12/22/2025
I want to speak about this quietly — the way we speak about places that still breathe.
I spent time at Wounded Knee in 2017. Not as a visitor checking a box, not as someone chasing history, but as a human being standing on ground that has never stopped remembering.
You don’t arrive there and feel finished.
You arrive and feel interrupted.
The land does not tell the story the way textbooks do. It doesn’t explain itself. It holds its breath. The wind moves differently. The silence has weight. You feel watched — not in fear, but in responsibility.
At Wounded Knee, you understand something very clearly:
this was never just an “event.”
It was a wound that stayed open because the world kept stepping over it.
So when I read that the President signed the Wounded Knee Massacre Memorial and Sacred Site Act into law on December 19, 2025, my first reaction was not celebration. It was stillness.
Because protection, when it comes this late, is not about triumph.
It’s about finally stopping the bleeding.
Placing that land into restricted fee status under the care of the Oglala Sioux Tribe and the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe matters — not symbolically, but materially. It means the land cannot be sold off quietly. It means it cannot be taxed, carved up, or repurposed by people who don’t carry its memory. It means jurisdiction returns to those whose ancestors were left in the snow.
The land sits within the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, but more importantly, it sits within Lakota time — not federal time, not market time, not political time. Ceremony time.
I remember standing there in 2017, realizing that Wounded Knee is not only about death. It is about restraint. About what happens when the world refuses to listen and chooses force instead. About how easily governments call violence “order” and grief “history.”
This law does one important thing:
it stops pretending the land is neutral.
By designating it strictly as a memorial and sacred site — with no gaming, no development, no extraction — it acknowledges something Indigenous peoples have said all along: some places are not resources. They are responsibilities.
This doesn’t erase the massacre.
It doesn’t settle the debt.
It doesn’t heal the wound on its own.
But it does something necessary.
It says: this ground will no longer be argued over as property.
It says: the dead will not be negotiated again.
And for a place like Wounded Knee, that matters.
Because memory needs boundaries.
And respect sometimes looks like finally stepping back and letting the land be held by those who have always known how to listen to it.
—Kanipawit Maskwa
Standing Bear Network