“I can remember when the bison were so many that they could not be counted, but more and more Wasichus came to kill them until there were only heaps of bones scattered where they used to be. The Wasichus did not kill them to eat; they killed them for the metal that makes them crazy, and they took only the hides to sell. Sometimes they did not even take the hides, only the tongues…”(247)
Prop from Dances With Wolves (glad they were fake!) - see why it stuck with me?
I also found a really powerful scene from the movie that says so much more than words can about the Wasichus. Black Elk talks of their wastefulness, how “they would take everything from each other if they could”, and that “they had forgotten that the earth was their mother”(247).In the following scene from Dances with Wolves, we see proof of Black Elk's words, and we hurt from the mistreatment of nature.
The scene to me is very powerful as they look over the sacred place because it is breathtaking and magical. And when the audience is full of pride in their land, the scene changes quickly to show the mistreatment of the sacred place with butchered animals and a disastrous mess. In effect, the audience is also angry and disappointed in the white men. The movie's impact is important because life lessons are worthless if you don't remember them.
On a lighter note, we have also seen the comparison of two different cultures side by side in other movies. I learned at a very young age that "you can paint with all the colors of the wind" because Pocahontas taught John Smith that "the Earth isn’t just a dead thing you can claim."
Her song sums up the Native American belief in nature(in a Disney-fied version), and it also echoes the symbol of the “sacred hoop” that Black Elk refers to many times. She says “we are all connected to each other in a circle, in a hoop that never ends” and at one point Black Elk sings, “A sacred hoop I wear as I walk.” When Black Elk explains that, “Even the seasons form a great circle in their changing, and always come back again to where they were,” he shows that part of what makes the sacred hoop so powerful is its ability to return to where it began.(243) Even though the hoop was broken, he still had hope of restoring it. At the end when he admits that “the nation’s hoops is broken and scattered”, we see that he has accepted that things can never return to the way they were (as they would in a hoop).

Even though his story ends sadly, I believe we are supposed to focus on the triumphs of the Native Americans versus the point they finally broke. Black Elk picked himself back up many times in his life, and with his story we can remember hope, the sacred hoop, earth as our mother, and that we are all one in the Power of the World.

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