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4.0
26 reviewsAn antiwar book that starts with Motorcycles and Native Americans: The Lakota Sioux once ruled the Black Hills of the Dakota Territories on horse back. Now, in August the Black Hills are filled with the roaring iron horses of bikers riding to the Bacchanalia of Sturgis Bike Week. Jeff Rasley set out for Sturgis to whoop it up with his biker friends. An unplanned detour through his family history led him to the site of one of the worst massacres in U.S. military history, Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation.
One of the author's ancestors fought in the Sioux Indian Wars in the Black Hills. Another helped the last of the Potawatomi survive a harsh winter in Indiana. Lt. James Mann of the 7th U.S. Cavalry was one of the few whites to die from wounds in the massacre at Wounded Knee. Valentine Berkey was given a beaded deerskin vest as a token of friendship from the Indians with whom he traded and aided.
Discovery of the different ways his ancestors treated with the people who were on the land before us began on a road trip to Sturgis Bike Week in South Dakota. A wrecked Harley motorcycle and bull-riding strippers sent Rasley on a Pilgrimage to Wounded Knee to discover the dark side and light side of his family history with Native Americans.
Rasley was forced to ask, to what tribe do I belong? No longer welcome in the Biker community at Sturgis, Rasley sought refuge among the Sioux in Pine Ridge Reservation. He didn't find the reconciliation he sought. Instead, his confrontation with the history of his ancestor's participation in the massacre of the Sioux people at Wounded Knee sent him off on another spiritual journey.