I have went to school with the Yakima people some very nice and open minded and open with there culture I have a lots of respect there people who have been through so much they never give up on there people .
I have lived all of my years in the Yakima valley and I didn’t know these stories of these wars. Why didn’t they teach this in school? I want to know more about it, I think the Mative Americans in this area should teach this to the public. I went to Sturgis this summer and I learned about Crazy Horse and some of the other great chiefs, I found new respect for them and now with the Yakama also. I wish I would have known this before. They are a great people.
This is a beautiful story when you can remove the uglyness that tryed to keep this otherside separate and the fact that you can come together is vary brave and heroic enjoy your inheritance because its healing and it helps others from the otherside to heal and forgive also,;"' thank you i also have Hamorons in our family and healing ans forgivess allow the children and grandchildren and grand nieces and grand nephews to heal and have confidence to move forward ..thank you ..
Wow my 5th great grandfather was a treaty signer also. He was murdered in the Yakima Indian wars 6 months after the treaty of 1855. 🙂 It's history and not anything anyone today did or can undo but it's good to remember and learn from the past.🙂
I distinctly, remember the picket fence graveyard, on a school field trip in early 1970's. But I'd forgotten the location, until I visited the Fort in White Swan, five years ago. I remember the area felt very sacred, even though I was a little girl.
Wow, I never heard about the Yakima War. It was never taught in US History in Oregon. I will have to do my research on this Topic. Do you have any good research I can look up.
Hi I have a real treaty photo from my great grandparents they kept it for a long time then gave it to my dad who gave it to his end laws which are my moms parents because they like antiques
it was really unbelivable to me. Yakamas are in India .i am also belongs to Yakama but we really didn,t Know Where My Religion Come from Thank you So much for This Video
Replying to one of the comments they didn't teach this to you in school because it would expose them to be the thieves that they were and still are if they do not return the lands that were stolen during the dog's act they were they are equally responsible as they were in 1889
Forced off 6 million acres to White Swan an area that get 8 inches of rainfall a year... meanwhile the family leaves the Rez to go back to the pristine Pacific Northwest region that the Native family was forced off of.
Many thanks to Emily Washines for all her efforts!
I am learning this right now, and I like how this turned out. It shows a little more besides the books, and its so breath taking.
I have went to school with the Yakima people some very nice and open minded and open with there culture I have a lots of respect there people who have been through so much they never give up on there people .
I have lived all of my years in the Yakima valley and I didn’t know these stories of these wars. Why didn’t they teach this in school? I want to know more about it, I think the Mative Americans in this area should teach this to the public. I went to Sturgis this summer and I learned about Crazy Horse and some of the other great chiefs, I found new respect for them and now with the Yakama also. I wish I would have known this before. They are a great people.
This is a beautiful story when you can remove the uglyness that tryed to keep this otherside separate and the fact that you can come together is vary brave and heroic enjoy your inheritance because its healing and it helps others from the otherside to heal and forgive also,;"' thank you i also have Hamorons in our family and healing ans forgivess allow the children and grandchildren and grand nieces and grand nephews to heal and have confidence to move forward ..thank you ..
Thank you for this information over the nations
Beautiful - Thank You ❤️
Wow my 5th great grandfather was a treaty signer also. He was murdered in the Yakima Indian wars 6 months after the treaty of 1855. 🙂 It's history and not anything anyone today did or can undo but it's good to remember and learn from the past.🙂
I distinctly, remember the picket fence graveyard, on a school field trip in early 1970's. But I'd forgotten the location, until I visited the Fort in White Swan, five years ago. I remember the area felt very sacred, even though I was a little girl.
Born and raised Yakama And Yakima. Used to see UFOs on Atanum Ridge.
I'm seneca and yakama.❤
Wow, I never heard about the Yakima War. It was never taught in US History in Oregon. I will have to do my research on this Topic. Do you have any good research I can look up.
Got your library get help from a librarian look up books on Washington's history and request them through the interstate library lending system
I'm learning about this in class so thank you for the information
Hi I have a real treaty photo from my great grandparents they kept it for a long time then gave it to my dad who gave it to his end laws which are my moms parents because they like antiques
it was really unbelivable to me. Yakamas are in India .i am also belongs to Yakama but we really didn,t Know Where My Religion Come from Thank you So much for This Video
Beautiful story. Deserves a lot more attention! Thank you Emily Washines
👌🏼 🔥🏹
Replying to one of the comments they didn't teach this to you in school because it would expose them to be the thieves that they were and still are if they do not return the lands that were stolen during the dog's act they were they are equally responsible as they were in 1889
Forced off 6 million acres to White Swan an area that get 8 inches of rainfall a year... meanwhile the family leaves the Rez to go back to the pristine Pacific Northwest region that the Native family was forced off of.
Never be friends until the land is returned a h o
??????
???????????????????????????¿??????¿??????????? People don't get u either
Become friends ?? Hahaha