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Black Elk was present at the Battle of the Little Big Horn. In 1890 he survived the massacre at Wounded Knee. “A people’s dream died there... It was a beautiful dream...the nation’s hoop is broken and scattered. There is no center any longer, and the sacred tree is dead.”
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In 1904 he became a Catholic and eventually a catechist. Opinions differ on the meaning of this conversion and what it meant for Black Elk to reconcile the different halves of his spiritual history. At 67 he described the vision of his youth in the classic “Black Elk Speaks.”
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He died on the Pine Ridge reservation on August 19 1950. In 2017 he was proposed for canonization as a Catholic saint. A guide for those now living in a world on the edge of destruction, seeking a spiritual vision to sustain and carry us to the other side.
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I appreciate this memorial about my father by @ggrenwald above any I have read today--for his comprehensive review of his bio & history, for his attention to themes generally overlooked about his post-Vietnam life, but particularly for deep appreciation of his human qualities.🙏
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Here's my @RollingStone article on Daniel Ellsberg, the heroic Pentagon Papers leaker who died today at 92: "We’re Told Never to Meet Our Childhood Heroes. Knowing Daniel Ellsberg Proved That Wrong" rollingstone.com/politics/polit
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