For Our Navajo People - by Peter Iverson & Monty Roessel (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- One hundred documents written by Diné men, women, and children speaking for themselves and on behalf of their communities are collected in this book.
- Author(s): Peter Iverson & Monty Roessel
- 296 Pages
- History, Native American
Description
About the Book
Using previously unpublished material, this book presents Navajo perspectives on key issues of land, community, education, rights, government, and identity.Book Synopsis
One hundred documents written by Diné men, women, and children speaking for themselves and on behalf of their communities are collected in this book. Discovered during Iverson's research for Diné A History of the Navajos, these letters, speeches, and petitions, almost all previously unpublished, provide a uniquely moving portrait of the Diné during an era in which they were fighting to defend their lands and to build the Navajo Nation.
Six crucial, overlapping subjects are addressed here: land, community, education, rights, government, and identity. Brief introductions to each chapter and each document provide the necessary context, and historic photographs selected by Monty Roessel (Navajo), an outstanding photographer, supplement the words of the people.
Most of the vast literature about American Indians emphasizes the actions and words of non-Indians. Indians become the victims, the people to whom things happen. This volume furnishes a different view of the native past. It shows Navajos making their own history. It demonstrates how the Diné worked to keep their lands, develop their economy, build their communities, educate their young people, affirm their rights, govern themselves, and maintain their heritage while forging a brighter future.
Included are the words of such prominent leaders as Chee Dodge, Jacob Morgan, Tom Dodge, Annie Wauneka, Sam Ahkeah, and Paul Jones, and less widely known but significant spokespersons like Howard Gorman, Scott Preston, Roger Davis, and Lilly Neill. It also presents the words of students at boarding schools, soldiers fighting in World War II, and members of the Native American Church speaking out for religious freedom. This book celebrates the resilience of the Diné and salutes their resolve. It honors the men, women, and children who built the Navajo Nation.
Review Quotes
"This book provides a unique view of the Navajos in that the historical documents present a narrative told through the interactions of the individuals featured in the book. . . . The resilience of the Navajo people is clearly illustrated in the documents written by prominent leaders. . . ."
"This is an important book within the field of American Indian studies and a book that is certainly worth reading. It is poignant, moving, and insightful."
"This compilation of documents furnishes a different view of the Navajo past. It shows these people making their own history and demonstrates how they worked to save their lands, develop their economy, educate their young people, govern themselves, and maintain their heritage while forging a brighter future."