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This and other articles may be viewed on
the internet at the website,
The Writings of Stephanie M. Schwartz
www.SilvrDrach.homestead.com
A
Special Resource Report:
Regarding life, conditions, and hope on
the Pine Ridge Oglala Lakota (Sioux)
Reservation of SD
www.SilvrDrach.homestead.com/Schwartz_2006_Oct_15.html
The Arrogance
of Ignorance;
Hidden
Away, Out of Sight and Out of Mind
By Stephanie M.
Schwartz,
Freelance Writer
Member, Native
American Journalists Association
© October 15, 2006
Brighton, Colorado
This is an
article of facts about the lives of
modern-day American Indians, a topic most
mainstream American news organizations will
not discuss. It is not a plea for charity.
It is not a promotion for non-profit
organizations. It is not aimed for pity. It
is not even an effort to detail cause and
effect. It is, however, an effort to dispel
ignorance…. a massive, pervasive, societal
ignorance filled with illusions and
caricatures which, ultimately, serve only to
corrupt the intelligence and decent intent
of the average mainstream citizen. Only
through knowledge and understanding can
solutions be found. But facts must be known
first. Then, it is the reader’s choice what
to do with those facts.
Hidden away, out of
sight but dotting the landscape of America,
are the little known or forgotten
Reservations of the Indigenous People of our
land. Sadly, the average U.S. mainstream
resident knows almost nothing about the
people of the Native American reservations
other than what romanticized or
caricaturized versions they see on film or
as the print media stereotypes of oil or
casino-rich Indians. Most assume that
whatever poverty exists on a reservation is
most certainly comparable to that which they
might experience themselves. Further, they
assume it is curable by the same means they
would use.
But that is the
arrogance of ignorance.
Our dominant society is
accustomed to being exposed to poverty.
It’s nearly invisible because it is
everywhere. We drive through our cities
with a blind eye, numb to the suffering on
the streets, or we shake our heads and turn
away, assuming help is on the way. After
all, it’s known that the government and the
big charities are helping the needy in
nearly every corner of the world.
But the question begs:
What about the sovereign nations on
America’s own soil, within this country, a
part and yet apart from mainstream society?
What about these Reservations that few
people ever see?
Oddly enough, the case
could be made that more Europeans and
Australians know and understand the cultures
and conditions of our Indigenous people
better Americans do.
Moreover, what the
Europeans and Australians know is that there
are a number of very fortunate Native
American Nations whose people are able to
earn a very good living due to casino
income, natural resource income, a good job
market from nearby cities, or from some
other source. They also know, however, that
a staggering number of residents on Native
American reservations live in abject,
incomprehensible conditions rivaling, or
even surpassing, that of many Third World
countries.
This article chronicles
just one Nation: the Oglala Lakota (Sioux)
Nation of the Pine Ridge Reservation in
South Dakota. Yet the name and only a few
details could easily be changed to describe
a host of others…. the Dineh (Navajo), Ute
Mountain Ute, Tohono O’odham, Pima, Yaqui,
Apache, the Brule’ Lakota (Sioux) ….the list
is long.
But this is not an
article of hopelessness. Despite
nearly-insurmountable conditions, few
resources, and against unbelievable odds,
Nation after Nation of Indigenous leaders
and their people are working hard to
counteract decades of oppression and forced
destruction of their cultures, to bring
their citizens back to a life of
self-respect and self-sufficiency in today’s
world.
In the meantime, these
words will serve simply to dispel a few
illusions and make public part of that which
is hidden away, out of sight, out of mind,
in the richest country in the world. It
seeks to dispel the arrogance of ignorance.
Demographic Information
§
The Pine Ridge Oglala Lakota
(Sioux) Indian Reservation sits in Bennett,
Jackson, and Shannon Counties and is located
in the southwest corner of South Dakota,
fifty miles east of the Wyoming border.
§
The 11,000-square mile
(approximately 2.7 million acres) Pine Ridge
Reservation is the second-largest Native
American Reservation within the United
States. It is roughly the size of the State
of Connecticut. According to the Oglala
Sioux tribal statistics, approximately 1.7
million acres of this land are owned by the
Tribe or by tribal members.
§
The Reservation is divided
into eight districts: Eagle Nest, Pass
Creek, Wakpamni, LaCreek, Pine Ridge, White
Clay, Medicine Root, Porcupine, and Wounded
Knee.
§
The topography of the Pine
Ridge Reservation includes the barren
Badlands, rolling grassland hills, dryland
prairie, and areas dotted with pine trees.
