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Monday, 22 June 2009 |
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Geronimo the Apache leader died in 1909 and to this day there is controversy over his remains.  Geronimo In June of 2009 the federal government has asked that a lawsuit alleging that the great Apache leader’s remains be returned to his family descendents. The remains were allegedly taken by the Skull and Bones secret society members in 1918 from Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Geronimo’s descendents seek to rebury his remains near his birthplace in New Mexico’s. This highlights the Native American’s desire to be with the land and to dwell in the place of their birth which is believed to be the place and land that was entrusted to them for care. |
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Saturday, 17 June 2006 |
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Geronimo (means "one who yawns"), was born in 1829 in what is today western New Mexico, but was then still Mexican territory. He was a Bedonkohe Apache (grandson of Mahko) by birth and a Net'na during his youth and early manhood. His wife, Juh, Geronimo's cousin Ishton, and Asa Daklugie were members of the Nednhi band of the Chiricahua Apache. He was reportedly given the name Geronimo by Mexican soldiers, although few agree as to why. As leader of the Apaches at Arispe in Sonora, he performed such daring feats that the Mexicans singled him out with the sobriquet Geronimo (Spanish for "Jerome"). Some attributed his numerous raiding successes to powers conferred by supernatural beings, including a reputed invulnerability to bullets. Geronimo's war career was linked with that of his brother-in-law, Juh, a Chiricahua chief. Although he was not a hereditary leader, Geronimo appeared so to outsiders because he often acted as spokesman for Juh, who had a speech impediment. Geronimo was the leader of the last American Indian fighting force formally to capitulate to the United States. Because he fought against such daunting odds and held out the longest, he became the most famous Apache of all. To the pioneers and settlers of Arizona and New Mexico, he was a bloody-handed murderer and this image endured until the second half of this century. Photo of Geronimo  |
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