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Hiawatha Indian Insane Asylum.

Download DOC from here: HIAWATHA INDIAN INSANE ASYLUM

HIAWATHA INDIAN INSANE ASYLUM

SACRED BURIAL GROUNDS

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ALL NATIONS HEALING AND PRAYER CEREMONY

 

The annual ceremony will be on May 15, 2011 beginning at 12 noon in Canton at the Canton Country Club Golf Course between the 4th and 5th holes, located 18 miles southeast of Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Harold Iron Shield, founder of the Native American Reburial Restoration Committee began this annual event and kept it alive until his death in 2008. It is now being revived to honor and give our prayers of peace and healing to those buried there.

Everyone is welcome to attend.

Calling All Tribal Members & Councils to be Represented

These are sacred burial grounds and they will be respected and honored as such.

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In 1902, the U.S. Government opened the Hiawatha Insane Asylum for American Indians. The purpose was to care for those members of tribes who were allegedly insane. The asylum was operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The Indians who made up the population of the asylum were Indians seen by the Government as "trouble makers"–spiritual leaders, medicine men, vision quest seekers, those who resisted reservation boundaries and boarding school students who did not conform to school policies.

Today the 121 bodies of the Hiawatha patients who died in the hospital and could not be returned to their families lie in state in what is now the Canton Country Club Golf Course. Just off the fourth fairway one will find a split rail fence surrounding the small cemetery, a monument sits in its middle bearing the names of those interred there.

For more information go to: http://www.hiawathadiary.com/

  • A ceremony calling out the names of those known buried there and a prayer ribbon for each name will be tied to the rail fence in their honor with a final prayer for peace and healing offered. Chiefs from the Great Sioux Nation will be in attendance in full regalia.
  • Bring cedar, sweet grass, and sage for smudging, tobacco for offering and a special token rock to lie at the plaque of names.
  • Bring traditional foods for offerings to “the pitiful ones.”
  • Canton Golf Course has offered their meeting room (accommodates 100) for our gathering after the ceremony—so bring a box lunch and let us get to know one another.
  • For Elders or disabled who wish to attend, Canton Golf Course has graciously offered to golf cart them to and from the sacred burial site.

Contact: Lavanah.judah@gmail.com