§
The Pine Ridge Reservation is
home to approximately 40,000 persons, 35% of
which are under the age of 18. The latest
Federal Census shows the median age to be
20.6 years. Approximately half the
residents of the Reservation are registered
tribal members of the Oglala Lakota Sioux
Nation.
§
According to the most recent
Federal Census, 58.7% of the grandparents on
the Reservation are responsible for raising
their own grandchildren.
§
The population is slowly but
steadily rising, despite the severe
conditions on the Reservation, as more and
more Oglala Lakota return home from far-away
cities to live within their societal values,
be with their families, and assist with the
revitalization of their culture and their
Nation.
Employment Information
§
Recent reports vary but many
point out that the median income on the Pine
Ridge Reservation is approximately $2,600 to
$3,500 per year.
§
The unemployment rate on Pine
Ridge is said to be approximately 83-85% and
can be higher during the winter months when
travel is difficult or often impossible.
§
According to 2006 resources,
about 97% of the population lives below
Federal poverty levels.
§
There is little industry,
technology, or commercial infrastructure on
the Reservation to provide employment.
§
Rapid City, South Dakota is
the nearest town of size (population
approximately 57,700) for those who can
travel to find work. It is located 120
miles from the Reservation. The nearest
large city to Pine Ridge is Denver, Colorado
located some 350 miles away.
Life Expectancy and Health Conditions
§
Some figures state that the
life expectancy on the Reservation is 48
years old for men and 52 for women. Other
reports state that the average life
expectancy on the Reservation is 45 years
old. These statistics are far from the 77.5
years of age life expectancy average found
in the United States as a whole. According
to current USDA Rural Development documents,
the Lakota have the lowest life expectancy
of any group in America.
§
Teenage suicide rate on the
Pine Ridge Reservation is 150% higher than
the U.S. national average for this age
group.
§
The infant mortality rate is
the highest on this continent and is about
300% higher than the U.S. national average.
§
More than half the
Reservation's adults battle addiction and
disease. Alcoholism, diabetes, heart
disease, cancer, and malnutrition are
pervasive.
§
The rate of diabetes on the
Reservation is reported to be 800% higher
than the U.S. national average.
§
Recent reports indicate that
almost 50% of the adults on the Reservation
over the age of 40 have diabetes.
§
As a result of the high rate
of diabetes on the Reservation,
diabetic-related blindness, amputations, and
kidney failure are common.
§
The tuberculosis rate on the
Pine Ridge Reservation is approximately 800%
higher than the U.S. national average.
§
Cervical cancer is 500% higher
than the U.S. national average.
§
It is reported that at least
60% of the homes on the Pine Ridge
Reservation are infested with Black Mold,
Stachybotrys. This infestation causes an
often-fatal condition with infants,
children, elderly, those with damaged immune
systems, and those with lung and pulmonary
conditions at the highest risk. Exposure to
this mold can cause hemorrhaging of the
lungs and brain as well as cancer.
§
A Federal Commodity Food
Program is active but supplies mostly
inappropriate foods (high in carbohydrate
and/or sugar) for the largely diabetic
population of the Reservation.
§
A small non-profit Food Co-op
is in operation on the Reservation but is
available only for those with funds to
participate.
Health Care
§
Many Reservation residents
live without health care due to vast travel
distances involved in accessing that care.
Additional factors include under-funded,
under-staffed medical facilities and
outdated or non-existent medical equipment.
§
Preventive healthcare programs
are rare.
§
In most of the treaties
between the U.S. Government and Indian
Nations, the U.S. government agreed to
provide adequate medical care for Indians in
return for vast quantities of land. The
Indian Health Services (IHS) was set up to
administer the health care for Indians under
these treaties and receives an appropriation
each year to fund Indian health care.
Unfortunately, the appropriation is very
small compared to the need and there is
little hope for increased funding from
Congress. The IHS is understaffed and
ill-equipped and can’t possibly address the
needs of Indian communities. Nowhere is
this more apparent than on the Pine Ridge
Reservation.
Education Issues
§
School drop-out rate is over
70%.
§
According to a Bureau of
Indian Affairs (BIA) report, the Pine Ridge
Reservation schools are in the bottom 10% of
school funding by U.S. Department of
Education and the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
§
Teacher turnover is 800% that
of the U.S. national average
Housing Conditions and Homelessness
§
The small BIA/Tribal Housing
Authority homes on the Pine Ridge
Reservation are overcrowded and scarce,
resulting in many homeless families who
often use tents or cars for shelter. Many
families live in old cabins or dilapidated
mobile homes and trailers.
§
According to a 2003 report
from South Dakota State University, the
majority of the current Tribal Housing
Authority homes were built from 1970-1979.
