Wounded Knee Bloodbath ‘Tarnishes’ Integrity of Medal of Honor

When Rep. Kaiali’i Kahele, a lieutenant colonel within the Hawaii Air Nationwide Guard, thinks in regards to the males, ladies, and youngsters massacred by the U.S. Army greater than a century in the past at Wounded Knee, it brings house recollections of different wrongs.

In 1893, U.S. Marines helped stage a coup d’etat with American sugar planters towards Queen Lili’uokalani, the Hawaiian monarch. Their actions in overthrowing her kingdom ultimately led the cluster of islands to turn out to be the final state, via annexation, to hitch the US.

“No redress has ever occurred,” Kahele says, although Congress ultimately apologized.

So when Native American veterans got here to Kahele, who’s on the Home Armed Companies Committee, with a mission to avoid wasting the glory of Indigineous peoples, in addition to of the Medal of Honor, he dedicated to their trigger.

“As a Native Hawaiian, as a fight veteran, I’m a really proud member of our United States army,” he says. “And the Medal of Honor is our nation’s highest army honor that honors heroism and bravado. … However what occurred at Wounded Knee and the bloodbath of tons of of unarmed Native Individuals tarnishes the integrity of the Medal of Honor and stains the popularity of those that do dwell as much as the usual of the Medal of Honor.”

Kahele—and a coalition of veterans, descendants, and lawmakers—hopes to rescind the 20 Medals of Honor awarded after the assault.

That push started in 2019, when Donald Trump mocked Sen. Elizabeth Warren, saying the Democratic senator from Massachusetts ought to have filmed her 2019 New Yr’s Eve announcement to ascertain a presidential exploratory committee whereas standing in entrance of a backdrop of “Bighorn or Wounded Knee, as an alternative of her kitchen, together with her husband wearing full Indian garb.”

“I imply, when the president of the US doesn’t even find out about Wounded Knee and might use it as a racist joke,” says Oliver “O.J.” Semans Sr., an enrolled member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe and a former U.S. Navy firefighter, “meaning we now have a protracted methods to go to be able to train America what really occurred at Wounded Knee, in order that’s once we began the marketing campaign.”

Semans wrote a letter to Trump lower than a month after the president’s remarks however mentioned it wasn’t meant to “clarify the fallacious performed in invoking this horror”—since his senators had already performed so.

“It ought to by no means be used as a punchline,” South Dakota Republican Sen. Mike Rounds tweeted. Sen. John Thune, a member of the Senate Republican management, mentioned Wounded Knee is “not one thing to be joked about.”

However Semans hoped to elucidate why the phrases had been so hurtful and to make a proper request to repair a previous fallacious. He started with a historical past lesson:

“The ‘Battle at Wounded Knee’ on December 29, 1890 was no battle,” Semans wrote to Trump. “It was a bloodbath. … The seventh Cavalry, which was obligated by treaty to guard my ancestors, as an alternative hunted my ancestors, surrounded them, and gunned tons of of them down. This included terrified ladies and youngsters who fled—defenseless—via the snow, perpetually stained by their blood.”

Medals of Honor got for killing Lakota ladies and youngsters. Calling upon Trump to “proper a a lot graver fallacious” was step one in correcting his dangerous and hurtful rhetoric, Semans says. However his letter went unanswered.

The unanswered letter feels heavy as Semans remembers the tales of his ancestors who had died by army fingers at the same time as they gave up their weapons. He thinks in regards to the Medals of Honor awarded for the killing of kids—as a strategy to change the narrative about an occasion so horrific that, at the same time as the ultimate marketing campaign through the American Indian Wars, U.S. leaders anxious about public notion and lingering legacy.

And as Veterans Affairs warns U.S. veterans that the pictures from the conflict in Ukraine might set off recollections and melancholy, Semans thinks in regards to the intergenerational trauma of his individuals as they watch others die combating to guard their lands. He and the band of Indigenous peoples he’s introduced collectively to struggle to revive the glory of these killed a century in the past, in addition to the medal established three a long time earlier than the bloodbath, say these horrified by the current must also be horrified by the previous.

