Why did we have to pick on Geronimo by using his name in the Bin Laden raid?

The appropriation of Indian labels is particularly unseemly given the reality of today’s military. Native Americans have one of the highest per capita enlistment rates in the military of any ethnic group. Powwows often begin with the entering of an honor guard, composed of military veterans who carry the U.S. and tribal flags. At the San Carlos Apache Reservation in Arizona, where Geronimo was confined in the 1870s and ’80s, the tribal government maintains a billboard proudly listing all the San Carlos Apaches serving in the military.

Advertisement

It’s no wonder that Indian peoples feel their sacrifices have been dishonored by the labeling of our worst enemy as Geronimo and that they themselves have been treated as other than real Americans. As Guyaalé’s great-grandson, Joseph Geronimo, noted recently, using the name in the operation to kill Bin Laden was a “slap in the face.” His ancestor, after all, “was more American than anybody else.”

But more than its misguided comparison of two individuals, the whole episode reminds us that we do not yet fully grasp our Native American past. If Americans know so little about Geronimo, probably the most famous Indian in American history, how many know anything at all about some of Geronimo’s contemporaries, who laid the groundwork for the Indian rights movement?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Trending on HotAir Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement