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Anna Mae Pictou-Aquash 1945 - 1976
  
Anna Mae married Nogeeshik Aquash on April 12, 1973.
Websites dedicated to Anna Mae
Indigenous Women for Justice
Anna Mae Pictou Aquash
A Biography
of Anna Mae
Introduction
From the era of Native American political activism and militancy during the
early 1970s, there is no more haunting figure than Anna Mae Pictou Aquash. An
active American Indian Movement (AIM) member, as well as mother, wife, social
worker, and day care teacher, her image is powerful as much for her untimely
death as for her life's work. Found murdered on the Pine Ridge Reservation
during a time of tremendous social and political upheaval, she has become a
symbol of the movement for Indian rights.
Childhood on a Micmac Reserve
Anna Mae was born on March 27, 1945 to Mary Ellen Pictou and Francis Thomas
Levi, both Micmac Indians. She came into the world in a small Indian village
just outside the town of Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia, Canada. Levi left before
Anna Mae was born, and Mary Ellen's third grade education didn't provide her the
skills required to support her children. Still a young woman herself, Mary Ellen
Pictou admitted to being a little too unsettled to offer her girls much in the
way of discipline. Aquash spent her early years in an atmosphere of poverty and
uncertainty.
Aquash's mother married Noel Sapier, a Micmac traditionalist, in 1949. A strong
believer in the preservation of what was left of the Micmac culture and
religion, Sapier brought discipline and emotional security to the family. He
moved them to Pictou's Landing, another small Micmac reserve, and tried to make
a living between seasonal farmhand jobs and traditional craftwork. Although they
were still very poor, Aquash learned a great deal about the richness of her
people's culture at this time.
Poverty often breeds disease, and conditions were very poor at Pictou's Landing.
In 1953, Aquash was plagued with recurrent eye infections. By the time an Indian
Department physician recognized the signs of tuberculosis of the eye, Aquash had
already developed tuberculosis of the lung. She recovered but was physically
weak for some time afterward.
In 1956, Noel Sapier died of cancer, and a new phase of Aquash's childhood
began. Until then, she had encountered racism mostly during trips to nearby
towns. Now she went to an off-reserve school and was shocked by the way she was
treated there. Although reserve schools were notoriously below standards, Aquash
maintained an A-average before attending her new school. By the end of her first
year, however, she was failing all her subjects. In later years, she would often
talk about how the constant jeers, racial slurs, and lewd comments had ruined
her school years. Aquash was not alone; most of her Micmac tribespeople followed
the same pattern of failure when they enrolled in off-reserve schools.
Aquash's difficulties with verbal and sometimes physical threats from classmates
continued in high school. She steadily performed at lower and lower grade
levels, but she stayed in school, something that many of her Indian classmates
had not done. Her school problems were compounded in 1956, when her mother ran
away to another reserve to marry Wilford Barlov. Aquash and her siblings came
home to find that they had been abandoned. Because it was common for Micmacs to
work as migrant farmhands throughout the Maritime Provinces and New England, and
Aquash herself had worked summers as a harvester, she dropped out of school and
turned to the only profession she knew, working the potato and berry harvest.
New Life in Boston
At the age of 17, Aquash decided to move to Boston to seek her fortune.
Reportedly on something of a dare, she went there with Jake Maloney, a young
Micmac she knew but had never dated. They found themselves in Boston in 1962, a
strange, noisy, bustling world for people used to reserve life. The presence of
many other Micmacs who had also moved there made the transition somewhat easier,
though, and the couple soon settled in.
Aquash began working in a factory and set up house with Jake. They considered
themselves married and started a family. In 1964 and 1965, Aquash gave birth to
daughters Denise and Deborah. Just after Deborah's birth, the couple married in
New Brunswick and moved to another Micmac reserve. Although they had enjoyed
life in Boston, they had mixed feelings about raising their daughters in such a
big city, and they moved back and forth between Boston and the Maritime
Provinces in Nova Scotia several times. During their stays in Canada, they
immersed themselves in Micmac tradition, learning much from Jake's step-uncle,
one of the few remaining Micmacs who kept to the old ways.
