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Saturday, February 5, 2011

Seattle's Speech, The Early Version

In four versions, the record of Chief Seattle's speech/letter is always powerful.  It gives awareness.  It has a bit of sadness to it, as well, for the people of Chief Seattle signed a contract for a reserved land.  A small space on Puget Sound, and some of the most beautiful of the islands there, became home for the Suquamish.  A people very different from our own, but with a common thread, and a common creator.


Here's the text from the Seattle Sunday Star on Oct. 29, 1887, in a column by Dr. Henry A. Smith. He makes it very clear that his version is not an exact copy, but rather the best he could put together from notes taken at the time.


Seattle spoke in his own language, never having learned English.



Yonder sky that has wept tears of compassion upon my people for centuries untold, and which to us appears changeless and eternal, may change. Today is fair. Tomorrow it may be overcast with clouds. My words are like the stars that never change. Whatever Seattle says, the great chief at Washington can rely upon with as much certainty as he can upon the return of the sun or the seasons. The white chief says that Big Chief at Washington sends us greetings of friendship and goodwill. This is kind of him for we know he has little need of our friendship in return. His people are many. They are like the grass that covers vast prairies. My people are few. They resemble the scattering trees of a storm-swept plain. The great, and I presume -- good, White Chief sends us word that he wishes to buy our land but is willing to allow us enough to live comfortably. This indeed appears just, even generous, for the Red Man no longer has rights that he need respect, and the offer may be wise, also, as we are no longer in need of an extensive country.

There was a time when our people covered the land as the waves of a wind-ruffled sea cover its shell-paved floor, but that time long since passed away with the greatness of tribes that are now but a mournful memory. I will not dwell on, nor mourn over, our untimely decay, nor reproach my paleface brothers with hastening it, as we too may have been somewhat to blame.

Youth is impulsive. When our young men grow angry at some real or imaginary wrong, and disfigure their faces with black paint, it denotes that their hearts are black, and that they are often cruel and relentless, and our old men and old women are unable to restrain them. Thus it has ever been. Thus it was when the white man began to push our forefathers ever westward. But let us hope that the hostilities between us may never return. We would have everything to lose and nothing to gain. Revenge by young men is considered gain, even at the cost of their own lives, but old men who stay at home in times of war, and mothers who have sons to lose, know better.

Our good father in Washington--for I presume he is now our father as well as yours, since King George has moved his boundaries further north--our great and good father, I say, sends us word that if we do as he desires he will protect us. His brave warriors will be to us a bristling wall of strength, and his wonderful ships of war will fill our harbors, so that our ancient enemies far to the northward -- the Haidas and Tsimshians -- will cease to frighten our women, children, and old men. Then in reality he will be our father and we his children. But can that ever be? Your God is not our God! Your God loves your people and hates mine! He folds his strong protecting arms lovingly about the paleface and leads him by the hand as a father leads an infant son. But, He has forsaken His Red children, if they really are His. Our God, the Great Spirit, seems also to have forsaken us. Your God makes your people wax stronger every day. Soon they will fill all the land. Our people are ebbing away like a rapidly receding tide that will never return. The white man's God cannot love our people or He would protect them. They seem to be orphans who can look nowhere for help. How then can we be brothers? How can your God become our God and renew our prosperity and awaken in us dreams of returning greatness? If we have a common Heavenly Father He must be partial, for He came to His paleface children. We never saw Him. He gave you laws but had no word for His red children whose teeming multitudes once filled this vast continent as stars fill the firmament. No; we are two distinct races with separate origins and separate destinies. There is little in common between us.

To us the ashes of our ancestors are sacred and their resting place is hallowed ground. You wander far from the graves of your ancestors and seemingly without regret. Your religion was written upon tablets of stone by the iron finger of your God so that you could not forget. The Red Man could never comprehend or remember it. Our religion is the traditions of our ancestors -- the dreams of our old men, given them in solemn hours of the night by the Great Spirit; and the visions of our sachems, and is written in the hearts of our people.
Your dead cease to love you and the land of their nativity as soon as they pass the portals of the tomb and wander away beyond the stars. They are soon forgotten and never return. Our dead never forget this beautiful world that gave them being. They still love its verdant valleys, its murmuring rivers, its magnificent mountains, sequestered vales and verdant lined lakes and bays, and ever yearn in tender fond affection over the lonely hearted living, and often return from the happy hunting ground to visit, guide, console, and comfort them.

