Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The Legacy of Our Manifest Destiny

Close you eyes and imagine poor.

What did you imagine?


What I imagined, did not include the images taken by Aaron Huey at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation of the Lakota/Sioux Indians.  In Aaron's moving Tedx video he points out some of the following statistics about the residents of Pine Ridge:

  • Umployment rate is 85%
  • 30% of homes have no electricity
  • 60% of homes have black mold
  • 90% of residents live below the federal poverty line
  • Tuberculosis is eight times higher than the rest of the nation
  • Infant mortality rate is the highest on the continent and three times higher than the rest of the nation.
  • School drop out rate is 70%
  • 50% of men over 40 has diabetes
  • The life expectant of men is the same as Afghanistan and Somalia







click HERE to see Aaron's full gallery of photo's.

From broken land treaties, to prisoners of war, to massacures of women and children, we are all familiar with the grave injustices done to the Native Americans in the quest of for our nation's Manifest Destiny.


TAKEAWAY:
I've been sitting on this post for months wrestling with the takeway. The purpose of this blog is to inspire you to take even the smallest of actions toward making our world a better place, not to depress you, make you feel guilty, or make you feel hopeless.  It is also to educate, as education is the key to a civil society. 

I am compelled by Aaron's TED video and his images because I was shocked at how, as a nation, the legacy we inflicted on the Native Americans over a hundred years ago is still being lived every day by the survivors.  Yet, as a nation, we continue to sweep it under the rug.  This is anything, but a free a civil society.


CALL TO ACTIONS:

This is not a simple issue, but some call to actions include:

  1. Contact our government leaders to insist the terms of the original Fort Laramie Treaty are uphelded
  2. Contact Hiefer to encourage them to start a project that benefits the Lakota/Sioux people like the project they did for Native Americans in New York.
  3. Contact KIVA and encourage them to provide micro loans that benefit Native Americans as they begin to expand into US based projects.  80% of the money made on the reservation leaves the reservation because there isn't enough locally owned businesses to capture the money.
  4. Contact Direct Relief International and encourage them to include projects that benefit Native Americans in their Direct Relief US program which provides free medications and supplies for clinics serving low-income and uninsured patients.





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