Become a Community Organizer
In 1968, Natives were calling for equal rights, cultural recognition, and the
fulfillment of promises made in treaties. Aquash worked as a volunteer in the
Boston Indian Council's headquarters while holding down her factory job. Her
council work centered on helping young, urban Natives develop self-esteem, a
technique that seemed to help them avoid alcohol abuse. It was a topic close to
Aquash's own life. At this time she and Jake Maloney had broken off their
marriage and, for a short period after the breakup, she frequently drank too
much. She had also seen the havoc created by heavy drinking in Indian
communities.
At the Indian Council Aquash heard about a planned protest by AIM. A number of
New England AIM members were joining with national leader Russell Means to
protest the "official" version of Thanksgiving by converging on the Mayflower
II, a reconstruction of the ship that carried the Pilgrims to America. The
traditional story behind Thanksgiving was that the Pilgrims were greeted by- and
shared a feast with--welcoming Indians. This version, of course, neglected to
mention the legacy of conquest and slaughter that Europeans brought to the New
World. Aquash participated in the protest and the event made her even more
determined to work for Native rights.
Aquash, along with her daughters, moved to Bar Harbor, Maine, to work in the
Teaching and Research in Bicultural Education School Project (TRIBES). The girls
attended the school and Pictou taught. The curriculum there consisted of
traditional subjects as well as Indian history, values, and beliefs to foster
pride in the students. Although the project was successful, it was closed in
1972, when funding was cut. The family returned to Boston, where Aquash enrolled
in the New Careers program at Wheelock College. This program included both
classroom instruction and community work. Pictou's assignment was teaching at a
day care center in Roxbury, a predominately African American section of Boston.
She excelled in the program and in her work, and was eventually offered a
scholarship to attend Brandeis University in Massachusetts. Aquash declined the
offer, preferring to continue her work in the black and Indian communities.
The Trail of Broken Treaties March
Around this time, she met and began a relationship with Nogeeshik Aquash, a
Chippewa artist from Ontario. Together, they raised her daughters and became
more involved in the growing Indian rights movement. In 1972 the couple
participated in the march on Washington, D.C., called Trail of Broken Treaties.
Originating with AIM, the march included Indians from all over the country who
converged on the capital to draw attention to Indian issues. The group took over
and occupied the Bureau of Indian Affairs building and then presented a list of
20 civil rights demands. After a week of occupation, the government promised to
review their demands, point by point, a great victory and the first time a
national organization of Indians had faced a confrontation as a united people.
Several months later, in April of 1973, a group of 200 Indians, led by AIM,
congregated at the site of the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre , in which 500 army
soldiers opened fire on a group of Minneconjou Ghost Dancers, killing 300 men,
women, and children. Wounded Knee, located near the Pine Ridge Reservation in
South Dakota, was chosen as the place for protest because of its painful
historical significance. AIM wished to draw public attention to its efforts
against the reputedly corrupt administration of tribal chairman of the Oglala
Sioux, Richard "Dick" Wilson, who used beatings and intimidation to rule the
reservation.
After hostilities increased, the town was occupied by 2,000 Indians in a siege
lasting 70 days. When word of the occupation and resulting siege by federal
troops reached Boston, Pictou and Nogeeshik left for South Dakota. Arriving
several days later, they immediately busied themselves by sneaking food and
medical supplies to the occupiers. Initially, they camped at Crow Dog's
Paradise, the home of medicine men Henry Crow Dog and Leonard Crow Dog. Later,
inside one of the stores at Wounded Knee, Aquash helped deliver Pedro, the first
son of Mary Brave Bird, who would soon marry Leonard Crow Dog. On April 12,
1973, Anna Mae married Nogeeshik Aquash in a traditional Lakota (Sioux) ceremony
presided over by Nicholas Black Elk and Wallace Black Elk.
