Posted in Journal on Sep 6th, 2007 No Comments »
(By Dave)
Lyn did a presentation in a Church in Hardin Montana this morning. Last Thursday and Friday she had two TV interviews (each only 2-minutes), and a newspaper interview (the Billings Gazette article above.) She’s staying in Hardin for just a couple days, and then will go back to Billings to meet a friend coming […]
Posted in In The News on Sep 6th, 2007 No Comments »
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For author, a long walk remembered
Billings Gazette - MT, USA
Lyn Hanush is the author of “Putting a Face on America: The Great American Journey,” whose 366 pages detail the 14-month journey that began in Blaine, …
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Posted in Journal on Sep 6th, 2007 No Comments »
Sunday went wonderfully. I started talking to people around here
Saturday evening about the Crow Indian situation and found that
the people of Hardin actually disagree with the warning about
entering the Crow Reservation. It was Billings and Helena people
that told us not to go there. Hardin people do fine with the Crow.
Some at church Sunday were quite surprised that people didn’t
think we should go into the Reservation. Most people in Hardin
believe you are safer on the Reservation than elsewhere. The
pastor and his wife and another couple had a sandwich buffet at
the church with me after the program. By the way, 6 people
bought books. Anyway these two couples answered a lot of
questions for me about the Crow. I was delighted.
Then on Monday Bill and Clara from the Hardin church took me
to Pryor on the Reservation to see if we could find anyone we had
met there on the walk.
I saw a man sitting on his front porch, so I walked up with the book
open to pictures of Crow Indians we had met. After introducing
myself and asking him about the pictures he smiled and pointed
to one and said, ”That’s my picture there.” He had lost a lot of
weight and looked so different I didn’t recognize him. It was
Oliver Costa, the Crow legislator - one of the key people we had talked with there. Oliver had
read the article in the Billings Gazette and knew immediately
who I was when I walked up. We had such an incredible reunion.
He invited me in and I met his family and we all visited for
awhile. This has been the best part of my whole trip.
I was so excited to meet and talk with Oliver and his family.
What wonderful people. He has one more year as a Crow
legislator. I don’t know if he can be reelected or not after that.
We plan to keep in touch.
Bill and Clara then took me to the back side of the Pryor
Mountains and miles up a dirt/gravel road, sometimes deeply
rutted (they had 4 wheel drive) to an ice cave (very interesting),
then an overlook where you could see almost forever, and then
to the wild horse area where we saw a total of 9 wild horses.
They had never seen more than three in one place. We saw 6 in
one place yesterday, then 2 in another, and 1 in yet another.
What a day.
I see the Crow prejudice as something much like some experiences
I’ve had in San Francisco. People hear so much bad about San
Francisco that they are sometimes afraid to get out of the car
there (one of my daughter’s friends from college was that way). The news makes it
sound like the whole city is bad when really it is only certain
incidents. Most of the city is fine, and, yes, I would be careful at
certain times of the day/night in certain areas, but otherwise I
have no problem walking anyplace in the city. So the people of
Billings and Helena are a little farther away and they hear the
bad reports so they assume the whole reservation is unsafe.
This has been an incredibly educational time for me here in
Hardin. And it’s making me do some more thinking about things
and people in our area in Paso Robles.