"As a child at a mission boarding school in the 1960s, I was forced to learn English. Nowhere in our lessons was there any mention of Native history. But at night, after lights out, we girls gathered in the dark to tell stories and sing Navajo songs, quietly, so as to not wake the housemother. We were taught that if we broke the rules, we would go to hell, a place we could not conceive of—there is no Navajo analogy. As I learned to read, I discovered in books a way to assuage my longing for my parents, my siblings, my home. So in this way my schooling was a mixed experience, a fact that was true for many Native children."
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Children's authorsWomen authors from the United States20th-century poets from the United StatesNative AmericansWomen born in the 1950s
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
"For More Than 100 Years, the U.S. Forced Navajo Students Into Western Schools. The Damage Is Still Felt Today" article (2016)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Luci_Tapahonso
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Luci Tapahonso
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