indianz.com Falmouth Institute
Advertise on Indianz.Com
Home Whats New on Indianz.Com? News Forums
  About
Home > News > Headlines
Print   Subscribe
Tim Giago: The pain of losing a child never ends
Monday, November 12, 2007
Filed Under: Opinion

Parents aren’t supposed to outlive their children. But it happens sometimes.

Her name was Roberta, but I always called her “Birdie.” When she was just about two I bought her a tiny, toy pony. She loved that little horse and she carried it with her wherever she went. When I first handed her the pony I said, “Now here is a little toy for you.” From then on she called the pony “Toy.”

One Sunday evening we were visiting her grandma who lived in the South Valley of Albuquerque in a place where there was still plenty of open pastures. I was carrying Birdie down a little dirt road by grandma’s house when a black horse came galloping along the fence by the road. Birdie looked at the toy pony in her hand and then she looked at the real live horse and she pointed at the horse and said, “Toy.”

She grew into a beautiful young lady. Her mother and I had separated and I had moved back to my home in South Dakota. She wanted to come up and stay with me and work at my newspaper. I was only too happy to have her with me. Whenever I would introduce her to my employees and friends they would inevitably say, “What a beautiful girl.”

Roberta worked really hard at the newspaper, but she missed her mother and after several months she decided to return to Albuquerque. I know that she had been in some trouble down there and it had involved drugs. I was reluctant to let her go back because I didn’t want her to get back into the same situation she had just left.

I tried to get down to Albuquerque to visit her as often as possible and I ended up opening a branch of my newspaper down there and Roberta came to work for me once more. She continued to have problems, but she realized it and she was on her way to a total cure.

In early 2006 I went to visit her and my grandchildren. I helped her find a house to live in and then we had a lot of fun getting the furniture for it. By this time Roberta had four daughters and they were all happy and unique young girls. Before I returned to Rapid City I took Roberta and the kids to the local mall in Los Lunas. While the kids were shopping, Roberta and I walked out to the car to wait for them. We sat down on a bench in the shade of a mall building. Roberta told me that she was glad that her life was finally on track. She had enrolled at an extension of the University of New Mexico and was studying journalism. Her children were all doing well in school.

She put her head on my shoulder and said, “Dad, I just want to make you happy and I want you to be proud of me.” I told her that no matter what, I was always proud of her.

I left for South Dakota early the next morning and that was the last time I saw my Birdie. On April 6, 2006, she was racing home in the middle of the afternoon with my granddaughter Crystal seated next to her in their old pickup when she missed a curve. She threw herself across the seat to shield her daughter and she was killed. Crystal held her in her arms as she died. She had just turned 34.

Roberta always said that if anything ever happened to her she wanted to be cremated. So that is what we did. There was a beautiful place north of the Jemez Indian Pueblo up in the mountains that she loved. She used to take the girls there on picnics and she would relax and listen to the radio while they climbed and played in the boulders near the road. She had discovered an old cottonwood tree and it became her shade tree.

Her mom, her children, her brother Timmy, and I put her favorite song in the CD player of my pickup truck, Free Bird by Lynyrd Skynrd, turned the volume on high, and we buried her ashes beneath that beautiful tree as the sound of that song reverberated off of the mountains. My granddaughter Crystal, who had just turned 15, was the only one to speak. With tears running down her face she said, “My mom saved my life for a reason and I won’t let her down.”

As my son and grandchildren climbed the rocks above her resting place, I sat beneath that cottonwood tree next to her ashes and looked at the deep blue skies and the clouds that floated gently like cotton candy, and in the sky I saw that little girl I had held in my arms on that Sunday evening so many years ago, and I heard her voice as she pointed at that real live horse and said, “Toy.”

Tim Giago, an Oglala Lakota, was born, raised and educated on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. He was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard in the Class of 1991 and founder of The Lakota Times and Indian Country Today newspapers. He founded and was the first president of the Native American Journalists Association. He can be reached at najournalist@msn.com.



