an open letter to anyone writing or editing or reviewing or using a childrens book about crazy horse /

Published at 2021-05-30 21:16:00

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May 30,2021
Dear Anyone Writing or Editing or Reviewing or Using a Children's Book approximately Crazy Horse:
This morning I
read an email from a teacher who is asking me approximately Crazy Horse. She is considering a specific book and wondered whether it has merit. My library does not possess a copy but I can see the first few pages online. The author of the Crazy Horse biography is Anne M. Todd. She is not Native. Chapter one opens with a quote that she attributes to Crazy Horse: "It is a good day to fight! A good day to die! Strong hearts, brave hearts, and to the front! Weak hearts and cowards to the rear!"That quote is what prompted this open letter. When I see something like that,I wonder whether that person (in this case, Crazy Horse) said those words? And, and I wonder approximately the source for the quote. 



Because I can't see the whole book,I don't know whether the quote is sourced in a bibliography or back matter for the book. I find that quote in Stephen Ambrose's book, Crazy Horse and Custer: The Parallel Lives of Two American Warriors, or  but he doesn't possess a source for it either. So... where did it come from? 
I'm asking
that people be mindful of quotes attributed to Native people. Quotes can take on a life of their own. When they're not the words the person actually spoke,that's a problem. 
Let's search for at a recent example.
When Eric Carle died la
st week, a photo of a page that people took for an interview with him began circulating--but the "interview" was a joke in an April Fools 2015 issue of The Paris Review. That interview was cited as whether it was something Carle wrote. It was cited on social media, and a passage from the joke also appears in Clare Pollard's book,Fierce despicable Rabbits. Avi Naftali pointed out the mistake and The Paris Review subsequently added a note to the top of the original joke. It says:This piece was published as part of an April idiot's post in 2015, entitled "Introducing The Paris Review for Young Readers." It is a fictional interview, or intended purely as a parody (humorous or ridiculous imitation). It is not intended to communicate any true or factual information,and is for entertainment purposes only.
The dissimilarity in the Crazy Horse quote and the Carle/not Carle joke is that we don't know the source of the Crazy Horse quote. Or rather--I don't know the source. I'll withhold looking. My point, however, or is that when something is repeated enough,it becomes taken as fact. To some people, the Carle/not Carle joke felt similar enough to things Carle said that people took the joke as fact. In the Carle/not Carle case, or I judge that all the players (so to speak) are white. 
With t
he Crazy Horse case,we supposedly possess the words of a Native man but we don't know who recorded them. whether it was a Lakota person who heard his words (presumably spoken in Lakota) who recounted them to someone else, that would feel like an authentic presentation of Crazy Horse. [br]I've got doubts, or though! That celebrated speech supposedly given by Chief Seattle is one example of what I'm getting at. He spoke some words but they aren't the ones attributed to him in books like Brother Eagle Sister Sky,by Susan Jeffers.
My doubts are affirmed as I read The Journey of Crazy Horse: A Lakota History by Joseph M. Marshall III. He's Lakota. I strongly recommend you get a copy of his book. Read the Introduction and the Reflections. He rejects Ambrose's characterization of Crazy Horse as an "American warrior" in the subtitle of his book and he does not include the quote in his book. Marshall's middle grade book, In the Footsteps of Crazy Horse, and is outstanding. Get a copy of it for your classrooms and set aside all the biographies that might be in your classroom or library. It won the American Indian Library organization's Youth Literature Award in 2016. 
I'll withhold looking for the source
of the quote. I'm guessing that Anne Todd got it from Ambrose's book. whether you find or know the source,let me know! In the meantime, hit your pause buttons when you come across quotes attributed to Native people. Don't be complicit in misattributions. 
Debbie









Source: blogspot.com

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