Day and night cannot dwell together. The Red Man has ever fled the approach of the White Man, as the morning mist flees before the morning sun. However, your proposition seems fair and I think that my people will accept it and will retire to the reservation you offer them. Then we will dwell apart in peace, for the words of the Great White Chief seem to be the words of nature speaking to my people out of dense darkness.

It matters little where we pass the remnant of our days. They will not be many. The Indian's night promises to be dark. Not a single star of hope hovers above his horizon. Sad-voiced winds moan in the distance. Grim fate seems to be on the Red Man's trail, and wherever he will hear the approaching footsteps of his fell destroyer and prepare stolidly to meet his doom, as does the wounded doe that hears the approaching footsteps of the hunter.

A few more moons, a few more winters, and not one of the descendants of the mighty hosts that once moved over this broad land or lived in happy homes, protected by the Great Spirit, will remain to mourn over the graves of a people once more powerful and hopeful than yours. But why should I mourn at the untimely fate of my people? Tribe follows tribe, and nation follows nation, like the waves of the sea. It is the order of nature, and regret is useless. Your time of decay may be distant, but it will surely come, for even the White Man whose God walked and talked with him as friend to friend, cannot be exempt from the common destiny. We may be brothers after all. We will see.

We will ponder your proposition and when we decide we will let you know. But should we accept it, I here and now make this condition that we will not be denied the privilege without molestation of visiting at any time the tombs of our ancestors, friends, and children. Every part of this soil is sacred in the estimation of my people. Every hillside, every valley, every plain and grove, has been hallowed by some sad or happy event in days long vanished. Even the rocks, which seem to be dumb and dead as the swelter in the sun along the silent shore, thrill with memories of stirring events connected with the lives of my people, and the very dust upon which you now stand responds more lovingly to their footsteps than yours, because it is rich with the blood of our ancestors, and our bare feet are conscious of the sympathetic touch. Our departed braves, fond mothers, glad, happy hearted maidens, and even the little children who lived here and rejoiced here for a brief season, will love these somber solitudes and at eventide they greet shadowy returning spirits. And when the last Red Man shall have perished, and the memory of my tribe shall have become a myth among the White Men, these shores will swarm with the invisible dead of my tribe, and when your children's children think themselves alone in the field, the store, the shop, upon the highway, or in the silence of the pathless woods, they will not be alone. In all the earth there is no place dedicated to solitude. At night when the streets of your cities and villages are silent and you think them deserted, they will throng with the returning hosts that once filled them and still love this beautiful land. The White Man will never be alone.
Let him be just and deal kindly with my people, for the dead are not powerless. Dead, did I say? There is no death, only a change of worlds.

Other versions become more poetic, more focused on later causes that Seattle could not have addressed.  That's fine;  it is sincere flattery to do that.  But this holds the flavor of a powerful man overwhelmed by enormous events.  And it is good to read, and recognize.  If anyone says that our God could not possibly be THEIR God, then perhaps our communication has got in the way, somehow.  Disciples of Jesus need to be sensitive and aware of that.

Blessings.


Friday, February 4, 2011

Snowy Morning Review and Mrs. Hawes

Who knew?  4 inches of snow and still falling.  Ground cold for 3 days, so everything "sticks".  Good morning to review, and make a new book outline.  What stands out as the most impact of one event?

For understanding the place of missions in some folks hearts, it would have to be Mrs. Hawes and the gift.

Mrs. Hawes lived in the South Liberty oil field, IN the field in a shack made of scrap wood, covered with tar-paper.  Her cooking and heat was from a pipe that ran directly from a well, just the throw-away gas, salvaged.  Water from a faucet somewhere, but quite a definition of poor.

She gathered pecans that year, all along the Trinity River bottoms, and took them up to the highway that ran to Houston, selling on the roadside.  But for the last week, she'd been home, her dentures broken.   She was getting money together to get them fixes.  My dad went to visit her on Monday.

When he came in, she apologized for missing, specially because it was Mission Sunday, and she always gave a gift for missions.  She handed him $5:  "This is mine, thanks for taking it and putting it with the others."

"But, Mrs. Hawes, you're getting money together to fix your teeth!"