The report brings to light that a great
percentage of that original construction by
the BIA (Bureau of Indian Affairs) was
“shoddy and substandard.” The report also
states that 26% of the housing units on the
Reservation are mobile homes, often
purchased or obtained (through donations) as
used, low-value units with negative-value
equity.
§
Even though there is a large
homeless population on the Reservation, most
families never turn away a relative no
matter how distant the blood relation.
Consequently, many homes often have large
numbers of people living in them.
§
In a recent case study, the
Tribal Council estimated a need for at least
4,000 new homes in order to combat the
homeless situation.
§
There is an estimated average
of 17 people living in each family home (a
home which may only have two to three
rooms). Some larger homes, built for 6 to 8
people, have up to 30 people living in them.
§
Over-all, 59% of the
Reservation homes are substandard.
§
Over 33% of the Reservation
homes lack basic water and sewage systems as
well as electricity.
§
Many residents must carry
(often contaminated) water from the local
rivers daily for their personal needs.
§
Some Reservation families are
forced to sleep on dirt floors.
§
Without basic insulation or
central heating in their homes, many
residents on the Pine Ridge Reservation use
their ovens to heat their homes.
§
Many Reservation homes lack
adequate insulation. Even more homes lack
central heating.
§
Periodically, Reservation
residents are found dead from hypothermia
(freezing).
§
It is reported that at least
60% of the homes on the Pine Ridge
Reservation need to be burned to the ground
and replaced with new housing due to
infestation of the potentially-fatal Black
Mold, Stachybotrys. There is no insurance
or government program to assist families in
replacing their homes.
§
39% of the homes on the Pine
Ridge Reservation have no electricity.
§
The most common form of
heating fuel is propane. Wood-burning is
the second most common form of heating a
home although wood supplies are often
expensive or difficult to obtain.
§
Many Reservation homes lack
basic furniture and appliances such as beds,
refrigerators, and stoves.
§
60% of Reservation families
have no land-line telephone. The Tribe has
recently issued basic cell phones to the
residents. However, these cell phones
(commonly called commodity phones) do not
operate off the Reservation at all and are
often inoperable in the rural areas on the
Reservation or during storms or wind.
§
Computers and internet
connections are very rare.
§
Federal and tribal heat
assistance programs (such as LLEAP) are
limited by their funding. In the winter of
2005-2006, the average one-time only payment
to a family was said to be approximately
$250-$300 to cover the entire winter. For
many, that amount did not even fill their
propane heating tanks one time.
Life on the Reservation
§
Most Reservation families live
in rural and often isolated areas.
§
The largest town on the
Reservation is the village of Pine Ridge
which has a population of approximately
5,720 people and is the administrative
center for the Reservation.
§
There are few improved (paved)
roads on the Reservation and most of the
rural homes are inaccessible during times of
rain or snow.
§
Weather is extreme on the
Reservation. Severe winds are always a
factor. Traditionally, summer temperatures
reach well over 110*F and winters bring
bitter cold with temperatures that can reach
-50*F below zero or worse. Flooding,
tornados, or wildfires are always a risk.
§
The Pine Ridge Reservation
still has no banks, discount stores, or
movie theaters. It has only one grocery
store of any moderate size and it is located
in the village of Pine Ridge on the
Reservation. A motel just opened in 2006
near the Oglala Lakota College at Kyle,
South Dakota. There are said to be about 8
Bed and Breakfast or campsite locations
found across the Reservation but that number
varies from time to time since most are part
of a private home.
§
Several of the banks and
lending institutions nearest to the
Reservation have been targeted for
investigation of fraudulent or predatory
lending practices, with the citizens of the
Pine Ridge Reservation as their victims.
§
There are no public libraries
except one at the Oglala Lakota College.
§
There is one radio station on
the Pine Ridge Reservation. KILI 90.1FM is
located near the town of Porcupine on the
Reservation.
Transportation
§
There is no public
transportation available on the Reservation.
§
Only a minority of Reservation
residents own an operable automobile.
§
Predominant form of travel for
all ages on the Reservation is walking or
hitchhiking.
§
There is one very small
airport on the Reservation servicing both
the Pine Ridge Reservation and Shannon
County. It's longest, paved runway extends
4,969 feet. There are no commercial flights
available. The majority of flights using
the airport are Federal, State, or County
Government-related.
§
The nearest commercial airport
and/or commercial bus line is located in
Rapid City, South Dakota (approximately 120
miles away).
Alcoholism
§
Alcoholism affects eight out
of ten families on the Reservation.
§
The death rate from
alcohol-related problems on the Reservation
is 300% higher than the remaining US
population.
