Groups help ease transition back into families, tribes
WASHINGTON —
Conrad Eagle Feather, a Sicangu Lakota, was only three when he was
taken from the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota and adopted by
a non-Native farming family in the state of Nebraska. His three sisters
were removed to separate families.
He recalls a childhood with little joy.
“They used us for farm labor,” he said, detailing a list of chores
that began before dawn and continued until bedtime. He said he still
bears the scars of physical abuse.
“For every sin I had committed according to the Bible, I got one
strike with whatever they had in their hands at the time — a garden
hose, a broom handle, a wire hanger,” he said. “And all the time, they
used to tell me, ‘Who knows what would have happened to you if we hadn’t
saved you?’”
READ STORY: Native Americans Confront the Legacy of Adoption
we will update as we publish at AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES WEBSITE - some issues with blogger are preventing this
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