YukonMontanaTannerTrapper
Explorer
ITTOG.....not exactly.....I'm Vegetarian, so not that for sure.....
So what was I reading that day when we drove into the Navajo Nation lands ? Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown.....seemed like an appropriate choice to me.....
Our next stop was in Window Rock, Arizona, north of Interstate 40, along the northwestern border of New Mexico. There was something about that name.....Window Rock.....that had caught my attention many a time while glossing over my road atlas, but I'd never traveled here, never ever before. Since this was Navajo land, I thought I'd start out at the Navajo Nation Museum to learn more about the Navajo people.....
I was totally enthralled by what I saw here.....the telling of their people.....
The wood carvings were top notch.....
.....as each one seemed to tell their stories.....
One of the original signed copies of the Treaty of 1868 was on display here but photography was not allowed.....so I took a screenshot from the internet for this post.....
I think the thing that stood out the most for me while viewing these artifacts were the signatures of the 29 Navajo chiefs that signed the Navajo Treaty of 1868.....each chief signed with an "X" as they couldn't read or write English. I've read that the U.S. government honored less than 50 % of that treaty.....they have such a sad story to tell.....
So what was I reading that day when we drove into the Navajo Nation lands ? Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown.....seemed like an appropriate choice to me.....
Our next stop was in Window Rock, Arizona, north of Interstate 40, along the northwestern border of New Mexico. There was something about that name.....Window Rock.....that had caught my attention many a time while glossing over my road atlas, but I'd never traveled here, never ever before. Since this was Navajo land, I thought I'd start out at the Navajo Nation Museum to learn more about the Navajo people.....
I was totally enthralled by what I saw here.....the telling of their people.....
The wood carvings were top notch.....
.....as each one seemed to tell their stories.....
One of the original signed copies of the Treaty of 1868 was on display here but photography was not allowed.....so I took a screenshot from the internet for this post.....
I think the thing that stood out the most for me while viewing these artifacts were the signatures of the 29 Navajo chiefs that signed the Navajo Treaty of 1868.....each chief signed with an "X" as they couldn't read or write English. I've read that the U.S. government honored less than 50 % of that treaty.....they have such a sad story to tell.....