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Beginnings Is a Different Kind of Memoir


Although Beginnings: The Trail from a Boyhood in Western Colorado to the Indian Controlled Schools Movement and Restoration of the Menominee Indian Tribe chronicles the work of the Menominee Restoration Committee and the formation of formal tribal government after the Termination Era in American Indian history—helping usher in the era of Indian Self-Determination—it is a different kind of book.

For one thing, in the Western Colorado sections and in the chapters where I recount the magical love story between Ethel Mortenson Davis—the poet, artist, and my wondrous wife—I integrate narrative poetry into the larger story of being born in the small town of Delta, our move to Grand Junction, our marriage and early years together, and, finally, my success in earning a teaching degree in history and English at the University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh.

The other aspect of my story during these years was the struggle against physical handicaps caused by Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a hereditary disorder that affects much of my extended family. The theme of how physical handicaps can affect American children growing up in a culture that extols exceptionalism while often denigrating intellectual and physical disabilities is, I believe, both powerful and universal. I was fortunate that my particular affliction was one I learned, somewhat shakily, to overcome, partially because of the glory of falling in love with Ethel.

I am often asked whether I am American Indian. Then, after I answer, another question follows: How did a Western Colorado boy end up spending most of his life serving American Indians through the Indian-controlled schools movement?

That question reflects the difficulties American society has always had in embracing the patchwork quilt of its own population. In my story, I move from being a true-blue inheritor of the Western ethic of independence, self-reliance, and connection to the landscape to becoming a participant in the effort of Indian people to control their own futures within a country that has often preferred to deny the history of the Indian Wars and the treatment of Native peoples after the wars ended and the Treaty Period gave way to new federal policies.

This meant that I became a participant in some of the most important historical movements in modern American history: the birth and development of the Indian-controlled schools movement and the legal and political foundations of the Self-Determination Era, which recognizes tribes as independent nations possessing constitutional and treaty rights that have too often been violated by national, state, and local governments.

The Major Themes of Beginnings

There are many major themes woven throughout Beginnings. I hope readers discover many of them for themselves.

The Power of Beginnings

How childhood experiences shape a lifetime of values, decisions, and leadership.

The Formation of Character

Lessons learned through family, work, hardship, and responsibility in rural western Colorado.

Leadership Through Service

Leadership emerging from commitment to a cause rather than the pursuit of authority or recognition.

Finding Purpose

The unexpected path from a small-town upbringing to involvement in national Native American issues.

Education as Self-Determination

Education as a means for communities to control their own future rather than simply transmit knowledge.

The Indian Self-Determination Movement

The historic transition from federal control toward tribal governance and local decision-making.

The Menominee Restoration

The political, legal, and human struggle to restore federal recognition to the Menominee Tribe.

Community Building

Creating institutions that outlast individuals, including schools, organizations, and partnerships.

Cross-Cultural Learning

The mutual education that occurs when people from different backgrounds work together with respect.

The Importance of Listening

Effective leadership beginning with understanding rather than directing.

Courage During Change

Individuals willing to challenge established systems in pursuit of justice.

Ordinary People Making History

How significant historical events are often shaped by people who never intended to become historical figures.

The Evolution of Tribal Education

The emergence of Indian-controlled schools and, eventually, tribal colleges as expressions of sovereignty.

Institution Building

The practical challenges of creating new educational and governmental institutions from the ground up.

Perseverance

Continuing despite political setbacks, financial uncertainty, and organizational obstacles.

Relationships and Mentorship

The influence of remarkable individuals whose guidance changed the course of my life.

The Intersection of Personal and National History

One person’s life unfolding alongside transformative events in federal Indian policy.

Hope and Renewal

Restoration not only of a tribe’s legal status but also of dignity, identity, and opportunity.

The Value of Place

The landscapes of western Colorado, Wisconsin, and Indian Country as active influences on identity and perspective.

History Through Personal Experience

Understanding major historical movements through the lived experiences of someone directly involved.

Beginnings ends before the years I spent helping establish and expand the tribal college movement—the work for which I am probably best known at the age of eighty. That story belongs to another volume.

For now, I hope readers find in Beginnings a story that contributes to a broader understanding of this country, its history, and what it ought to stand for.

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Hayes Lewis

Too many of the great American Indian leaders in education are passing. I keep mourning each one as they go beyond the blanket to where I cannot see. Thomas Davis

Hayes Lewis

I have been thinking about Hayes today,
How Agent Orange and his time in Viet Nam got him in the end,
But like all of us,
The ending is not the story,
Not the stone that has been shaped into a fetish
That means more than what it represents.

He was gentle, softspoken,
But the dreams he had!
He wanted to somehow reach into the spirit
Of every Zuni and American Indian child and young person
And stir alive with what they really are,
A blessing on the earth.
A gentle rain after weeks of unrelenting sun
That explodes the high desert into wildflowers,
Sun flowers, bee balm, Indian paintbrush,
The colors of life as bright as any rainbow.

As a Superintendent of Schools
He worked hard to stir up accomplishments
Inherent in spirits touched by the spirit
Of the Zuni heritage and history.
At the Institute of American Indian Arts
He worked to allow the creative fires
At the heart of who American tribal people are
To create a renaissance
So powerful it would wipe away
The foolish prejudices and preconceptions
Of those who still believe that Indian live in teepees
And have failed to join the contemporary world.
At A:shwi College he labored
To bring a college into being,
A tribal college that honored language, culture, and history
By bringing it alive,
Making it the heart of what learning should be.

But even this is only a little bit of what he was.
He has been one of those people
Who speak and people listen.
One of those people whose courage
Is not in their deeds alone,
But in the presence of how they hold themselves
As season passes season and days become a summation
Of all that is good and perfect upon the good earth.

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Filed under poems, Poetry, Thomas Davis