‘We Don’t Know How Many Youngsters Ran Away’

Violet Catches, a third-generation Oglala Sioux descendant, remembers being advised a days-long blizzard abruptly swept over the grassy prairies as her blood relative, Leon Holy, ran away with a gaggle of different youngsters from the gun-bearing troopers.

It was Dec. 29, 1890, in southwestern South Dakota, and members of the Lakota Sioux peoples had been compelled from their reservation. They sought refuge within the Badlands, an inhospitable space identified for its few sources of water, its slippery clay rocks, and the buttes and canyons that make journey tough. There had been a drought that yr, and crops had failed. The U.S. authorities despatched a federal agent, who was supposed to make sure the tribal members had sufficient meals and clothes. However Congress had minimize the funds for this system after the Sioux Settlement in 1889. Till the U.S. authorities expanded west, the Lakota had been largely nomadic, looking huge recreation. U.S. officers needed them to turn out to be farmers, on dangerous land, and to remain in a single place. That space grew smaller because the federal authorities claimed extra assets.

As these assets dwindled, together with rations from the federal government, and because the drought left the Lakotas with little meals, President Benjamin Harrison feared the Native Individuals would assault white settlers. The Lakota had rebelled towards integration—faith, clothes, language—by performing the “Ghost Dance,” which terrified the native U.S. agent. Harrison despatched in troops from Fort Robinson, Nebraska, to cease the ritual from spreading throughout Indian Nation.

Sitting Bull, who had led the Lakotas to victory at Little Bighorn, was one of many most-wanted Native Individuals at the moment as a result of, whereas he didn’t follow the dance himself, he ensured others had been ready to take action. The U.S. agent despatched in Indian police to arrest him, however Sitting Bull, with 12 others, was killed.

Some individuals fled to Pine Ridge. Others went again to the Badlands. On Dec. 28, 1890, the seventh Cavalry—beforehand led by Gen. George Armstrong Custer, who died together with his males at Little Bighorn—went into Wounded Knee Creek. The Lakotas of the Miniconjou band mentioned they might give up peacefully. The following day, Col. James Forsyth had his troopers collect the Native Individuals in a council circle, telling them the troopers would confiscate their weapons.

The Lakota males didn’t hand over all of their weapons. Forsyth ordered a search, however they started to carry out the Ghost Dance. Accounts over what occurred subsequent differ, however one retelling of that historical past says the rifle of Black Coyote, a younger and deaf Lakota man, misfired after a lot of the group’s weapons had been turned in, although it’s unclear who fired first. In the end, the seventh Cavalry opened hearth on a gaggle of largely unarmed males, ladies, and youngsters.

Dozens of individuals had been killed instantly, and when Lakota ladies and youngsters tried to flee to a close-by ravine, the troopers shot and killed them. The seventh Cavalry killed between 250 and 300 Indigenous individuals, and virtually half of them had been ladies and youngsters.

Troopers return from the battle of Wounded Knee. (Nationwide Archives photograph)

As Catches’ ancestor fled, frozen our bodies littered the makeshift battlefield stretching for miles, usually referred to as the “killing discipline” amongst Lakotas. The chilly, stiff corpse of Noticed Elk, nicknamed Chief Huge Foot of the Miniconjou band, was frozen to the bottom. The Army dug mass graves, and troopers stripped down a few of their our bodies to steal “ghost shirts” as souvenirs.

“And we don’t know what number of different youngsters ran from Wounded Knee collectively, unsupervised, and all of this as a result of someone needed land,” Catches tells The Warfare Horse. “Russia needs Ukraine for the land and the assets. We turned displaced for the exact same cause; we’re nonetheless displaced.”

‘They Didn’t Maintain Themselves Accountable’

Manny Iron Hawk sends ideas, prayers, and even a little bit of his damaged coronary heart across the globe from the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation in South Dakota to the Ukrainians 5,000 miles away.

“I hope possibly we are able to by some means ship a message to them, to the individuals of Ukraine, that we now have related histories,” the enrolled member of Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe tells The Warfare Horse, “that we’ve gone via some very laborious occasions, massacres, and whatnot.”

