Most Awe-Inspiring Man I've Ever Met
I met him a few years before I ever thought of doing a blog, so hence I didn't bring a camera to a friend's college alumni luncheon where he was speaking. But still today he remains the most awe-inspiring man I've ever met in person and the only one for which my stomach went jittery, as I was awestruck to be shaking his hand.
Those who know me are probably wondering which actor I'm talking about, and in a way, they'd be right, because he is an actor now. But it isn't because he's an actor that meeting him filled me with awe that day. And it isn't even because he's an activist or sees his acting as a way to reach more people as an activist than he could on the lecture circuit.
What struck awe in me as I went up to say hello and shake his hand was that this was talking to a very important part of history. In 1972, this man, with others, had stood up against the might of our soldiers and FBI agents armed with guns, facing those guns for the rights of his people. In a standoff at Wounded Knee -- a place of a terrible massacre of Sioux Indians in the 19th century -- he faced down getting shot and killed by modern-day, fellow citizenry white men who hated him for the color of his skin and for his unwillingness to sink with his culture down into oblivion, who hated him for protesting against all the broken promises and stolen land and treaty violations our government has perpetrated on his people.
I've marched in protest with other like-minded college students, I've supported causes for the rights of people, I've written letters and stuffed envelopes and collected food and clothing. I've written stories and scripts to spread my beliefs. I even helped collect food and clothing to be backpacked through the mountains and hence smuggled past the US government blockade of those brave members of AIM (American Indian Movement) who stood up in defiance so bravely for weeks. But I've never faced guns pointed at me out of hatred and with the full blessing of my government and I'm not even sure that I could. To be truthful, I never want to find out.
I've never been shot or stabbed or incarcerated in prison for my beliefs like this man has. I never want to have to find out whether I can take it and bounce out the other side still fighting to have the voice of my people heard. I don't want to find out how it feels to have that kind of pain or suffer that kind of anguish. I truly doubt I'd have the strength.
But that's why meeting Russell Means, the first national director of the American Indian Movement (AIM), in person was such a momentous and awesome encounter. Because he's the real thing. While we write and act it out in our fantasy worlds of screen and TV, he's the one who actually did it -- put his life on the line for what he was saying.
That he doesn't do that now, and puts his efforts more into acting and producing stories about his people I fully understand. Few people heard of the standoff at Wounded Knee because there was no Internet back in 1972 and the government was pretty successful at getting a media blackout. Yet millions have seen what Native Americans and Native American cultures are all about in movies such as Last of the Mohicans, Black Cloud, Into the West, and various other television shows that raise awareness while entertaining.
Even our humanitarian efforts at supplying food and warm clothing for those protestors went for naught. While we figured many would be caught, we figured that some of the backpackers would get through... and aid was being sent from all states in the Union. What we didn't know then and didn't find out until much later was that all that aid was stopped at the borders of the various states it was collected in and hence none of it got through. It was illegal to stop it and the ACLU successively fought it in the courts, but it mattered little because by then the protestors were starved into submission. And in the grand scheme of things, very few people ever heard of any of it.
So maybe the most effective ways to change people's minds and hearts are through movies like Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee and Flags of our Fathers. But I still stand in awe of meeting the real life person, who laid it all the line in real life, and took being shot and stabbed and incarcerated in stride to try to help his people.
Labels: acting, AIM, American Indian Movement, Native Americans, protest, Russell Means
5 Comments:
I'm in Awe of all of them. Russell Means, Dennis Banks Vernon and Clyde Bellecourt, John Trudell who's wife and children were burned out and killed. And there were many more. One other courageous episode was occupying the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, DC. Boy did Nixon have his hands full. They all came from the Great and mighty Souix Nation. All in the Spirit of Crazy Horse.Love the Blog.
8:25 PM
Carol,
You are absolutely right. I am in awe of all of them for what they did and the courage they showed.
But I've only met Russell Means in person. I was trying to describe, the unexpectedly strong response of awe I had to meeting a man who had done what he did and the courage he showed. I'm sure I would have responded the same way to meeting Dennis, Clyde, John, or any of the others, for the exact same reasons. The other AIM leaders would have also struck me with the same weight of courage and importance and living history.
Thank you so much for posting so that I know there's someone else out there that shares my feeling.
11:30 PM
Carol,
One more word -- I've always admired what AIM has done and the Spirit of Crazy Horse. But from afar. About the only thing I could do for them was collecting food and clothes and money back then. What I wanted to pay tribute to was what I felt like meeting one of them... because while my head and heart was always in awe of them... what was unexpected was the gut reaction of awe meeting one, if you understand what I mean.
12:56 AM
O'siyo, Crystal. Wado for this wonderful blog about an amazing human-being. Russell Means is one of my heroes. May you Walk In Beauty....
4:38 AM
Thank you for the lovely words. Whenever I read this over, I feel like my words don't really convey my feelings. I didn't realize how deeply or how permanently Wounded Knee affected me until I met this amazing man. I do believe they are all heroes. Especially the women. Either Russell's book or Dennis's book or both talked about how it was the women who made the decision to take the stand at Wounded Knee. And when you think that these were not young women sowing their oats so to speak, but mothers putting their children - their youth -- in harm's way -- it is quite awesome and heroic.
11:07 AM
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