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The
Future for Native Americans?
Although
Native Americans eventually gained citizenship, they received
federal support for two more decades. In the 1950s, however,
the Bureau of Indian Affairs terminated federal services and
placed the responsibility for Native Americans on state governments.
Between 1952 and 1956, the bureau also sold 1.6 million acres
of Native American land to developers.
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Political
protests by organizations such as the American Indian Movement
(AIM) call attention to the chronic unemployment and political
disenfranchisement of Native Americans.
For example,
twenty-five Native Americans gathered in Plymouth, Massachusetts
on Thanksgiving Day 1970. The protesters wore traditional funeral
clothes and convened in front of a statue of Massassoit, the
Wampanoag Chief who aided colonists in 1621, and then buried
Plymouth Rock under mounds of sand.
In
a more violent effort, the American Indian Movement took control
of South Dakotas Wounded Knee in February 1973. The forceful
occupation of the reservation to protest local government lasted
71 days and resulted in 2 deaths, 12 injuries, and more than
1,100 arrests.
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