AIM-GGC
Profile
WHAT
IS THE AMERICAN INDIAN MOVEMENT?
Things will never be same again and that is what the American
Indian Movement is about ... They are respected by many,
hated by some, but they are never ignored ... They are the
catalyst for Indian Sovereignty ... They intend to raise
questions in the minds of all, questions that have gone to sleep in
the minds of Indians and non-Indian alike ... From the outside,
AIM people are tough people, they had to be ... AIM
was born out of the dark violence of police brutality and voiceless
despair of Indian people in the courts of Minneapolis, Minnesota
... AIM was born because a few knew that it was enough,
enough to endure for themselves and all others like them who were
people without power or rights ... AIM people have known
the insides of jails; the long wait; the no appeal of the courts for
Indians, because many of them were there ... From the inside
AIM people are cleansing themselves; many have returned to
the old traditional religions of their tribes, away from the
confused notions of a society that has made them slaves of their own
unguided lives ... AIM is first, a spiritual movement, a
religious re-birth, and then the re-birth of dignity and pride in a
people ... AIM succeeds because they have beliefs to act
upon ... The American Indian Movement is attempting to
connect the realities of the past with the promise of tomorrow
... They are people in a hurry, because they know that the
dignity of a person can be snuffed by despair and a belt in a cell
of a city jail ... They know that the deepest hopes of the old
people could die with them ... They know that the Indian way is
not tolerated in White America, because it is not acknowledged as a
decent way to be ... Sovereignty, Land, and Culture cannot
endure if a people is not left in peace ... The American
Indian Movement is then, the Warriors Class of this century, who
are bound to the bond of the Drum, who vote with their bodies
instead of their mouths ... THEIR BUSINESS IS HOPE.
Words and thoughts by Birgil Kills Straight, Oglala
Lakota Nation. Author, Richard LaCourse, Director, American
Indian Press Association 1973
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