Keepers of the Sacred Hills: The Lakota People
From Ancient Origins to the Fight for the Future
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Narrado por:
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Michelle Peitz
Some histories arrive in the public mind already simplified. They become a handful of images, a small collection of names, and a few repeating phrases that are passed from generation to generation until they begin to feel like the whole story. The Lakota have suffered that kind of compression more than most people. In the popular imagination, they are often reduced to war bonnets, cavalry charges, and a tragic snow-covered hillside called Wounded Knee. They are placed in a narrow frame where they seem to appear suddenly in the nineteenth century, briefly resist the advance of the United States, and then vanish into a sad afterword.
That is not the Lakota story. It is not even close.
The Lakota are not a symbol, not a single moment, not a romantic idea of “the Plains Indian,” and not a fixed portrait from a time when the world still felt vast and unsettled. The Lakota are a living nation of families, communities, languages, obligations, ceremonies, and political realities. They have a deep past that predates the United States, a nineteenth century that cannot be understood through battles alone, and a modern era that is not merely survival but continuation, adaptation, and ongoing insistence on the meaning of treaty, land, and identity.
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