The standoff at Wounded Knee ended with the indictment of AIM leaders Dennis
Banks and Russell Means. The Aquashes returned to Boston, where they continued
their work for the movement. Aquash was on her way to becoming a national AIM
leader. In 1974, she moved to St. Paul, Minnesota, to work in the AIM office
there. Within a year, she was involved in the Menominee Indian takeover of an
abandoned Alexian Brothers Catholic Monastery in protest of the termination of
their federal Indian status. The conflict in Gresham, Wisconsin, ended
peacefully, but from that time on, Aquash was constantly under FBI observation.
Back to Wounded Knee
During the summer of 1975, Aquash and AIM security chief Leonard Peltier
attended an AIM conference in Farmington, New Mexico, to lend support to Navajo
protests over mining in the Four Corners area. From there, they were called back
to Pine Ridge to help organize security for Lakota traditionalists and AIM
supporters who were being attacked by Wilson's provisional police force. They
camped on the property of the Jumping Bull family. On June 26, 1975, a fight
broke out between two FBI agents and AIM members. Two agents and a young Indian
were killed. AIM members scattered as an international manhunt began for the FBI
agents' killers. Peltier was later arrested, charged, and convicted of the
murders of the two FBI agents.
Three months later, in September 1975, Aquash was arrested with several others
during a raid on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. Fearing the worst, she
jumped bail and went "underground" (hid from the law). In November, she was
leaving the Port Madison Reservation in Washington State when federal agents
began watching the two vehicles in the AIM caravan. In Oregon, just one mile
short of the Idaho border, state troopers stopped the group and Aquash was again
arrested. She was extradited to South Dakota in handcuffs to face charges from
the raid at Rosebud, as well as federal charges of transporting and possessing
firearms and dangerous weapons, including dynamite. Since she had not been
indicted on the earlier charges, the South Dakota judge released her on bail;
she fled again on November 24, 1975.
On February 24, 1976, a Lakota rancher found Aquash's dead body while riding the
perimeter of his property. Her body's deteriorated condition indicated that she
had been dead for some time. The body was initially taken to the Pine Ridge
Public Health Service for an autopsy. Her cause of death was listed as exposure,
and since no one was able to identify her, she was buried as a "Jane Doe"--an
anonymous corpse. Her hands were cut off and sent to FBI headquarters in
Washington, D.C., for possible identification, and a week later, Aquash was
identified. When her family was informed, they called on AIM to help them secure
a second autopsy. On March 11, 1976, another post-mortem revealed a .32 caliber
bullet hole at the base of Anna Mae's skull. Her death was then officially
designated a homicide. Aquash was reburied with traditional rites, and the
investigation of her murder began.
When Leonard Peltier was arrested for the murder of the two FBI agents at Pine
Ridge, the FBI based part of their case against him on the account of a witness.
A Lakota woman, Myrtle Poor Bear, claimed she'd seen Peltier commit the murders.
She later changed her story, saying that she had been coerced into identifying
Peltier as the killer by an FBI agent, who had said she might meet the same end
as Anna Mae Aquash. Aquash, whose murder had taken place right after Peltier's
arrest, had earlier told the FBI she knew nothing about the murders of the
agents and would not cooperate with them.
Although two senators brought the matter before Congress and the Department of
Justice, and although Canadian authorities demanded full accounting for the
murder of one of their citizens on the federal land of a friendly neighboring
country, the investigation never went far. The murder of Anna Mae Aquash remains
unsolved, but she is remembered as a powerful symbol of an era of Native rights
activism.
FURTHER READING
Brand, Johanna, The Life and Death of Anna Mae Aquash, James Lorimer, 1978.
Matthiessen, Peter, In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, Viking Books, 1983.
Native American Women, edited by Gretchen M. Bataille, Garland Publishing, 1993.
courtesy of
http://www.thomson.com/gale/whmbios.html
http://www.dickshovel.com/bio.html
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