Prison Writings
My Life Is My Sun Dance
-
- $12.99
-
- $12.99
Publisher Description
In September of 2022, twenty-five years after Leonard Peltier received a life sentence for the murder of two FBI agents, the DNC unanimously passed a resolution urging President Joe Biden to release him. Peltier has affirmed his innocence ever since his sentencing in 1977--his case was made fully and famously in Peter Matthiessen's bestselling In the Spirit of Crazy Horse--and many remain convinced he was wrongly convicted.
Prison Writings is a wise and unsettling book, both memoir and manifesto, chronicling his life in Leavenworth Prison in Kansas. Invoking the Sun Dance, in which pain leads one to a transcendent reality, Peltier explores his suffering and the insights it has borne him. He also locates his experience within the history of the American Indian peoples and their struggles to overcome the federal government's injustices.
Edited by Harvey Arden, with an Introduction by Chief Arvol Looking Horse, and a Preface by former Attorney General Ramsey Clark.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Currently incarcerated at Leavenworth Prison in Kansas, American Indian Movement leader Leonard Peltier assembled these grimly powerful "journal entries, soul thoughts, political musings and personal recollections" to bolster his lawyers' request that President Clinton commute the two life sentences imposed 24 years ago at his conviction for murdering two FBI agents (plus seven years for his attempt to escape from prison). In his introduction, former U.S. attorney general Ramsey Clark, once Peltier's lawyer, grounds Peltier's case in the post-Vietnam era of government "paranoia against dissident groups," noting a government prosecutor's 1985 admission that "we do not know who shot the two agents." For his part, Peltier describes his stark surroundings and the uncompromising sameness of every day: "I'm always on edge here, you never let your guard down when you live in hell." Through moving recollections of a childhood spent on the South Dakota's Sioux reservations and of the Indian culture passed on by his grandparents, he connects his predicament to the "suffering of indigenous peoples around the world." Likening himself to Nelson Mandela, Peltier contends that his "crime" is that he is an Indian, and says little about the events at Jumping Bull Camp, which occurred "ninety-nine years and one day" after the battle of Little Big Horn. Instead, he finds strength in the having participated in the Sun Dance, which "sends us out into the world hardened against pain the way a charred stick is hardened against fire." Introduction by Chief Arvol Looking Horse not seen by PW. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.