As co-chair of HAWK 1890, which stands for Heartbeat at Wounded Knee 1890—a Native-led grassroots group of residing descendants—Iron Hawk watches the modern-day wrestle for Ukrainian sovereignty. A fourth-generation direct descendant of Ghost Horse, who died at Wounded Knee together with his son, Iron Hawk says historical past is repeating itself with “quite a lot of youngsters getting killed over there,” together with older Ukrainians, a few of whom “aren’t fleeing quick sufficient.”

“They’re Indigenous, they’re tied to the land, so that they wish to keep there and struggle—if it prices them their lives,” Iron Hawk says of the Ukrainians. “They consider in one thing that comes from our coronary heart.”

Even with spotty mobile and Wi-Fi service scattered throughout the splintered South Dakota reservations, seeing human rights violations unfold on their televisions and cellular screens in actual time reminds residents of their very own bloodied historical past.

“They’re prepared to kill indiscriminately to be able to create shock and awe,” Wendell Yellow Bull, an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, tells The Warfare Horse. “What they did, they did right here. And the political was to justify why they did the atrocities.”

Joseph Horn Cloud was a Wounded Knee survivor and Yellow Bull’s great-grandfather. Yellow Bull by no means lived anyplace however Pine Ridge Indian Reservation—besides when he joined the Armed Forces.

In 1979, after his first try and cross the GED take a look at at age 17, he enlisted within the U.S. Marine Corps, incomes the rank of lance corporal. He was despatched to Okinawa, Japan, with the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, higher often called the “Magnificent Bastards.” He skilled infantry items assigned to rescue prisoners of conflict lengthy after the Vietnam Warfare ended. However right now, his perspective has modified: He sees himself as an intruder venturing into Asia with the “Stars and Stripes” stitched onto his uniform sleeve.

The Oglala Lakota county commissioner says if Individuals demand that Russia be punished for its army misconduct and allegations of conflict crimes in Ukraine, the US ought to appropriate its personal file.

“They didn’t maintain themselves accountable as a result of they declared it a battle,” Yellow Bull says, “They needed the land. … They needed revenge.”

Dwight Mears, a retired U.S. Army main and former historical past professor at West Level, says an investigation “did, in reality, uncover conflict crimes” within the days and months after the mass capturing in South Dakota. However the findings fell on deaf ears and had been ignored by these highest within the chain of command.

One case stands out among the many relaxation: Three miles away from the battlefield, the our bodies of a Lakota girl and three youngsters—two women and a boy—of the Huge Foot band had been found behind a bush.

Main Peter Dumont Vroom, the inspector normal, investigated Wounded Knee for Secretary of Warfare Redfield Proctor, in response to Mears. Vroom sought to search out out if civilians died unnecessarily.

The troopers seem to have coordinated their tales: “Most of them simply blamed the Natives and mentioned that this was treachery they usually had been those that killed their very own civilians,” Mears mentioned.

Main J. Ford Kent, 4th Infantry assistant inspector normal, blamed the Lakotas for the civilian casualties.

“I’m of opinion that, underneath the circumstances, all care was taken after the Indians made their first break to protect the lives of non-combatants,” he wrote in a sworn assertion, “and that the truth that a number of ladies and youngsters had been killed and wounded might be ascribed solely to the fault of the Indians themselves, and power of unavoidable and unlucky circumstances.”

However not the entire Army believed him, together with Gen. Nelson Appleton Miles, who requested the investigation.

“I’ve by no means heard of a extra brutal, cold-blooded bloodbath than that at Wounded Knee,” he wrote in a private letter. “About 2 hundred ladies and youngsters had been killed and wounded; ladies with little youngsters upon their backs, and young children powder-burned by the lads who killed them being so close to as to burn the flesh and clothes with the powder of their weapons, and nursing babes with 5 bullet holes via them.”

First Sgt. Herman Gunther of the seventh Cavalry’s Troop D remembered chasing the fleeing Natives, and “looking for the remainder” via the ravine after the bloodshed stopped.

