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#chief joseph
riverwindphotography · 11 months
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In the Name of All Humanity
photos (c) riverwindphotography, June 2023, taken at the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial, Boise, ID
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tiliman2 · 10 months
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“U.S. people are taught that their military culture does not approve of or encourage targeting and killing civilians and know little or nothing about the nearly three centuries of war-fare-before and after the founding of the U.S.-that reduced the Indigenous peoples of the continent to a few reservations by burning their towns and fields and killing civilians, driving the refugees out--step by step--across the continent....Violence directed systematically against noncombatants through irregular means, from the start, has been a central part of Americans' way of war. “
Military Historian John Grenier
Excerpt from Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz’s book:
An Indigenous People’s History of the United States
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My portrait of Chief Joseph in vibrant technicolor.
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tomtorez · 8 months
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Part 2
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chiefjoseph1877 · 8 months
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Standing L-R Rabbit Skin Leggings, Yellow Bird Sitting L-R Charley Moses, Chief Joseph - Nez Perce - 1877 2
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johbeil · 18 days
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Wie ! viel Vente
Diese Star- bucks-Terrasse schmiegt sich an die Klippen, so dass man die Gefahr spürt, die diese Kletterer bei den verschiedenen Schwierigkeitsgraden ertragen müssen Ich nehme den letzten Tisch und nippe an meinem Macchiato aus einer weißen Keramiktasse Eine Rotte von Radfahrern in Lycra-Uniform bremst plötzlich, stellt die Räder in den Ständer und stellt sich hinter ihm am Tresen für einen Latte an Ist das Cochise, der…
Fotografie: Portrait von Steve Katz (amerikanischer Schriftsteller, 1935-2019)
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Dewey Beard or Wasú Máza ("Iron Hail", 1858–1955) was a Lakota who fought in the Battle of Little Bighorn as a teenager. After George Armstrong Custer's defeat, Wasú Máza followed Sitting Bull into exile in Canada and then back to South Dakota where he lived on the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation. Wasú Máza with his wife and granddaughter, Celane
[Scott Horton]
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Before dying (in 1871) Tu-eka-kas, the father of Chief Joseph des Nez-Percés, recalls to his son that he should not sell his father's bones. Chief Joseph describes his death. "MY FATHER DID CALL ME. I SAW HE WAS GOING TO DIE. I TAKEN HIS hand in mine. He said, “My son, my body will return to my mother earth, and my spirit will soon see the Chief Great Spirit. When I'm gone, think about your country. You are the leader of this people. They expect you to guide them. Always remember that your father never sold his country. You will cover your ears when you are asked to sign a treaty selling your land. A few more years and the white man will be there. They have their eyes on this country. Never forget, son, my dying words. This earth contains the body of your father. Never sell the bones of your father and mother. "I squeezed my father's hands and told him that I will protect his grave with my life. My father smiled and left for Spirit Land. I buried him in this beautiful valley where the water winds. I love this land more than the rest of the world. A man who wouldn't love his father's grave is worse than a wild animal." 
[alive on all channels]
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popolitiko · 1 year
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Chief Joseph Native American Tribe Leader
Chief Joseph in Seattle In 1903, Chief Joseph made a visit to Seattle at the request of his friend, professor Edmond Meany of the University of Washington. The trip included a tour of Seattle, an epic UW football game, an iconic photograph taken by Edward Curtis and a plea to be allowed to return to his ancestral lands. 👇 🏹 👇
youtube
🏹 https://youtu.be/DpC90VMw3UI
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waiting-eyez · 1 year
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It makes my heart sick when I remember
all the good words and the broken promises.
(Chief Joseph)
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HALT! YOU THERE! who is joseph *kicking my feet*
sorry it took me a while to reply - i was very excited to receive your ask and wanted to provide a coherent answer.
short answer: this is joseph:
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this is is his wikipedia article.
longer answer: his name is chief joseph, also known as thunder rolling over the mountains or hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt (although there are many variations of his name), and he was a leader of the wallowa band of nez perce, who lived in the wallowa valley in oregon.
he became famous for the nez perce war in 1877. although a pacifist by principle, he was forced by the us government to abandon his home and move onto a reservation. joseph resisted moving onto the reservation, leading to much adversity and abuse from the white settlers. to protect his people, he led his band as they fled america in the hope of reaching sanctuary in with sitting bull, who was living in canada.
they were persued by general oliver o howard, but were not caught for several months. eventually, facing starvation and certain death, joseph surrendered to the army, and was moved onto the reservation. even after this, he toured the usa, giving speeches about the wrongs done to his people. he gained much publicity and respect by doing this, but despite this he died without being able to return to his home.
i find him an incredibly inspirational person, and i respect and admire him very much.
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eopederson2 · 2 months
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Wallowa Valley and Blue Mountains, Oregon, 2009.
"I will fight no more forever," Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce, 1877.
What Heimweh Chief Joseph and his band must have felt when he uttered those words of surrender when the attempt to escape into Canada failed after an epic flight from the US Army being driven from the ancestral homeland. Joseph probably knew that he was unlikely to ever again see the Wallowa Valley, though he never abandoned the hope of doing so. The extreme northeast corner of Oregon has to be one of the most beautiful places anywhere, and exile from it must have been almost unbearable. Joseph and the surviving members of the band were exiled to various places on the Great Plains, and Joseph was finally relocated to the Colville Reservation in Washington.
"In 1903, Chief Joseph visited Seattle, a booming young town, where he stayed in the Lincoln Hotel as guest to (sic)  Edmond Meany, a history professor at the University of Washington. It was there that he also befriended Edward Curtis, the photographer, who took one of his most memorable and well-known photographs. Joseph also visited President Theodore Roosevelt in Washington, D.C. the same year. Everywhere he went, it was to make a plea for what remained of his people to be returned to their home in the Wallowa Valley, but it never happened."
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mimi-0007 · 2 years
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tiliman2 · 1 year
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Get to know the animals around you,
get to know the birds,
Get to know the land,
the water...
Because what you don’t know
you won’t understand,
And what you don't understand,
you will fear.
And what you fear, you will destroy.
– A poem by Kayah George's
great-grandfather, Chief Dan George
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alanjporterart · 2 years
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Love is shown and given in many different ways, for you have seen other deprived children struggling unloved and left in pain, your loving soul cannot cope when seeing a child left loveless where everything will still remain the same, so your love shines with a beautiful loving light, and your love reacts to doing what is right, for your love then becomes the most beautiful and enriching sight,
....
More in our Love Poem Art Gallery ...
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cdchyld · 2 months
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Just added to Etsy!
~ "Let Me Be Free: The Nez Perce Tragedy" by David Lavender (1992)
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chiefjoseph1877 · 6 months
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