The Song of Native American Day . . . at Long Last
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By the shores of Sacramento
By the murky Delta water
Stood the office of Pete Wilson.
Son of Rightness, Peter Wilson,
He whose right hand is his pen hand.
*
Bright before him lay the paper,
Lay the clear, official wording
Making one day for the Indian
One day hallowed to the Indian
Out of all the long year’s passage.
*
Wilson signed it for the Indians,
Called them “our first Californians,”
Set aside a harvest Friday
Fourth of each September’s Friday
To remember our red brethren.
*
Late and little comes the honor
To the vanquished native thousands.
Grass has grown across their grave sites
Malls and homesteads hide their grave sites
Gone from memory as from living.
*
Like the California grizzly,
Living only on the state flag,
Only hallowed in extinction
Safely captured by extinction,
Martyred by its very killers.
*
Who then does that Friday honor?
Ghost of Ishi, our last Yahi,
Dead of TB, and of heartbreak.
Tens of thousands, killed by heartbreak
Surely as by guns and virus.
*
Mission people, mass converted
To the Spaniards’ cross and credo.
Living in the mission compounds,
Dying in the mission compounds,
Scythed like wheat for their salvation.
*
Chumash, with their painted cave walls,
Miwok, skilled in herbs for healing,
Hoopa and Ohlone people,
Throve for years unnumbered, people
Done to death in less than fifty.
*
Gold Rush settlers, 49ers,
Tapped a deep, rich vein of bloodshed,
Ushered in the natives’ twilight,
Launched their swift and certain twilight:
Not for them, this El Dorado.
*
More than just a three-day weekend,
This new law approved by Wilson
Also wants to teach the children
In the classroom, give the children
Lessons of the native people.
*
Let’s not sugarcoat the history,
Let’s not teach them cartoon legends.
Not just Pocahontas fables,
Not just sad “Ramona” fables,
More than noble braves and maidens.
*
Tell of Pomos, trapped and murdered,
Wiped out north of San Francisco,
One more slaughter in that history,
Wounded Knee and Sand Creek history,
Massacred like pesky vermin.
*
Teach about the Bellflower clinic:
“Pocahontas” in one weekend
Made more money at the movies--
Thirty million at the movies--
Than this little Indian clinic
Had to spend since 1970.
*
On the day that Wilson signed it,
Made the holiday official,
Polls of California voters
Found that more than half the voters
Favor Indian-run casinos.
*
This is a defining moment--
Many years of bland betrayals,
Pledges made and pledges broken,
Bones and arrows smashed and broken,
May avenge themselves in this way:
*
Holidays are fine and welcome
But like treaties, only paper.
Something else can turn the tables:
Five-card stud and blackjack tables
Could redress a mighty grievance,
*
Could make up for lands and status,
And restore a balance toppled:
Taking back in bits and pieces,
Winning back by two-bit pieces,
What was taken from their forebears.
*
Cannot bring back lives and birthrights
But redress can be exacted
From the ghosts of two-armed killers
(Wild for gold and land, those killers)--
Buck by buck, by one-armed bandits.
*
Next September 24th, then,
Make a restitution gesture.
Expiate this guilt by gambling,
Lose your shirt to them in gambling:
Living well’s their sweetest vengeance.
Patt Morrison’s column appears Wednesdays. E-mail her at patt.morrison@latimes.com
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