More Tim Giago:
Tim Giago: Rep. Watson attacks Cherokee Nation (11/5)
Tim Giago: Church abuse must not go unpunished (10/29)
Tim Giago: Remembering Vernon Bellecourt (10/22)
Tim Giago: American Indians are not mascots (10/15)
Tim Giago: Stop trying to rename 'Indians' (10/8)
Tim Giago: The origins of Native American Day (10/1)
Tim Giago: Growing up in Kyle, Pine Ridge Reservation (9/24)
Tim Giago: Healing the wounds that haunt Pine Ridge (9/17)
Tim Giago: Closing a dark chapter at Pine Ridge (9/10)
Tim Giago: AIM responsible for Anna Mae's death (9/4)
Tim Giago: 'Commod bods' going out of fashion (8/27)
Tim Giago: Tribes should include all their citizens (8/20)
Tim Giago: Hollywood dashes hopes of 'Wounded Knee' (8/6)
Tim Giago: Honeymoon is over for California tribes (7/30)
Tim Giago: Modern Indian heroes compiled in book (7/23)
Tim Giago: Media errors in 'State of Native Nations' (7/9)
Tim Giago: Columnist disparages Native people (7/2)
Tim Giago: Pine Ridge still needs a hand up (6/25)
Tim Giago: The great horse of the Pawnee Nation (6/18)
Tim Giago: Indians still the most misunderstood (6/11)
Tim Giago: The theft of the sacred Black Hills (6/4)
Tim Giago: Clear and present danger to sovereignty (5/28)
Tim Giago: Rich tribes still not helping poor ones (5/21)
Tim Giago: Standing ground against 'Dropout Nation' (5/14)
Tim Giago: Indian prophecies and medicine (5/7)
Tim Giago: Help the poorest county in America (4/30)
Tim Giago: Honoring those who died at Washita (4/23)
Tim Giago: Mainstream media ignores the real issues (4/16)
Tim Giago: Racism and hypocrisy over Imus (4/11)
Tim Giago: Kill the Indian and save the child (4/9)
Tim Giago: The dark legacy of boarding schools (4/2)
Tim Giago: Tribes continue to surrender sovereignty (3/26)
Tim Giago: Venezuela steps up for Indian nations (3/19)
Tim Giago: Cherokee Nation votes out Freedmen (3/12)
Tim Giago: Oglala Lakota Tribe still struggling (3/5)
Tim Giago: A view from South Dakota, the 'red' state (2/26)
Tim Giago: 'Chief Illiniwek' does his last dance (2/19)
Tim Giago: Greed is the new God in Indian Country (2/12)
Giago discusses 'dark legacy' of boarding schools (2/5)
Tim Giago: Writing helped heal wounds of abuse (1/29)
Tim Giago: How many others will die over Iraq? (1/22)
Tim Giago: Apache journalist opens doors in media (1/15)
Tim Giago: Newspaper fills gap in South Dakota (1/8)
Tim Giago: Recognize an Indian hero in the new year (1/2)
Tim Giago: Christmas and Lakota traditions (12/25)
Tim Giago: Sen. Johnson never wanted the spotlight (12/18)
Tim Giago: The 1890 massacre at Wounded Knee (12/11)
Tim Giago: R-word just as insulting as the N-word (12/4)
Tim Giago: Mainstream media lacking in accuracy (11/27)
Tim Giago: Thanksgiving - A holiday of the imagination (11/22)
Tim Giago: State stifling growth on reservations (11/20)
Tim Giago: Taking stock of Election Day 2006 (11/13)
Tim Giago: Few roles for Indians in Hollywood (11/6)
Tim Giago: Freedom of the press has a chance (10/31)
Tim Giago: Important election day for South Dakota (10/24)
Tim Giago: White media ignores Indian contributions (10/17)
Tim Giago: Termination a dirty word in Indian Country (10/10)
Giago: Domestic violence from a male perspective (10/3)
Tim Giago: Culturecide started with innocent children (09/19)
Tim Giago: Indian people mark 500 years of terrorism (9/11)
Tim Giago: Lawsuit challenges church on abuse (9/6)

Copyright © Indianz.Com
More headlines...
Local Links:
In The Hoop | Indian Gaming | The Federal Register
Casino Stalker | Federal Recognition Database
Jobs and Notices:
Indian Law Resource Center Development Director
American Indian Alaska Native Tourism Association Financial Manager
Employment Opportunity Membership Coordinator
Native American Contractors Association Executive Director
Contact Blue Earth Marketing, lchen@blueearthmarketing.com, to place your ad here!
Latest News:
Native Sun News: Oglala Sioux Tribe calls Keystone XL rally (2/8)
Rick Santorum boosts campaign with victories in three states (2/8)
Rep. Markey calls for hearing on Alaska Native corporations (2/7)
Larry Echo Hawk: How being a Mormon helped me succeed (2/7)
Steve Russell: Talking Mitt Romney with cousin Ray Sixkiller (2/7)
Jeromy Sullivan: Protect Port Gamble from overdevelopment (2/7)
Julia Good Fox: A unified political platform for Indian Country (2/7)
DC Circuit set to hear first of challenges to Cobell settlement (2/7)
House approves bill to move Quileute Tribe to safer grounds (2/7)
Sen. McCain questions law firm that receives casino revenue (2/7)
Ms. Blog: Some things you need to know about Native women (2/7)
Opinion: False allegations against San Manuel Band chairman (2/7)
Opinion: IHS includes natural health discipline in loan program (2/7)
New Mexico Secretary of Indian Affairs hasn't been confirmed (2/7)
Pueblo man charged in connection with woman's brutal death (2/7)
Mohawk man charged for digging up ground at Superfund site (2/7)
Gila River Indian Community considers reservation highway (2/7)
Mississippi Choctaws receive $2.5M in transportation grants (2/7)
Redding Rancheria starts construction on new health facility (2/7)
Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation files federal recognition lawsuit (2/7)
British Columbia chooses reserve as site of detention facility (2/7)
Leader of Little Salmon Carmacks First Nation faces removal (2/7)
Opinion: Jack Abramoff still trying to say sorry for his crimes (2/7)
City urged to provide services to Kialegee Tribal Town casino (2/7)
New York governor includes gaming revenue in state budget (2/7)
Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe plans to open new casino in April (2/7)
City council backs Jemez Pueblo off-reservation casino plan (2/7)
IPR: Grand Traverse Band shares $958K in gaming revenues (2/7)
Editorial: Give Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe casino more time (2/7)
Editorial: Tribal gaming monopoly a big question in Michigan (2/7)
Editorial: Death of non-Indian gaming bill is good for Florida (2/7)
Tim Giago: Cobell settlement just another government rip-off (2/6)
Witness List: House subcommittee hearing on Indian land bill (2/6)
more headlines...

Home | Abramoff | Arts & Entertainment | Business | Canada | Cobell | Education | Environment | Forum | Health | Humor | Indian Gaming | Jobs | Law | National | News | Opinion | Politics | Recognition | Sports | Trust

Suggest a Site

Indianz.Com Terms of Service | Indianz.Com Privacy Policy
About Indianz.Com | Contribute to Indianz.Com | Advertise on Indianz.Com | Write to Indianz.Com

Indianz.Com is a product of Noble Savage Media, LLC and Ho-Chunk, Inc.