"That will come along, but this was Mission Sunday.  I just don't miss that!"  Nothing would do but for Dad to take her gift.

He knew how poor she was.  He knew that was pecan money, planned for denture repair.

Plain, simple, unmistakeable, generous, focused, exactly the attitude Jesus told us to have every day.  But rarely seen.  We give out of our surplus, after the needs are met.  Mrs. Hawes didn't do it that way.

It's been 54 years since that moment, but every time there's an offering destined for mission work, that sweet lady's face comes to mind.  I've known missionary families, been a type of missionary, studied all the maps and charts and history.  But the persuasive moment that is always fresh is Mrs. Hawes.

All of us find our highest motivation for performance, accomplishment, academic achievement, whatever, from something just like that.

Thank God for His disciples who reflect His Word and will.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Allegiance - a Re-Post

Cleaning out the store-room after a death in the family, in the very back corner was hidden a large, framed, formal document.  Elegant script and decorations, it was a 33rd degree Masonic certificate.  That degree is given as a special recognition, I discovered, not like the earlier earned degrees.  The certificate told no story of what was recognized, or what the holder of that degree had done or contributed to generate the honor.  But it did generate the curiosity!

Digging a bit, I found that my ancestor had been a "withdrawer" from several things.  He withdrew from the local medical association after a bitter malpractice contest in which he supported a woman badly burned by a competitor/doctor who had improperly used X-Ray when it was a totally new technology.  He retained membership in the AMA.  His medical work was a passionate commitment for him, over and over again.

He had withdrawn from the church, upset over the inter-locking of city government and church leadership, and what he felt was a lack of ethics in the group controlling both.  But the withdrawal was not from boredom, but from a passionate expectation of better things from the organization.

And the Lodge?  he had moved his membership from his East Texas town of residence, returning to the very small town of Moscow, over similar issues.  And in Moscow, there was a Masonic school (back in the prosperous times), which he highly supported.  Was that the source of the 33rd Degree? 

Almost no way to answer the questions.  By 1950, the school had been disbanded.  By 1980, even the oldest men who played dominoes on the front porch of the old, closed pharmacy no longer played there.  The town, shrinking away, held no memories of the great and passionate civic efforts of the 1920's and earlier. 

But the today's ghost town was once a place where lumber brought wealth, the money flowed, and there was a passion for education.  Bits and pieces remain.  But the biggest heritage of the town is that inherited passion.  (There are families who have impacted Texas:  Hobby for one!)  There are unknown practitioners of various professions who would now be the third-generation inheritors of the passions that built the Masonic School.

There are grandsons now grandfathers whose whole perspective on the world has been shaped by those who passionately withdrew from one allegiance for the sake of forming and honoring another allegiance.  History sometimes harvests slowly, but it does come to the harvest day.

Thank God for loyalties that found a new home one day, and generated an entire new wave in the process.

Why the Rabbi?

Rabbi Goldstein, Holocaust survivor, holder of 5 doctorates, was a life-time student.  True to the title, Rabbi was a provocative teacher.  His life-goal was to learn all he could, teach as much as he could, but most of all to stir up the hunger for knowledge in others that could become a life-time experience.

I met him 35 years ago, and his influence has been strong.  When I study, for whatever reason, he comes to mind.  Have I really "pursued" this thing or that thing?  Should I go one more level, discovering more before I speak at all?  Is my pursuit of "whatever" actually done with the kind of energy and dedication he brought to everything?

And that's a good thing.

I'll share a bit in this blog about curiousity that moves me.  Along these lines:

Jesus is the Word made flesh.
The Word, co-eternal with God, was the mysterious speaking of God which created.
God the Father, God the Word, God the Spirit has eternally been at work.
The most dramatic work (and mystery) of God is in the death and resurrection of Jesus.
The gift of salvation today comes through the work of the Resurrected Jesus, conveyed to us by the Holy Spirit.

BUT, Jesus said he had other sheep, other flocks.  There is a door that just offers a peek at God's ways.  God so loved the WORLD that he gave his only Son, not to condemn, but that the WORLD might be saved through him.

I count my blessings, familiar blessings, and always wonder what ELSE God is doing.

So, what's in the Rabbi's briefcase?

Questions and comments are always welcome.  And your discoveries, too.