A girl and three youngsters crouched within the low shrubbery. Earlier than the troops started to shoot at their unconfirmed targets, troopers and their commanding officers allegedly shouted out, “Hau Kola … Hau Kola …”—a Lakota time period that means “hi there buddy.”

Nobody answered, which isn’t stunning contemplating so many had simply been killed, Mears says. So the troopers fired. The women had been younger, between the ages of six and eight. The oldest woman fell in entrance of her mom, who was shot beneath her proper shoulder blade. The youngest daughter collapsed from a shot to her again and clung to her mom’s skirt.

The boy, who was as younger as 10, was shot within the left aspect of his head.

Blacksmith Maurice Carey, an enlistee who had joined Troop D three weeks earlier than the bloodbath, executed the boy, who was apparently nonetheless alive after the preliminary volley, whereas the remainder of the troopers wandered via the valley in the hunt for extra runaways.

Retired U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Edward Settle Godfrey’s letter to the Army Warfare School, written 40 years after the Wounded Knee investigation concluded, exhibits he noticed Carey grasp the boy’s head and elevate him up, solely to see his eyes abruptly flicker open. His sudden actions frightened the brand new recruit, who shot the boy via the pinnacle in “self protection,” out of concern for his personal life, Carey later advised Godfrey. However no weapons had been discovered close to any of the our bodies.

Whereas a number of troopers mentioned the bush was too thick for them to establish the unarmed Lakota girl and youngsters, the report discovered that the shrubbery had no leaves left on its branches, in response to Mears’ analysis.

“It doesn’t seem that this killing had any reference to the struggle at Wounded Knee,” Warfare Secretary Proctor wrote, absolving the U.S. Army from any duty for the civilian murders.

Warfare Division officers “anxious that it was going to taint the power to whitewash Wounded Knee and say that it had been totally investigated” following the Army’s inner inquiry of the girl and her youngsters’s deaths—one which was “fairly thorough by that day’s requirements,” Mears says, “not a lot by current day”—so that they mentioned it was unrelated to Wounded Knee.

Neither Forsyth, a West Level graduate, nor any of his males had been prosecuted after the inquiry concluded. Though the secretary of conflict mentioned the troopers dedicated crimes, Proctor’s verdict allowed the Army colonel to regain management of his command following a quick go away of absence through the investigation.

‘Awarding Medals Modified the Narrative’

Troopers who fired indiscriminately and aimed toward youngsters, in addition to largely unarmed Lakota males, had been really useful for the Medal of Honor. In the end, 20 troopers who participated within the bloodbath at Wounded Knee acquired the Medal of Honor. To place that in perspective, 25 Medals of Honor have been awarded within the 21 years for the reason that 9/11 terror assaults.

After Wounded Knee, 2nd Lt. Harry Hawthorne acquired a medal for his gallantry, his coolness, his discretion, and the best way he dealt with his weapons, Jerry Inexperienced writes for the Nebraska State Historic Society. John Clancy, who was court-martialed eight occasions whereas he served within the Army and in the end was dishonorably discharged, acquired his medal for rescuing wounded troopers.

After Wounded Knee, the Army added to the necessities for the medal: One couldn’t obtain it if they’d been court-martialed for the reason that motion.

Different troopers acquired medals for “gallantry,” or “bravery.” One such soldier fatally shot himself within the head two years after Wounded Knee.

Yet one more soldier acquired a medal for “conspicuous bravery in rounding up and bringing to the skirmish line a stampeded pack mule,” Inexperienced writes. One other soldier earned his medal for “voluntarily leaving his work as a cook dinner.”

The Wounded Knee Memorial on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.
On this Might 1, 2015 photograph, Native American cartoonist Ricardo Cate’, far proper, and Chicano cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz, third proper, go to Wounded Knee Memorial at Wounded Knee, S.D., on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. The nightclub assault in Orlando was initially described by some information organizations, together with The Related Press, because the deadliest mass capturing in U.S. historical past. In fact, America has seen even greater massacres, some involving tons of of males, ladies and youngsters, just like the one at Wounded Knee in 1890 towards the Lakota. (AP Photograph/Russell Contreras)

Medals predating the Army’s modernization, together with these issued at Wounded Knee, got with none guiding statutory rules. Lots of the Wounded Knee recipients would have failed to satisfy the service threshold necessities set by new fashionable statutes that dictated Medal of Honor eligibility, Mears says.

“Awarding medals was a wonderful strategy to change the narrative,” Mears says, including that the Army’s seventh Cavalry sought to “shore up their legacy.”

Twelve years after Wounded Knee, the 1916 Medal of Honor Assessment Board revoked 911 medals after they assessed all 2,625 medals given for the reason that award’s founding in 1862. It’s the one time Army medals had been rescinded, licensed by an act of Congress.

The Wounded Knee troopers all stored their medals.

Mears has labored to collect teachers to individually assess every Medal of Honor awarded for Wounded Knee. His has recognized at the least 13 circumstances that appear to be “facially revocable,” that means the actions that led to the medals had been questionable. However he wants extra buy-in from his friends in academia.

Mears, who wrote The Medal of Honor: The Evolution of America’s Highest Army Ornament, says the Wounded Knee awards weren’t earned.

“Nearly everybody with a Ph.D. after their title mainly agrees that the Army mustn’t have awarded these medals, even underneath their standards that existed at the moment, that it was unwise, and that in all probability a few of these officers knew it—​​if not the individuals themselves,” Mears says.

“They had been deliberately making an attempt to push a false model of historical past, and so that you’re not rewriting historical past by undoing that,” he provides. “You’re correcting historical past to base it on info, and that’s like Wounded Knee as a result of the established order is untenable.”

‘Act Swiftly to Revoke These Undue Honors’

In early November, Sens. Warren and Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., led efforts to ship a letter with Kahele and 15 different U.S. senators to the president, asking him to “act swiftly to revoke these undue honors” to “proper this historic fallacious and start to heal the lasting wounds of many Native American descendants right now.”

“This was one thing I felt, as an Indigenous, Native Hawaiian, that it was my duty to behave as a voice for not solely my ancestors, however the ancestors of all Indigenous peoples of this nation who’ve, for over 100 years, been silenced on this concern—like those who had been silenced at Wounded Knee,” Kahele says.

Though federal lawmakers argue the president has the authority to revoke honors when deemed applicable, the method to rescind army decorations is a reasonably fashionable and even unprecedented one, Mears says.

Since there’s no statute barring any sitting president from revocating army awards, together with the Medal of Honor, Mears says “it’s a protected guess” Biden has the authority to revoke the medals.

Nevertheless, Protection Division coverage tips define causes for revocation. Normally, proof should show fraud, materials error, or the misrepresentation of info regarding the conduct of service, Mears says.

“The Division of Protection typically struggles with learn how to handle and supply redress to issues which have been performed to our Native communities up to now,” Kahele says. “Native Hawaiians are not any totally different.”

‘It’s Very Private to Us’

After sending the letter in 2019, Semans and his spouse Barbara started bringing at the least 100 direct descendants of the 131-year-old bloodbath collectively throughout three reservations via 4 Instructions, a South Dakota-based nonpartisan group main Native voting rights initiatives nationwide.

Like their ancestors, the residing descendants are resilient and equally affected person. It took a century for Hill lawmakers to acknowledge Wounded Knee as a “horrible tragedy” in a decision the one hundred and first Congress handed in 1990.

In 2001, the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribal Council referred to as upon the US to revoke the Medals of Honor after passing a decision demanding the Army “surrender the issuance of mentioned medals” and proclaim that the army honors are “null and void” given “the atrocities dedicated” upon unarmed noncombatants.

On the Nationwide Congress of American Indians annual session 18 years later, held in Albuquerque, New Mexico, they adopted a decision in help of the Take away the Stain Act by calling upon Congress and the president to “train a way of humanity.” The 2019 decision says commending the Army’s seventh Cavalry with army reward “dishonors the Medals of Honor and is a message of hostility and genocide by the US towards the Nice Sioux Nation and our treasured relations who had been massacred at Wounded Knee.”

