I don’t know who said, “Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem,” but it certainly makes sense.
Teen suicide, it would appear, is a problem throughout America, but it seems to happen more frequently among young Native Americans.
A “study” on any topic usually does not offer a solution, but a “study” that gets to the bottom of why so many young Indians are taking their own lives would at least lay the groundwork for the traditionalists seeking a solution.
Some would place the problem at the doorstep of the boarding schools where children were oftentimes forcibly taken from their traditional homes and placed in institutions designed to strip any Indian identity from their psyche. Shorn of hair, stripped of all cultural markers, forced to learn English and physically abused for speaking their own language, indoctrinated into a religion foreign to them, and forced to cut their ties to their tiospaye (traditional family group), in many cases the boarding school children grew up uncertain of their own identity.
Worse yet, many grew up ashamed of their culture and traditions because they had been force-fed the idea that their past was now meaningless and ties to their ancestors was akin to something evil. The shame and guilt foisted upon two or three generations of Native Americans became a part of a new culture; one that had many Indians searching for themselves and finding absolution in alcohol and drugs. The problems then became generational and the guilt and anger, enhanced by the abuse of alcohol and drugs, was visited upon the children and even the grandchildren of the ensuing generations. The abuses ran the gamut of sexual, spousal and child abuse that has brought so many dysfunctional families to the forefront in Indian Country.
Combine all of these problems with extreme poverty and you have sown the seeds of extreme depression. Indian children of today are often raised by their grandparents because they are the children of teenage mothers who have been abandoned by their boyfriends who in turn are the children of parents that lost all ties to their own traditions and culture.
The young go to movies, watch television and they see all of the modern technology that comes with cell phones, I-pods, and I-pads and they are exposed to the world of texting, twittering and tweeting, but find they are unable to afford these innovative technologies because of extreme poverty and oftentimes from the distance and isolation of their Indian reservations. This deprivation can instill depression in the young.
According to Richard Iron Cloud, Acting Director of the Sweet Grass Project on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, in 2009 there were nine successful suicides on the reservation; eight men and one woman with an average age of 29 years. “Men are more likely to carry out suicide attempts than women,” he said.
The Sweet Grass Project is halfway through its funding year and, as a very new project, it is feeling its way through small successes and foibles. After encouraging and enabling wicasa wakan (holy men) like Rick Two Dogs to visit the schools and hold meetings across the reservation with the young, Iron Cloud feels that the ensuing reduction in suicides is emblematic of their efforts. “The real success will come through strength in the community,” he said.
Iron Cloud is optimistic, but he was visibly upset at the suicide of a 16 year old girl on the reservation last week. “We have tried to set up a 24/7 hot line, but believe it or not, with unemployment on the reservation as high as 80 percent we are having a hard time finding experienced people to man the phones,” he said.
He believes that it is the trauma of speaking to the young people contemplating suicide that has caused such a high turnover in personnel. “In the past year we have lost 13 employees who said they just couldn’t take it anymore,” he said.
After the first rash of suicides in 2009, Oglala Sioux Tribal President, Theresa Two Bulls, declared a state of emergency and vowed to raise the money and create an atmosphere that would stem and hopefully, eliminate the problem.
Iron Cloud said, “We have a reservation larger than some of the smaller states like Rhode Island and getting our people trained in villages like Porcupine and Wanblee means having to provide them with transportation, fuel, food and lodging and this really creates a hardship for the volunteers.”
“It is always a matter of finding the money to carry out our project and we are always working on that end of it,” Iron Cloud said.
Another old saying goes, “If you think the government can fix everything, ask an Indian.” Iron Cloud and his dedicated staff need the money the government offers, but they intend to find a solution to the problem of the high suicide rate on the reservation by going back to the culture, traditions and the spirituality of their ancestors. So far it seems to be working.
Tim Giago, an Oglala Lakota, is the publisher of Native Sun News. He was the
founder and first president of the Native American Journalists Association, the
1985 recipient of the H. L. Mencken Award, and a Nieman Fellow at Harvard with
the Class of 1991. Giago was inducted into the South Dakota Newspaper Hall of
Fame in 2008. He can be reached at editor@nsweekly.com.
