This was the point where I felt I had entered another world: the bridge over the wide WIDE Missouri after Mobridge, South Dakota, and entering the area of Lake Oahe. The sign is blurred, I apologize, I am driver, navigator, photographer and barista on this solo venture.
It's about 40 miles to Standing Rock and the landscape is quietly undulating grasslands. The music from "Dances With Wolves" kept playing in my head. Yep, I know, trite, but true.
Just across the river and a right turn is the very welcome sign "Entering Standing Rock Reservation." It was at that moment I felt a sigh of relief and a calm sense of safety. With all the stuff packed in my tiny car I wanted to stay away from any possibility of a ticket so I kept the Blue Viber at the exact speed for hundreds of miles. Now I could let her run a little.
Pass the Casino and up 1806 I called my friend Avram Friedman, of The Canary Coalition in western North Carolina, to review the directions for getting into camp. Avram was here last week with supplies, during very cold days. It was good to hear his voice. It reassured me that I would find a particular tipi when I got to camp and unload all the donations and gear at last.
WELL.....well....coming up the rise and down into camp beside the Cannonball River is a vast panorama of yurts, buildings, lean-to's for many purposes and....tipis. Lots of tipis. Well, duh! Like every other campsite was a tipi. Nomadics in Bend, Oregon, has donated many of their tipis to be used by the more permanent campers. Entering the main camp, Oceti Sakowin, I'm met by the folks directing traffic and the people at the guardhouse where I asked directions to the medical tent. It has a similar feeling to getting into the state fair only friendlier. There are people coming and going in cars and on foot with no discernible logic to an outsider. I maneuvered my car past roped off areas, squeezed beside a camper, and made my way to the medical yurts.
It was heartening to see all the donations being sorted from clothes to building supplies to medical supplies. I found this everywhere in camp: donations are available for every purpose and if you need something and it's at the donation station, you are welcome to use it. My contact here, Dell Hambleton, had not picked up on my text messages so I was left with asking for help to find her. Not able to connect with Facebook I had to recreate her message from memory and all I remembered was it was very near the medical tent, it was the only tent with a green band at the top with a bear painted on it. I got out of my car and scanned the horizon of tipi poles jutting up above the sea of life and felt lost for the first time on this trip. There is no map at Standing Rock.
Folks at the medical yurts did not know her. They were busy sorting large piles of donations. I turned to walk into the camp and after a few minutes gave up when I didn't notice any tipis with green bands. As I was walking back to my car, the look of frustration prompted one young man to call out "Hello Auntie, do you need something?" The term 'auntie' or 'grandmother' used here by the native people is a term of respect and it warmed me in this moment of frustration and self-doubt or more importantly the prospect of car camping in really cold temperatures among a car full of bags and boxes. I told him who I was looking for and then he asked the right question: "Which camp is she in?" Then I remembered: Rosebud. There are three camps here and knowing which one is important. The fellow smiled and said it's over the bridge.
Following his directions out of this ordered chaos, I made my way into Rosebud, parked my car and stopped the first person I saw and asked if they knew the only person whose name I had carried with me. Sean not only knew her, had helped her re-set her tipi and took me directly to her tent. And my heart and spirits pitched up several octaves. I had found the tipi among hundreds. I now claimed the title of Mighty Tipi Hunter as well as Black Snake Tracker.
Dell has made a space not only in her tipi and her life and her heart for me, but in this camp, introducing me everywhere we go, explaining what is where and why (to the best of her ability.) Although she was here in August, things change quickly in these camps. We walked up to Sacred Stone Camp and she noticed what had changed in just a few months. Exciting changes, too. People come for awhile and leave. Teams come to build the yurts or more permanent structures like an indoor kitchen or the school building and cycle out. Medical personnel may fly in or drive in giving up their personnel days to help out. Folks give up large pieces of their lives 'back wherever' to create a sense of unity out of our diversity. What at first appeared as a collection of refugees from Burning Man (and I do believe there are some of those among us) are, for the most part, people awakened by this travesty and the conviction that this is OUR last great opportunity to unite and demand a world not built on draining every ounce of oil from our Earth and destroying our health in the process.They watch from the hills our every activity. |
Close enough that I could wave and snap this pic. |
For more information on the events from Sunday night follow Democracy Now! or The Young Turks or as it comes available I will post from reputable news sources from the camp.You all have a lovely Wednesday. And no, I have not seen or heard about Jane Fonda being here tomorrow. More to come....
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