Native Americans Criticize Bush's Silence: Response to School Shooting Is Contrasted With President's Intervention in Schiavo Case
- Originally published in the Washington Post on Friday, March 25, 2005; Page A06
By Ceci Connolly
Washington Post Staff Writer
MINNEAPOLIS, March 24 -- Native Americans across the country --
including tribal leaders, academics and rank-and-file tribe members --
voiced anger and frustration Thursday that President Bush has responded
to the second-deadliest school shooting in U.S. history with silence.
Three days after 16-year-old Jeff Weise killed nine members of
his Red Lake tribe before taking his own life, grief-stricken American
Indians complained that the White House has offered little in the way
of sympathy for the tribe situated in the uppermost region of Minnesota.
"From all over the world we are getting letters of condolence,
the Red Cross has come, but the so-called Great White Father in
Washington hasn't said or done a thing," said Clyde Bellecourt, a
Chippewa Indian who is the founder and national director of the
American Indian Movement here. "When people's children are murdered and
others are in the hospital hanging on to life, he should be the first
one to offer his condolences. . . . If this was a white community, I
don't think he'd have any problem doing that."
Weise's victims included his grandfather and five teenagers;
seven other students were wounded, and two of them remain in serious
condition in a hospital in Fargo, N.D.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan, in an informal discussion with
reporters Tuesday, said: "Our thoughts and prayers are with the
families of those who were killed."
"I hope that he would say something," said Victoria Graves, a
cultural educator at Red Lake Elementary School on the reservation.
"It's important that there's acknowledgment of the tragedy. It's
important he sees the tribes are out here. We need help."
The reaction to Bush's silence was particularly bitter given his
high-profile, late-night intervention on behalf of Terri Schiavo, the
brain-damaged Florida woman caught in a legal battle over whether her
feeding tube should be reinserted.
"The fact that Bush preempted his vacation to say something about
Ms. Schiavo and here you have 10 native people gunned down and he can't
take time to speak is very telling," said David Wilkins, interim
chairman of the Department of American Indian Studies at the University
of Minnesota and a member of the North Carolina-based Lumbee tribe.
"He has not been real visible in Indian country," said former senator
Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colo.). "He's got a lot of irons in the
fire, but this is important."
Even more alarming than Bush's silence, he said, is the
president's proposal to cut $100 million from several Indian programs
next year.
After hearing grumbling from tribal leaders, Jacqueline Johnson,
executive director of the National Congress of American Indians, called
the White House on Thursday to inquire about Bush's silence. "I wanted
to make sure the White House is paying attention to this issue," she
said. "I wasn't sure."
Asked Thursday about Bush's silence, spokeswoman Dana Perino said
that he plans to dedicate part of his Saturday radio address to the Red
Lake tragedy and that he is following the case closely through the FBI
and the Justice Department.
In the hours after the massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado in
1999, President Bill Clinton publicly expressed his condolences and
followed up a few days later with a radio address in which he proposed
new gun control measures and school safety projects.
At the Red Lake Urban Indian Office here, volunteer Marilyn Westbrook said she was disappointed but not surprised.
"I don't feel he cares about the American Indian people," said
Westbrook, as she collected donations of gas cards and money to enable
fellow Red Lake members to make the 260-mile journey to the
reservation. "Why hasn't he made any statements about what happened
with this shooting?"