One of the most amazing chalkboard champions and political activists
in American history is Native American Zitkala Sa, whose Indian name
translated means Red Bird.
This remarkable educator was
born on February 22, 1876, on the Yankton Sioux Indian Reservation in
South Dakota. Her father, an American of European descent, abandoned his
family, leaving his young daughter to be raised alone by her Native
American mother. Despite her father's absence, Zitkala Sa described her
childhood on the reservation as a time of freedom and joy spent in the
loving care of her tribe.
In 1884, when she
was just eight years old, missionaries visited the reservation
and removed several of the Native American children, including Zitkala
Sa, to Wabash, Indiana. There she was enrolled in White's Manual Labor
Institute, a school founded by Quaker Josiah White for the purpose of
educating "poor children, white, colored, and Indian." She attended the
school for three years until 1887, later describing her life there in
detail in her autobiography The School Days of an Indian Girl. In
the book she described her despair over having been separated from her
family, and having her heritage stripped from her as she was forced to
give up her native language, clothing, and religious practices, and to
cut her long hair, a symbolic act of shame among Native Americans. Her
deep emotional pain, however, was somewhat brightened by the joy and
exhilaration she felt in learning to read, write, and play the violin.
Zitkala Sa became an accomplished musician.
After
completing her secondary education in 1895, the young graduate enrolled
at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, on a scholarship. The move was
an unusual one, because at that time higher education for women was not
common. In 1899, Zitkala Sa accepted a position as a music teacher at
Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Here she
became an important role model for Native American children who, like
herself, had been separated from their families and relocated far from
their home reservations to attend an Indian boarding school. In 1900,
the young teacher escorted some of her students to the Paris Exposition
in France, where she played her violin in public performances by the
school band. After she returned to the Carlisle School, Zitkala
Sa became embroiled in a conflict with the Carlisle's founder, Colonel
Richard Henry Pratt, when she expressed resentment over the rigid
program of assimilation into the dominant white culture that Pratt
advocated, and the fact that the school's curriculum did not encourage
Native American children to aspire to anything beyond lives spent as
manual laborers.
As a political activist, Zitkala
Sa devoted her energy and talent towards the improvement of the lives of
her fellow Native Americans. She founded the National Council of
American Indians in 1926 and served as its president until her death in
1938. She traveled around the country delivering speeches on
controversial issues such as Native American enfranchisement, their full
citizenship, Indian military service in World War I, corruption in the
Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the apportionment of tribal lands. In 1997
she was selected as a Women's History Month Honoree by the
National Women's History Project.
Zitkala Sa: a national treasure and a genuine chalkboard champion.
If interested, you can read more about the Carlisle Indian School in my book, Chalkboard Champions, available from amazon.
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