Commentary: A Native reflects on war and military service
5/1/2003 News media contact: Linda Green · (615) 742-5470 · Nashville, Tenn NOTE: A head-and-shoulders photo of Ray Buckley is available at http://umns.umc.org/photos/headshots.html. A UMNS Commentary By Ray Buckley*
In Tuba City, Ariz., there was singing coming from the high
school. It was not the sound of a glee club or the school choir. It was
the sound of prayer floating from the building into the dry high-desert
air. Seven hundred people from the community had gathered to pray for a
local woman who was in trouble. Her name, heard in the prayers, was
Pfc. Lori Piestewa (Pie-ESS-te-wa), and she was missing in action in
Iraq.
Millions around the world had seen her picture via CNN and
MSNBC. For many, Lori Piestewa was the first Native face they had
seen. They did not know the difference between a Hopi and a Navajo.
Many had not thought of Native people serving in the military. Many
more Americans had never seen a woman soldier missing in action, and
Lori's face, along with others, became stamped in our memories. For this
moment in time, Lori Piestewa had become the most famous Native face in
the world.
Federal policies often pit Hopi and Navajo interests
against each other. The small Hopi reservation, surrounded by the
expanse of the Navajo world, seems almost afloat in a desert sea. Still,
over the course of several days, Native people--Hopi and Navajo--
responded in traditional fashion. They stood in lines outside of the
Piestewa family home, bringing gifts of food and comfort--and praying.
On
this night, the 700 gathered in a gymnasium prayed that a hometown girl
would be found safe. Believing that "we are all related," they prayed
for sons and daughters of other mothers and fathers, and also for the
families and children of Iraq. Somewhere, others were singing too, and
their songs were carried to heaven, mixing with the songs and prayers
for Lori Piestewa.
Across the United States and Canada, other
Native communities saw the face of Lori Piestewa. It was a face that
could be theirs, or that of their child or their mother. War is always
different when you recognize your own face. People began singing and
praying in the Native languages of Osage, Cree, Haida, Seminole, and
Ojibway. Drums played among the Dakota, Kalispell, Pima, and Micmac.
Salish voices were heard, as well as Kickapoo and Choctaw. In the land
of the Hopi and Navajo, so familiar with flocks of sheep, prayers were
prayed for the safety of this lamb, this one of us. Others prayed for
the somebody-who-looks-like-me.
It was a matter of a few days
really, such a small space of time to the mountains and the rivers. The
Native adage, "Only the mountains live forever upon the earth," seemed
to echo through the hollow space in our hearts. Lori Piestewa had come
home. Her body had been returned to Tuba City, but we were honoring her
living spirit. We stood quietly in long lines, holding pictures of
other soldiers, or those who had fought many years before. We held
eagle feathers and Bibles, crucifixes and sweetgrass. When we spoke to
her family, our voices were soft, and we seldom made eye contact. We
were honoring this daughter, this sister, this mother, this friend, and
this one-who-was-like-us. We sang in many languages. Our weeping was
the same, for laughter and tears are the same the world over. We sang
for Lori Piestewa, who was among us, and for those who had no one to
sing for them. We are singing still.
Native people have
fought in every war involving this nation. When we could be sold into
slavery, we fought. Before we were citizens, our people served in the
military. Before we were allowed to be treated in public hospitals, our
soldiers served. The languages of our people protected U.S. and Allied
troops. Choctaw voices in World War I, and Comanche and Navajo in World
War II, confused those we were fighting against. When our soldiers came
home, our people held healing ceremonies to ease their minds, and we
welcomed others who were not Native, but had no one to sing for them.
We
are deeply familiar with loss. We understand hunger. We understand
death. But we understand prayer, and we value healing. We have carried
our homes and our churches on our backs, but we know where we find each
other, we find community. Our strength and our survival have been in
our prayers and our communities. We are people of the song.
A Song for Those Far Away
We have said your name on the wind. It is coming toward you. It is coming toward you. We have danced a prayer upon the earth. It is moving toward you. It is moving toward you. We have sung for you a sacred song. We are singing with you. We are singing with you. We have called Creator with our hearts. He is standing with you. He is standing with you.
# # # *Buckley is director of the Native People's Communications Office at United Methodist Communications in Nashville, Tenn.
Commentaries
provided by United Methodist News Service do not necessarily represent
the opinions or policies of UMNS or the United Methodist Church.
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