide and notes are coming out, each one a different color. A woman with green hair holds her hands up to the sky and says: These are secret words, Say them after me. May all the plants and flowers rise And all people rise from death. I look up from the paper: a dusty shelf, a starfish in a jar caked with dust beside dusty petri dishes. I see shades of blue: the globe cerulean, the sky bleached out. And out the window, above the children’s heads, topsoil, the residue of ancient oceans, swirling like a thumbprint in the playground, wind pushing the empty swings. “So many poems,” I say, smiling at the girl. “You must love to write.” She shifts from foot to foot and weaves her hands in air. “I don’t have paper at home,” she says, “so I keep them in my head. That’s where they live until I write them down.
Kathleen Norris (Dakota: A Spiritual Geography (Dakotas))
We gathered up the kids and sat up on the hill. We had no time to get our chickens and no time to get our horses out of the corral. The water came in and smacked against the corral and broke the horses' legs. The drowned, and the chickens drowned. We sat on the hill and we cried. These are the stories we tell about the river," said [Ladona] Brave Bull Allard. The granddaughter of Chief Brave Bull, she told her story at a Missouri River symposium in Bismark, North Dakota, in the fall of 2003. Before The Flood, her Standing Rock Sioux Tribe lived in a Garden of Eden, where nature provided all their needs. "In the summer, we would plant huge gardens because the land was fertile," she recalled. We had all our potatoes and squash. We canned all the berries that grew along the river. Now we don't have the plants and the medicine they used to make.
Bill Lambrecht (Big Muddy Blues: True Tales and Twisted Politics Along Lewis and Clark's Missouri River)
+27639944880 BRING BACK EX LOVER IN CALIFORNIA SACRAMENTO SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO, LOST LOVE SPELLS IN USA LOVE SPELLS CASTER WHO CAN BRING BACK A LOST LOVER, AN EX- LOVER, MAGIC SPELLS CASTER, A LOST LOVE SPELLS CASTER TO BRING BACK LOST LOVER, EX- LOVER, EX-GIRLFRIEND, GIRLFRIEND, EX-BOYFRIEND, BOYFRIEND, EX-WIFE, WIFE, EX-HUSBAND, HUSBAND IN 24 HOURS, RETURN REUNITE EX LOVER LOST LOVER IN 24 HOURS, Are you looking for a good, authentic, genuine, best real working powerful love spells caster, love specialist, voodoo spells caster, a witch doctor, a native healer, a spiritual healer, a traditional doctor, black magician? You need a spell caster? Looking for a voodoo Wiccan love spells caster? You want/ need your lost lover back? You need to reunite you’re lost ex-lover? You want to return you’re lost ex-lover? You want to reunite with your lost ex-lover? I am a love spells caster / a spell caster to bring back lost lover, return reunite ex-boyfriend girlfriend wife husband. LOVE SPELL CASTER IN California Sacramento Los Angeles Colorado Denver Connecticut Hartford Bridgeport Delaware Dover Wilmington Florida Tallahassee Jacksonville Georgia Atlanta Hawaii Honolulu Idaho Boise Illinois Springfield Chicago Indiana Indianapolis Iowa Des Moines Kansas Topeka Wichita Kentucky Frankfort Louisville Louisiana Baton Rouge New Orleans Maine Augusta Portland Maryland Annapolis Baltimore Alabama Montgomery Birmingham Alaska Juneau Anchorage Arizona Phoenix Arkansas Little Rock Massachusetts Boston Michigan Lansing Detroit Minnesota St. Paul Minneapolis Mississippi Jackson Missouri Jefferson City Kansas City Montana Helena Billings Nebraska Lincoln Omaha Nevada Carson City Las Vegas New Hampshire Concord Manchester New Jersey Trenton Newark New Mexico Santa Fe Albuquerque New York +27639944880 Albany New York City North Carolina Raleigh Charlotte North Dakota Bismarck Fargo Ohio Columbus Oklahoma Oklahoma City Oregon Salem Portland Pennsylvania Harrisburg Philadelphia Rhode Island Providence South Carolina Columbia South Dakota Pierre Sioux Falls Tennessee Nashville Memphis Texas Austin Houston Utah Salt Lake City Vermont Montpelier Burlington Virginia Richmond Virginia Beach Washington Olympia Seattle West Virginia Charleston Wisconsin Madison Milwaukee Wyoming Cheyenne Miami A voodoo spells casters/ love spells casters in Louisiana Los Angeles California Atlanta Georgia Florida Alabama Pennsylvania Louisiana Chicago Indiana Nebraska West Virginia +27639944880 New York New Hampshire. Black magic practitioners, black magic removal expert, black magic person, black magic specialist , Black magic for broken relationships, voodoo magic, voodoo practitioners, voodoo specialist, voodoo expert, voodoo spells specialist, voodoo magic specialist, voodoo magic practitioners, voodoo magic expert, spells caster for marriage, spells caster for love problems, spells caster for divorce issues, spells caster, voodoo spells caster for marriage, spells caster for separation, voodoo spells caster for divorce, voodoo spells caster for separation, spells caster who can return gay