"Brother, I wish you to
give me close attention, because I think you do not clearly
understand. I want to speak to you about promises that the Americans
have made.
You recall the time when the
Jesus Indians of the Delawares lived near the Americans, and had
confidence in their promises of friendship, and thought they were
secure, yet the Americans murdered all the men, women, and children,
even as they prayed to Jesus?
The same promises were given
to the Shawnee one time. It was at Fort Finney, where some of my
people were forced to make a treaty. Flags were given to my people,
and they were told they were now the children of the Americans. We
were told, if any white people mean to harm you, hold up these flags
and you will then be safe from all danger. We did this in good faith.
But what happened? Our beloved chief Moluntha stood with the American
flag in front of him and that very peace treaty in his hand, but his
head was chopped by a American officer, and that American officer was
never punished.
Brother, after such bitter
events, can you blame me for placing little confidence in the promises
of Americans? That happened before the Treaty of Greenville. When they
buried the tomahawk at Greenville, the Americans said they were our
new fathers, not the British anymore, and would treat us well. Since
that treaty, here is how the Americans have treated us well: They have
killed many Shawnee, many Winnebagoes, many Miamis, many Delawares,
and have taken land from them. When they killed them, no American ever
was punished, not one.
It is you, the Americans, by
such bad deeds, who push the red men to do mischief. You do not want
unity among the tribes, and you destroy it. You try to make
differences between them. We, their leaders, wish them to unite and
consider their land the common property of all, but you try to keep
them from this. You separate the tribes and deal with them that way,
one by one, and advise them not to come into this union. Your states
have set an example of forming a union among all the Fires, why should
you censure the Indians for following that example?
But, brother, I mean to bring
all the tribes together, in spite of you, and until I have finished, I
will not go to visit your president. Maybe I will when I have
finished, maybe. The reason I tell you this, you want, by making your
distinctions of Indian tribes and allotting to each a particular tract
of land, to set them against each other, and thus to weaken us.
You never see an Indian come,
do you, and endeavor to make the white people divide up?
C You are always driving the
red people this way! At last you will drive them into the Great Lake,
where they can neither stand nor walk.
Brother, you ought to know
what you are doing to the Indians. Is it by the direction of the
president you make these distinctions? It is a very bad thing, and we
do not like it. Since my residence at Tippecanoe, we have tried to
level all distinctions, to destroy village chiefs, by whom all such
mischief is done. It is they who sell our lands to the Americans.
Brother, these lands that were sold and the goods that were given for
them were done by only a few. The Treaty of Fort Wayne was made
through the threats of Winnemac, but in the future we are going to
punish those chiefs who propose to sell the land.
The only way to stop this evil
is for all the red men to unite in claiming an equal right in the
land. That is how it was at first, and should be still, for the land
never was divided, but was for the use of everyone. Any tribe could go
to an empty land and make a home there. And if they left, another
tribe could come there and make a home. No groups among us have a
right to sell, even to one another, and surely not to outsiders who
want all, and will not do with less.
Sell a country! Why not sell
the air, the clouds, and the Great Sea, as well as the earth? Did not
the Great Good Spirit make them all for the use of his children?
Brother, I was glad to hear
what you told us. you said that if we could prove that the land was
sold by people who had no right to sell it, you would restore it. I
will prove that those who did sell did not own it. Did they have a
deed? A title? No! You say those prove someone owns land. Those chiefs
only spoke a claim, and so you pretended to believe their claim, only
because you wanted the land. But the many tribes with me will not
agree with those claims. They have never had a title to sell, and we
agree this proves you could not buy it from them. If the land is not
given back to us, you will see, when we return to our homes from here,
how it will be settled. It will be like this:
We shall have a great council,
at which all tribes will be present. We shall show to those who sold
that they had no rights to the claim they set up, and we shall see
what will be done to those chiefs who did sell the land to you. I am
not alone in this determination, it is the determination of all the
warriors and red people who listen to me. Brother, I now wish you to
listen to me. If you do not wipe out that treaty, it will seem that
you wish me to kill all the chiefs who sold the land! I tell you so
because I am authorized by all tribes to do so! I am the head of them
all! All my warriors will meet together with me in two or three moons
from now. Then I will call for those chiefs who sold you this land,
and we shall know what to do with them. If you do not restore the
land, you will have had a hand in killing them!
I am Shawnee! I am a warrior!
My forefathers were warriors. From them I took only my birth into this
world. From my tribe I take nothing. I am the maker of my own destiny!
And of that I might make the destiny of my red people, of our nation,
as great as I conceive to in my mind, when I think of Weshemoneto, who
rules this universe! I would not then have to come to Governor
Harrison and ask him to tear up this treaty and wipe away the marks
upon the land. No! I would say to him, 'Sir, you may return to you own
country!' The being within me hears the voice of the ages, which tells
me that once, always, and until lately, there were no white men on all
this island, that it then belonged to the red men, children of the
same parents, placed on it by the Great Good Spirit who made them, to
keep it, to traverse it, to enjoy its yield, and to people it with the
same race. Once they were a happy race! Now they are made miserable by
the white people, who are never contented but are always coming in!
You do this always, after promising not to anyone, yet you ask us to
have confidence in your promises. How can we have confidence in the
white people? When Jesus Christ came upon the earth, you killed him,
the son of your own God, you nailed him up! You thought he was dead,
but you were mistaken. And only after you thought you killed him did
you worship him, and start killing those who would not worship him.
What kind of a people is this for us to trust?
Now, Brother, everything I
have said to you is the truth, as Weshemoneto has inspired me to speak
only truth to you. I have declared myself freely to you about my
intentions. And I want to know your intentions. I want to know what
you are going to do about the taking of our land. I want to hear you
say that you understand now, and will wipe out that pretended treaty,
so that the tribes can be at peace with each other, as you pretend you
want them to be. Tell me, brother. I want to know now.