East Baton Rouge Parish Library

Ojibwa warrior, Dennis Banks and the rise of the American Indian Movement, Dennis Banks with Richard Erdoes

Label
Ojibwa warrior, Dennis Banks and the rise of the American Indian Movement, Dennis Banks with Richard Erdoes
Language
eng
resource.biographical
autobiography
resource.governmentPublication
government publication of a state province territory dependency etc
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Ojibwa warrior
Oclc number
53059503
Responsibility statement
Dennis Banks with Richard Erdoes
Sub title
Dennis Banks and the rise of the American Indian Movement
Summary
Publisher's description: Dennis Banks, an American Indian of the Ojibwa Tribe, is probably the most influential Indian leader of our time. In Ojibwa Warrior, written with acclaimed writer and photographer Richard Erdoes, Banks tells his own story for the very first time and reveals an inside look at the birth of the American Indian Movement. Born in 1937 and raised by his grandparents on the Leach Lake reservation in Minnesota, Dennis Banks grew up learning traditional Ojibwa lifeways. As a young child he was torn from his home and forced to attend a government boarding school designed to assimilate Indian children into white culture. After years of being "white man-ized" in these repressive schools, Banks enlisted in the U.S. Air Force, shipping out to Japan when he was only seventeen years old. After returning to the states, Banks lived in poverty in the Indian slums of Minnesota until he was arrested for stealing groceries to feed his growing family. Although his white accomplice was freed on probation, Banks was sent to prison. There he became determined to educate himself. Hearing about the African American struggle for civil rights, he recognized that American Indians must take up a similar fight. Upon hi
Classification
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