indianz.com Kill The Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement
Advertise on Indianz.Com
Home Whats New on Indianz.Com? News Forums
  About
Home > News > Headlines
Print   Subscribe
Tim Giago: Good things and bad things come in April
Monday, April 20, 2009
Filed Under: Opinion

In April of 1921 Vaudevillian entertainer Al Jolson stood on the stage in Jolson's 59th Street Theatre in New York City in blackface in the production of the Broadway musical Bombo, and he sang, "Though April showers may come your way, they bring the flowers that bloom in May."

At that time April became the month of hope and dreams. But before Jolson's song of April, the month took some ominous turns.

On April 20, 1889, Adolph Hitler was born and between his life and death, millions would die in World War 2. More than 6 million Jews would die in the concentration camps in what Hitler proclaimed as the Final Solution.

On April 15, 1912 the luxury liner Titanic struck an iceberg in the Atlantic Ocean and sank taking 1,517 passengers to the bottom with it.

It was in April 1968 when Robert F. Kennedy made his historic visit to the Holy Rosary Mission Indian boarding school on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, just a few months before he was assassinated in California.

On April 19, 1995 an Army veteran named Timothy McVeigh calmly walked away from the Ryder Truck he had parked in front of the Alfred Murrah federal building and the truck exploded nearly destroying the building and taking the lives of 168 people.

And on April 20, 1999, Hitler's birthday, two high school boys, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, walked into the classrooms at Columbine High School and took the lives of 12 students, one teacher and then turned the guns on themselves. In all 15 people died that day.

Something else happened on April 4, 1981 that helps me to round out things that happened in that month that held different meanings. On April 4 a group of Native Americans from the American Indian Movement occupied a small plot of land called Victoria Creek Canyon and changed the name to Yellow Thunder Camp in honor of Raymond Yellow Thunder, the Lakota man killed in Gordon, Nebraska by locals.

On the evening that AIM took over the grounds at Yellow Thunder Camp the skies above Rapid City took on colors of red, pink and purple that I have never seen before or since. The entire sky above this city lit up for nearly 30 minutes. Members of AIM looked upon this as a sign that Wakan Tanka (Great Spirit) was with them.

That same evening in a hospital bed at the Rapid City Regional Hospital, a tiny Lakota woman named Lupe breathed her last breath. When I looked out of the windows at the hospital and saw the brilliant hues of colors in the skies I thought, "There goes the spirit of my mother."

In April of 1992, I got a phone call from my cousin "Buzzy" telling me to hurry home because my brother Tony, the man we called "Tuna the Bass" was in the same Regional Hospital and in dire straits. I was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard at the time and I rushed out to Logan International Airport in Boston and caught the first available flight home. I was too late. My brother passed away before my plane could reach Rapid City. I found it ironic in 2001 when I saw on the news that one of the hijacked planes that crashed into the Twin Towers in New York City took off from the same airport where I boarded the plane in an effort to make it home before my brother's death.

From that day on, April has been a month of anxiety to me. My angst about the month "that brings May flowers" was pushed to the forefront when on April 6, 2006, my lovely daughter Roberta died in a terrible pickup crash in Albuquerque, N.M. She was only 34 and had just begun to find real purpose in her life.

But April can also bring good things because every month of every year has had its good happenings and bad. For example, it was in the month of August when two atom bombs destroyed the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the island of Japan marking the first and last time that atomic weapons have ever taken the lives of human beings.

It was on April 22, 1996 that I went on a blind date to celebrate the birthday of Karla Anderson, one of my employees at the Albuquerque office of my newspaper, Indian Country Today, and met, Jackie, the woman who would become my wife.

Although it took several years for us to figure out that we should spend the rest of our lives together, we still celebrate April 22 as the very special day in our lives. Karla Anderson still lives and works in Albuquerque with her husband Bob, and every year we hoist a glass of wine and wish her a very Happy Birthday.

So I guess, even though I traveled a very circuitous route to tell you about the bad and the good of April, I tried to make it a historical trip for you. And by the way, when I was young man, one April day in 1951, I was sitting on the porch with my teenage girlfriend at her home in North Rapid listening to the rain splatter on the roof above us, and through the open window, on her radio, the voice of Al Jolson wafted through the air; "So if it's raining, have no regrets, it isn't raining rain you know, it's raining violets."

Tim Giago, Oglala Lakota, is editor and publisher of the weekly Native Sun News and he can be reached at editor@nsweekly.com or by writing him at; 1000 Cambell St. Suite 1A, Rapid City, SD 57701.

More Tim Giago:
Tim Giago: An open letter to South Dakota governor (4/13)
Tim Giago: Nostalgia and South Dakota blizzards (4/6)
Tim Giago: An older brother who paved the way (3/30)
Tim Giago: Sticks and stones and Charles Trimble (3/17)
Tim Giago: Pine Ridge team triumphs at tournament (3/16)
Tim Giago: Announcing the Native Sun News (3/9)
Tim Giago: No winners at Wounded Knee 1973 (3/5)
Tim Giago: The real victims of Wounded Knee 1973 (3/2)
Tim Giago: No outrage over abuse of Natives (2/23)
Tim Giago: A perspective on the fairness doctrine (2/16)
Tim Giago: Throwing Tom Daschle under the bus (2/9)
Tim Giago: Native people out of sight, out of mind (2/2)
Tim Giago: Native veteran loses fight against VA (1/26)
Tim Giago: The Wellbriety Journey for Forgiveness (1/19)
Tim Giago: The stolen generations in the U.S. (1/12)
Tim Giago: Indian Country looks to Tom Daschle for help (1/5)





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.