Thanks for that, Walks. I know President Bush declared November as "National American Indian Heritage Month" back in 1990(?), but I have always been amazed that it is never given the attention that "National Black History Month" is. Both peoples have been put through hell and back and unless I just happen to 'miss' all of it, which I highly doubt, I have not seen press, TV news/programs, commentators, writers, anything done that even comes close to them being looked at/presented equally. I don't count TNT network showing
"Dances With Wolves" 20 times as truly paying tribute.
This, at the end, struck a chord with me: "It was hard to be an American Indian one hundred plus years ago but it is still hard today; they tell us to get over it,
we cannot be whom we are today without knowing where we come from." I think the part I bolded can apply to any of us, but I would never presume to know what it feels like to be a part of a group of people as a whole who have been forced to go through struggles and hardships I have never had to live through.
We all go through tough things that we feel at times will never end or we just won't be able to get through, but we do because we want to go on living. If we don't, then we deal with it in misery and sometimes people put the final end to that misery by suicide. It's like someone saying to me (or anyone), "Oh,
I know exactly how you feel." No, you don't, anymore than I do you.