“I feel as army service members, it’s very private to us,” Kahele says. “And it’s one thing that even when it occurred 100-plus years in the past, it must be addressed.”

Although the Democrats management Congress, and President Joe Biden issued an official marketing campaign promise to rescind Medals of Honor issued at Wounded Knee, the very best army decorations nonetheless stay intact for U.S. troopers who participated in a bloodbath.

The Take away the Stain Act laws has appeared, spanning throughout two congressional classes. All makes an attempt to enact the measure into regulation have failed to date. Nevertheless, 4 Instructions helped coordinate two presidential boards, centering Native communities and points on the forefront of conversations through the newest race for the White Home.

Throughout one such session, Bret Healy, a non-Native ally who serves as COO of 4 Instructions, says Biden “with out reservation” made a written dedication to revoke the medals.

“He didn’t have any caveats in his reply,”Healy says. 4 Instructions launched the official marketing campaign memo to The Warfare Horse.

“Now we have quite a lot of work forward of us, however I do know we’re as much as the duty,” Biden mentioned within the doc, dated Jan. 15, 2020.

As a presidential candidate, Biden mentioned the nation’s highest army ornament being bestowed to honor a bloodbath is “abhorrent to these very beliefs and lessens what the award represents in integrity and private sacrifice for all others who’ve acquired it.”

Vice President Kamala Harris additionally backed the Take away the Stain Act, telling Marcella LeBeau, a retired Army nurse and elder of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe who served as a nurse on the Battle of the Bulge in World Warfare II, that “historical past has to mirror reality” throughout a 4 Instructions presidential discussion board in 2019.

Semans hoped the 102-year-old Lakota group chief would see their goals turn out to be actuality. However LeBeau died in November, a couple of weeks after federal lawmakers renewed their efforts by urgent the Biden administration to behave.

“The Biden-Harris administration considers the Wounded Knee Bloodbath a stain on our nation’s historical past and we proceed to evaluate this concern,” an assistant press secretary for the White Home’s Nationwide Safety Council advised The Warfare Horse in an e-mail.

‘It’s Gaining Nationwide Prominence’

However the struggle for change continues to be a wrestle, even because the nation sees bases renamed and statues of Accomplice generals eliminated. The veterans’ efforts had been stalled from the outset, Semans says, once they “misplaced [their] lineup.” Key lawmakers left Congress after that session in 2019, most notably Deb Haaland, a former Democratic congresswoman from New Mexico. She joined the Biden administration as secretary of the inside division, turning into the primary Indigenous Cupboard member in U.S. historical past.

So 4 Instructions approached Kahele.

“The Wounded Knee Bloodbath, to me, is part of a bigger collection of army encounters and atrocities between Native Individuals and the U.S. army,” Kahele says. “It’s one thing that we now have to handle as a nation, and that was my intent by getting the Wounded Knee modification into the [National Defense Authorization Act].”

Final yr, Congress inserted an modification into the 2022 NDAA, adopting language from the reintroduced Take away the Stain Act. The unique invoice, which was initially launched on the Battle of Little Bighorn’s anniversary in June 2019, would rescind the Wounded Knee Medals of Honor.

Though the Kahele Modification handed within the Home final September, it had been scrubbed from the $770 billion protection funds through the Senate conferencing interval by early December.

“I’ll be pushing once more this yr within the upcoming NDAA to get that modification in and ship it again to the convention committee, and push for it to face—the ultimate model of the invoice,” Kahele says.

He reintroduced the Take away the Stain Act, amending the Home’s 2023 Nationwide Protection Authorization Act upon its passage in July.

The Senate and Home Armed Companies convention chairs sought to “encourage the Secretary of Protection to evaluate these medals,” in addition to to offer a briefing, in a directive outlined via the joint explanatory assertion accompanying the 2022 NDAA. It acknowledged that the medals had been “awarded on the prerogative of the President of the US, not the Congress.”

