• thisbenzingring
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    1 年前

    fair enough

    Lakota myself. True to my heritage, I too am scattered from ones own. or as my cousin calls it a city native

    • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      Ottowae on one side recent enough, that my grandmother went to one of those white washing ”Indian schools”. Wyandotte a bit further back on the other side with a bit more Ottawae. Which is pretty common considering after the death march, those that survived ended up in kansas/oklahoma.

      • thisbenzingring
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        1 年前

        One of my grandmother’s, who survived wounded knee as a toddler, told my cousin that as long as he knows the blood they share, even if they say it’s only 1% then they are Lakota like her.

        i bet your grandmothers would feel the same.

        ❤️🤍💛🖤

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          1 年前

          Oh absolutely. As do the tribes. Despite not being the most visually recognizable descendants. Even my father at this point simply due to the way genetics works doesn’t have the markers that a lot of the DNA tests used to identify native populations. But blood is blood, and we can trace our lineage right back to past tribal leaders even.