More Tim Giago:
Tim Giago: Indian trust fund settlement insults
land holders (5/24)
Tim Giago: Innocence lost at
boarding school on reservation (5/17)
Tim Giago: Students in Wisconsin win victory on
mascot bill (5/10)
Tim Giago: Political
and religious fanaticism turning deadly (5/3)
Tim Giago: Democrat reaches out to South Dakota
tribes (4/26)
Tim Giago: Mount Rushmore
loses a man of great vision (4/19)
Tim
Giago: Black Hills land claim settlement fund tops $1B (4/12)
Tim Giago: His ancestor was Crazy Horse's sole
interpreter (4/5)
Tim Giago: Look into
Native veteran discrimination claims (3/29)
Tim Giago: Inadequate funds crippling Indian health
care (3/22)
Tim Giago: Urban relocation
another failed Indian policy (3/15)
Tim
Giago: Statistics and health care in Indian Country (3/8)
Tim Giago: Indigenous in America, Australia share
paths (3/1)
Tim Giago: Sunday night
movies at boarding school (2/22)
Tim
Giago: Support the Year of Unity in South Dakota (2/15)
Tim Giago: Cherokee Nation fights termination
effort (2/8)
Tim Giago: Natives finding
true voice as Independents (2/1)
Tim
Giago: Obama's vision might not please everyone (1/25)
Tim Giago: No honor in 1890 massacre at Wounded
Knee (1/18)
Tim Giago: Support for
Oglala Sioux President Two Bulls (1/11)
Tim Giago: Addressing misconceptions about Indians
(1/6)
Tim Giago: Poem still
inspirational after many years (12/21)
Tim Giago: Brown's classic 'Bury My Heart' turns 40
(12/17)
Tim Giago: A place for Indian
time in this busy world (12/7)
Tim
Giago: The final showdown with Chuck Trimble (11/25)
Tim Giago: Open dialogue on America's dirty secret
(11/23)
Tim Giago: 'Culturecide' began
in Indian Country (11/16)
Tim Giago: The
mysterious deaths at Wind River (11/9)
Tim Giago: Tribe responds to corruption allegations
(11/4)
Tim Giago: Tribal governments and
democracies (11/2)
Tim Giago: Airing
allegations of tribal corruption (10/26)
Tim Giago: Native Sun a watchdog for tribes, public
(10/21)
Tim Giago: Can ceremonies save
Sioux people? (10/19)
Tim Giago:
'Wizard' author backed genocide (10/12)
Tim Giago: Indians left out of bison roundup
(10/9)
Tim Giago: Racism against Native
Americans (10/5)
Tim Giago: Another nail
in the coffin of smokers (9/28)
Native
Sun Editorial: Mascots are not an honor (9/22)
Tim Giago: Leaving the anger and the meanness
(9/21)
Tim Giago: Indian Reorganization
Act turns 75 (9/14)
Tim Giago: They
could not kill Lakota spirituality (9/7)
Tim Giago: Don't take IHS criticism at face value
(8/31)
Tim Giago: Coffee and bagels with
Tim Johnson (8/24)
Tim Giago: Real
problems of US health care (8/17)
Tim
Giago: Sotomayor puts dent in glass ceiling (8/10)
Tim Giago: Standing ground at Mount Rushmore
(8/3)
Tim Giago: Voting Native and
voting independent (7/27)
Tim Giago:
Rapid City is changing for the better (7/20)
Tim Giago: Frontier mentality still alive in 2009
(7/13)
Tim Giago: The execution of Chief
Two Sticks (7/6)
Tim Giago: McDonald's
mentality needs revamp (6/29)
Tim Giago:
National health care debate and IHS (6/22)
Tim Giago: South Dakota restricts tribal growth
(6/15)
Tim Giago: No more status quo for
BIA education (6/8)
Tim Giago: Being
Indian and being independent (6/1)
Tim
Giago: Let Oglala Sioux president do her job (5/27)
Tim Giago: Memorial Day speech at Black Hills
(5/25)
Tim Giago: Small victories in
battle against mascots (5/18)
Tim Giago:
A day of tribal victory at Little Bighorn (5/11)
Tim Giago: Negative Native images in the news
(5/4)
Tim Giago: Resolving ownership of
the Black Hills (4/27)
Tim Giago: Good
things and bad things come in April (4/20)
Tim Giago: An open letter to South Dakota governor
(4/13)
Tim Giago: Nostalgia and South
Dakota blizzards (4/6)
Tim Giago: An
older brother who paved the way (3/30)
Tim Giago: Sticks and stones and Charles Trimble
(3/17)
Tim Giago: Pine Ridge team
triumphs at tournament (3/16)
Tim Giago:
Announcing the Native Sun News (3/9)
Tim
Giago: No winners at Wounded Knee 1973 (3/5)
Tim Giago: The real victims of Wounded Knee 1973
(3/2)
Tim Giago: No outrage over abuse
of Natives (2/23)
Tim Giago: A
perspective on the fairness doctrine (2/16)
Tim Giago: Throwing Tom Daschle under the bus
(2/9)
Tim Giago: Native people out of
sight, out of mind (2/2)
Tim Giago:
Native veteran loses fight against VA (1/26)
Tim Giago: The Wellbriety Journey for Forgiveness
(1/19)
Tim Giago: The stolen generations
in the U.S. (1/12)
Tim Giago: Indian
Country looks to Tom Daschle for help (1/5)
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