§
The Oglala Lakota Nation has
prohibited the sale and possession of
alcohol on the Pine Ridge Reservation since
the early 1970's. However, the town of
Whiteclay, Nebraska (which sits 400 yards
off the Reservation border in a contested
"buffer" zone) has approximately 14
residents and four liquor stores which sell
over 4.1 million cans of beer each year
resulting in a $3million annual trade.
Unlike other Nebraska communities, Whiteclay
exists only to sell liquor and make money.
It has no schools, no churches, no civic
organizations, no parks, no benches, no
public bathrooms, no fire service and no law
enforcement. Tribal officials have
repeatedly pleaded with the State of
Nebraska to close these liquor stores or
enforce the State laws regulating liquor
stores but have been consistently refused.
Water and Aquifer Contamination
§
Many wells and much of the
water and land on the Reservation is
contaminated with pesticides and other
poisons from farming, mining, open dumps,
and commercial and governmental mining
operations outside the Reservation. A
further source of contamination is buried
ordnance and hazardous materials from closed
U.S. military bombing ranges on the
Reservation.
§
Scientific studies show that
the High Plains/Oglala Aquifer which begins
underneath the Pine Ridge Reservation is
predicted to run dry in less than 30 years
due to commercial interest use and dryland
farming in numerous states south of the
Reservation. This critical North American
underground water resource is not renewable
at anything near the present consumption
rate. The recent years of drought have
simply accelerated the problem.
§
Scientific studies show that
much of the High Plains/Oglala Aquifer has
been contaminated with farming pesticides
and commercial, factory, mining, and
industrial contaminants in the States of
South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas,
Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas.
Sovereignty and Tribal Government
§
By Treaty, the Tribal nations
are considered to have sovereign
governmental status. They have a special
government to government relationship with
the United States. Interactions with the
U.S. Government and the Department of
Interior (and its Bureau of Indian Affairs)
are supposed to be through Treaty
negotiations and most Federal programs (such
as Indian Health Services) were purchased by
the Tribal nations (usually with land) and
guaranteed by Treaty. This is specifically
true for the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Nation of
the Pine Ridge Reservation.
§
The Oglala Lakota (Sioux)
Tribal government operates under a
constitution consistent with the Indian
Reorganization Act of 1934 and approved by
the Tribal membership and Tribal Council of
the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Tribe. The Tribe
is governed by an elected body consisting of
a 5 member Executive Committee and an 18
member Tribal Council, all of whom serve a
four year term.
Hope
§
Currently, there are various
efforts underway to implement innovative
techniques and solutions to Reservation
problems. These projects include community
volunteer groups, alternative education
programs, wind or water energy initiatives,
substance abuse programs, cultural and
language programs, employment opportunities,
cottage industries, promotion of artists and
musicians, small co-op businesses, etc.
However, funding for these programs is
highly limited.
§
There are several very small
projects now working to help with the
housing shortage. Some of these involve
using donated mobile homes, community-built
sod housing, other community-built housing
(such as Habitat for Humanity), exploring
possible use of unused FEMA mobile homes,
and other alternate solutions.
Unfortunately, funding is highly limited.
§
The Tribal Council Housing
Authority is working as hard as it can to
build new homes and repair existing
structures but it is limited by the small,
limited amount of funding available.
§
There are a few reputable
small non-profit organizations attempting to
sincerely assist the people of the Pine
Ridge Reservation in their efforts to
resolve and mitigate existing problems.
However, funding for these programs is
currently highly limited.
§
There is one small independent
(non-IHS) clinic on the Reservation at the
community of Porcupine. It was founded and
is controlled by the Lakota community. It
just recently obtained its first dialysis
machine and runs an aggressive program to
combat diabetes. However, funding is very
limited and is obtained locally and through
grants.
§
The Oglala Lakota are a
determined, intelligent, and proud People
who are working hard to over-come their
Reservation problems. Against all odds,
with minimal resources, they are slowly
working to re-claim their self-sufficiency,
their culture, and their life.
These statistics
concerning the Pine Ridge Oglala Lakota
(Sioux) Reservation were compiled from
recent Political, Educational, Government,
Non-Profit, and Tribal Publications. An
earlier version was published by the same
author in 2002 entitled, “Hidden Away, in
the Land of Plenty.”
Contact
the author if you wish a list of the
resources and publications used for this
report.
Stephanie M. Schwartz may be reached at
SilvrDrach@Gmail.com
This and other articles may be viewed on the
internet at the website,
The Writings of Stephanie M. Schwartz
www.SilvrDrach.homestead.com
This
article may be reprinted and reproduced
unedited with proper attribution and
sourcing for non-profit, educational, news,
or archival purposes.

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