"Dorothy Yahtin spotted the glow of the Simnasho Longhouse, cars still in the parking lot, and limped toward the light. The rugged hills of the Warm Springs Reservation, flecked with sage, stretched toward the dark horizon.
Her hands were freezing in the late November chill. She remembers numbly opening the door and stumbling in.
The tribal chairman and his family, gathered for dinner on the 2002 Thanksgiving weekend, looked up.
Dorothy's long black hair hung around her battered face. A purple bruise, vivid in emergency-room photos taken later, circled her swollen left eye. Her upper lip split over her sheepish smile. She smelled like warm beer."
Get the Story:
The broken chain
(The Oregonian 1/7)
History leaves tribes in transition
(The Oregonian 1/7)
Oregonian Special Series:
Warm Springs - A Place Where Children Die
Relevant Links:
Warm Springs Tribes -
http://www.warmsprings.com
Oregonian: Alcohol, drugs and abuse destroy family
Wednesday, January 7, 2004
Trending in News
1 Tribes rush to respond to new coronavirus emergency created by Trump administration
2 'At this rate the entire tribe will be extinct': Zuni Pueblo sees COVID-19 cases double as first death is confirmed
3 Arne Vainio: 'A great sickness has been visited upon us as human beings'
4 Arne Vainio: Zoongide'iwin is the Ojibwe word for courage
5 Cayuga Nation's division leads to a 'human rights catastrophe'
2 'At this rate the entire tribe will be extinct': Zuni Pueblo sees COVID-19 cases double as first death is confirmed
3 Arne Vainio: 'A great sickness has been visited upon us as human beings'
4 Arne Vainio: Zoongide'iwin is the Ojibwe word for courage
5 Cayuga Nation's division leads to a 'human rights catastrophe'