lover, spells caster who can reunite gay lover, spells caster for gay relationships, voodoo spells caster for gay relationships, spells caster for broken a relationship, a spells caster who can solve relationship problems, issues, matters , a spells caster who can restore broken love, spells caster who can restore broken relationship, spells caster who can work on broken relationship, +27639944880 broken relationship spells caster, broken relationship voodoo spells, black magic for broken relationship, voodoo spells caster for broken relationship, a witch doctor for broken relationship, a witch doctor for broken marriage, black magic for broken marriage, voodoo spells caster for broken marriage. Break up spells in Alaska, break up spells in Arkansas, break up spells in California, break up spells in Colorado, break up spells in Connecticut, break up spells in Delaware, break up
ASTROLOGER G. PARTHIBAN
BRING BACK EX LOVER IN CALIFORNIA SACRAMENTO SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO, LOST LOVE SPELLS IN USA +27639944880 LOVE SPELLS CASTER WHO CAN BRING BACK A LOST LOVER, AN EX- LOVER, MAGIC SPELLS CASTER, A LOST LOVE SPELLS CASTER TO BRING BACK LOST LOVER, EX- LOVER, EX-GIRLFRIEND, GIRLFRIEND, EX-BOYFRIEND, BOYFRIEND, EX-WIFE, WIFE, EX-HUSBAND, HUSBAND IN 24 HOURS, RETURN REUNITE EX LOVER LOST LOVER IN 24 HOURS, Are you looking for a good, authentic, genuine, best real working powerful love spells caster, love specialist, voodoo spells caster, a witch doctor, a native healer, a spiritual healer, a traditional doctor, black magician? You need a spell caster? Looking for a voodoo Wiccan love spells caster? You want/ need your lost lover back? You need to reunite you’re lost ex-lover? You want to return you’re lost ex-lover? You want to reunite with your lost ex-lover? I am a love spells caster / a spell caster to bring back lost lover, return reunite ex-boyfriend girlfriend wife husband. LOVE SPELL CASTER IN California Sacramento Los Angeles Colorado Denver Connecticut Hartford Bridgeport Delaware Dover Wilmington Florida Tallahassee Jacksonville Georgia Atlanta Hawaii Honolulu Idaho Boise Illinois Springfield Chicago Indiana Indianapolis Iowa Des Moines Kansas Topeka Wichita Kentucky Frankfort Louisville Louisiana Baton Rouge New Orleans Maine Augusta Portland Maryland Annapolis Baltimore Alabama Montgomery Birmingham Alaska Juneau Anchorage Arizona Phoenix Arkansas Little Rock Massachusetts Boston Michigan Lansing Detroit Minnesota St. Paul Minneapolis Mississippi Jackson Missouri Jefferson City Kansas City Montana Helena Billings Nebraska Lincoln Omaha Nevada Carson City Las Vegas New Hampshire Concord Manchester New Jersey Trenton Newark New Mexico Santa Fe Albuquerque New York +27639944880 Albany New York City North Carolina Raleigh Charlotte North Dakota Bismarck Fargo Ohio Columbus Oklahoma Oklahoma City Oregon Salem Portland Pennsylvania Harrisburg Philadelphia Rhode Island Providence South Carolina Columbia South Dakota Pierre Sioux Falls Tennessee Nashville Memphis Texas Austin Houston Utah Salt Lake City Vermont Montpelier Burlington Virginia Richmond Virginia Beach Washington Olympia Seattle West Virginia Charleston Wisconsin Madison Milwaukee Wyoming Cheyenne Miami A voodoo spells casters/ love spells casters in Louisiana Los Angeles California Atlanta Georgia Florida Alabama Pennsylvania Louisiana Chicago Indiana Nebraska West Virginia +27639944880 New York New Hampshire. Black magic practitioners, black magic removal expert, black magic person, black magic specialist , Black magic for broken relationships, voodoo magic, voodoo practitioners, voodoo specialist, voodoo expert, voodoo spells specialist, voodoo magic specialist, voodoo magic practitioners, voodoo magic expert, spells caster for marriage, spells caster for love problems, spells caster for divorce issues, spells caster, voodoo spells caster for marriage, spells caster for separation, voodoo spells caster for divorce, voodoo spells caster for separation, spells caster who can return gay lover, spells caster who can reunite gay lover, spells caster for gay relationships, voodoo spells caster for gay relationships, spells caster for broken a relationship, a spells caster who can solve relationship problems, issues, matters , a spells caster who can restore broken love, spells caster who can restore broken relationship, spells caster who can work on broken relationship, +27639944880 broken relationship spells caster, broken relationship voodoo spells, black magic for broken relationship, voodoo spells caster for broken relationship, a witch doctor for broken relationship, a witch doctor for broken marriage, black magic for broken marriage, voodoo spells caster for broken marriage. Break up spells in Alaska, break up spells in Arkansas, break up spells in California, break up spells in Colorado, break up spells in Connecticut, break up spells in Delaware, break up s
voodoo spellcaster