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The Lakota Summary

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This week of class was very interesting once again. We watched several films, read our first book, and had some class discussions. These three things provided me with a great deal of information on the 1975 FBI shooting at Pine Ridge and on Native American/American Indian myths and legends.
In the films Incident at Oglala and Murder on a Reservation, I learned a great deal about the 1975 FBI shooting at Pine Ridge and have developed my own opinion about the incident. I learned that on June 26, 1975 two FBI agents, Ronald Williams and Jack Coler, followed a red pick-up truck onto the Jumping Bull Ranch. They were out on the reservation to serve a warrant, but they were in unmarked cars so the Native American/American Indians feared that it was an attack and began shooting.
When all was said and done, one Native American/American Indian …show more content…

There were a couple of stories that really stood out to me. The first was “The Story of Defender.” I really enjoyed this story because it keep me on the edge of my seat the whole time and taught about two important values of the Lakota people—bravery and humility. When Hoka was fourteen years old, he was invited on a hunting party and was given the job of guarding the camp, which contained elk meat and elk hides for many families back in their village. One day, when the hunters went out, Hoka encountered a “bear.” He considered going and looking for the hunters, but he knew if a bear came and took the meat while he was looking for them he would be responsible, so he stayed and defended the camp. After watching the “bear” scurry through the brush for a while, Hoka took a shot. He heard a slight cry and when he went to look where the bear was hiding, he saw blood. Hoka believed he had shot and wounded a bear, but when the hunters returned later that night and asked if anything happened, he simply said

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