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Clyde Bellecourt
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Clyde Bellecourt : ウィキペディア英語版
Clyde Bellecourt

Clyde Howard Bellecourt (born May 8, 1936) is a White Earth Ojibwe civil rights organizer noted for co-founding the American Indian Movement (AIM) in 1968 with Dennis Banks, Herb Powless, and Eddie Benton Banai, among others. His older brother, the late Vernon Bellecourt, was also active. Clyde was the seventh of 12 children born to his parents (Charles and Angeline) on the White Earth Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota.
His Ojibwe name is ''Nee-gon-we-way-we-dun'' which means "Thunder Before the Storm."
==Biography==
Bellecourt's birthplace is occupied by the largest and poorest of northern Minnesota's Ojibwe bands.
In his youth, Clyde fought against the forces of authority, because he did not think they respected his family and other Indians. As a child, he could hear his parents speaking in low tones late at night in a language he did not understand. When he asked what they were saying, he was told to think about his education and do as well as he could. The years in school were not pleasant. As a boy, he attended a reservation mission school run strictly by Benedictine nuns.
After the Bellecourt family moved to Minneapolis Twin Cities, the boy Clyde continued to act up in school, receiving detentions. He ultimately incurred more serious charges, resulting in a conviction and sentence to the adult correctional facility at St. Cloud. Clyde was arrested for a succession of offenses—including burglary and robbery. On his 25th birthday, he was transferred to Stillwater Prison in Stillwater, where he served out the remainder of his sentence.〔http://www.citypages.com/2000-02-16/news/bury-my-heart/full/〕
According to Bellecourt's first-person account of this time, he was in solitary confinement for a discipline infraction when he heard someone outside his cell singing and calling his name. He looked out the peep-hole into the eyes of Eddie Benton Banai. Having witnessed Bellecourt's ability to organize the Indian inmates, Banai had come to persuade him to help form an Indian cultural group. After negotiation with his caseworker Donahue, Bellecourt agreed to help, on the conditions that he would be moved from solitary to what was called the Honors Dormitory, be allowed to work in the power plant, and to pursue completion of his Boiler Engineer License.
In the following weeks, Bellecourt gathered 82 of the 128 Indian inmates then in Stillwater to come to the first meeting of the Indian American Folklore Group. It became the model for an Indian cultural renaissance within prisons across the country. The Folklore Group met weekly, using ''History of the Ojibwe Nation'' by William Whipple Warren as their text, and led by Banai as instructor. Having secretly made a drum,〔Interview:KKWE Niijii Radio〕 the group began having powwows. Sometimes family members and visitors were allowed to participate.
In some cases for the first time, the American Indian men began to learn about their tribal history, culture, and spirituality. Bellecourt's life was changed by his participation. In 1964 the young man returned to Minneapolis determined to help Indians heal through learning their culture and spirituality. He helped found the American Indian Movement (AIM).
〔Laura Waterman Wittstock, Elaine Salinas, and Susan Aasen, "Russell Means", in ''Visions and Voices - American Indian Activism and the Civil Rights Movement,'' edited by Kurt Peters and Terry Straus〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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