It’s nonetheless unclear if Protection Secretary Lloyd Austin is assessing the standing of the medals even after Congress suggested him to take action greater than six months in the past. Two Protection Division spokespeoplewere unable to reply whether or not Austin had tasked his company to evaluate the medals for the reason that division “doesn’t talk about inner, deliberative processes.”

However Mears says the choice for revocation ought to be bipartisan: “If you wish to make this ironclad as attainable, one of the simplest ways to do it will be to cross a invoice … a bipartisan invoice, optimally authorizing a evaluate that will search each scholarly and DOD enter.”

Kahele sees no cause for extra debate, and says permitting Biden to revoke the awards is “the quickest, easiest method.”

“We don’t have to conduct an investigation into Wounded Knee,” Kahele says, echoing the feelings of the direct descendants. “Our army and nation dedicated atrocities there. These medals must be and ought to be, and I consider shall be, revoked.”

Rep. Dusty Johnson, a two-term Republican representing South Dakota’s at-large congressional district, agrees with the Hawaiian congressman. “I don’t consider Congress has, or ought to have, the authority to unilaterally rescind or award army honors, whatever the circumstances,” Johnson writes in an inner letter despatched to Biden, dated June 24, 2021, obtained by The Warfare Horse.

The South Dakota Home Republican cites the Article XXVI Sec. 175 of the Rules for the Army printed in 1889, a statute that reads: “Medals of honor shall be awarded, by the President, to officers or enlisted males who’ve distinguished themselves in motion.”

“I request that you just evaluate these and different rules and statutes to find out whether or not you, as Commander in Chief, have each the only real authority to concern Medals of Honor in addition to rescind Medals of Honor,” Johnson wrote.

A number of members of Congress in each chambers, together with Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn.; Warren; and Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kan., agreed; they advised The Warfare Horse in individually written statements.

Tribal leaders additionally agreed. Kevin Killer, president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, served as a Democratic lawmaker within the South Dakota Home of Representatives for a decade, representing a district that encompassed the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

The South Dakota State Senate unanimously adopted a decision in February 2021 calling on the federal authorities to research and rescind the Medals of Honor. A cultural shift has reworked the state legislature since he held workplace, Killer says.

“I feel with Wounded Knee coming to mild, it’s been loads higher making an attempt to get individuals to grasp that historical past,” Killer tells The Warfare Horse.

“However I feel up to now 10 years, it’s been rising, rising—gaining nationwide prominence,” Killer says. “I feel that nationwide consciousness wasn’t there 10 years in the past.”

Scott Herman, president of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, requested that federal lawmakers enterprise westward to go to their reservations, meet the descendants, and see the memorial websites devoted to their slain ancestors, he tells The Warfare Horse.

Marlis Afraid of the Hawk, an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, and the remainder of her household have been combating three lifetimes for justice. Her grandfather, Richard Afraid of the Hawk, who survived the bloodbath on the age of 13, testified earlier than Congress looking for reparations and the elimination of medals in 1934. Her father, David Afraid of the Hawk, additionally fought for the change.

The Lakota great-grandmother says she hopes her youngsters and grandchildren will sooner or later reap the advantages of her household’s wrestle—even when she doesn’t dwell to see it herself.

“I’m simply hoping that every thing will work out, you realize, for all of the descendants, and particularly for my grandkids and my great-grandkids,” Afraid of Hawk says. “I don’t allow them to overlook that as a result of, you realize, like I mentioned, each time we get along with all my grandkids, I inform them: Be happy with the place you come from.”

On the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, recollections inherited from atrocities dedicated greater than a century in the past nonetheless bother Iron Hawk, he says, talking of intergenerational trauma. He needs to interrupt that cycle for the sake of his youngsters.

“I heard the tales of my mom when she reads her grandma’s tales, they usually additionally cry, you realize, so by some means that transferred to me,” Iron Hawk says. “I didn’t need that for my youngsters. It’s going to need to cease—therapeutic has to start proper now.”

This article first appeared on The Warfare Horse, an award-winning nonprofit information group educating the general public on army service. Subscribe to their e-newsletter.

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