MANKATO — In the Dakota tradition, the number four represents a completed cycle.
So the fourth year of the Reconciliation Ride is special numerically, and geographically: At 340 miles, it’s the longest. On Dec. 10, the group set out on horseback on a ceremonial ride to help heal the wounds that remain after the Dakota War of 1862 and the subsequent execution of 38 men in Mankato on Dec. 26, 1862. The ride ends in Mankato on Dec. 26.
Blizzard conditions have so far harried the riders and forced them to stop occasionally.
Sheldon Wolfchild, former chairman of the Lower Sioux Indian Community in Morton, said the ride began this year near Crow Creek in South Dakota, where his relatives were forced to move in the spring of 1863.
The war inflicted what he calls “generational trauma” on his people.
“Psychologically, that’s been affecting our people, our children,” he said. “In order to heal in the future, we have to go back and remember the past.”
This Dec. 26 will mark the 146th anniversary of the executions.
It may seem like enough time for healing, but Wolfchild says that isn’t so. Colonists’ land grabs and theft brought starvation on his people and shattered their community, he said.
The tradition dates back to 2005, when Dakota descendant Jim Miller recounted a dream of a series of horseback rides that would raise awareness and help bring reconciliation.
Wolfchild said there may be a ride next year, but it will be different — perhaps more of a ride to give thanks for the opportunity to go on the rides.
On Dec. 26, the riders will gather at the hanging site where the existing library is to hold a ceremony. Later, the riders will eat dinner at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Mankato. Mayor John Brady is writing a proclamation to be read by him or Councilman Jack Considine.
A group of Dakota Indians also makes an annual run from Fort Snelling in St. Paul to Mankato, leaving midnight Dec. 25 and arriving in Mankato at about noon. At the time of departure a vigil fire is started at Land of Memories Park. The run has been held since 1987.
At A Glance
This week’s Reconciliation Ride schedule:
Today — gathering at Lower Sioux Agency in Morton
Tuesday — Lower Sioux to Fort Ridgely, near Fairfax
Wednesday — Fort Ridgely to Courtland
Thursday — Courtland to Land of Memories Park, Mankato
Friday — Land of Memories Park to downtown Mankato
On the Web
For more information about the ride and a blog by a rider, visit www.dakota38.com.
Local News
Dakota ride finishes four-year cycle
- Local News
-
-
"Man in Black' charged in St. Peter, Gaylord bank robberies
- Walz happy to see STOCK bill pass the House
- Sleepy Eye schools trying to get state approval for 4-day weeks
-
Tweten advances to group round on 'Idol'
If it weren’t for a tiny glimpse or two on camera Thursday night, and her mom’s confirmation on Facebook, the world wouldn’t have known that North Mankato’s Shelby Tweten advanced on “American Idol” again this week. The West High School student has made it to the most infamous challenge of the season: “group round.”
-
Tour of kitchens benefits Loyola music department
-
West student wins first HickoryTech video prize
- Domestic assault suspect arrested after allegedly fleeing
-
Today’s services, Thursday, Feb. 9, 2012
Evan, Eugene, services 10:30 a.m. at St. Casimir Catholic Church in Wells.
Hite, Shirley, services 11 a.m. at Kinder-Dennis Home for Funerals in Waseca.
Mortvedt, Oris “Mort,” services 11 a.m. at Shiloh Lutheran Church in Elmore.
Schwamberger, M. Elizabeth, services 10 a.m. at St. Joseph the Worker Catholic Church in Mankato.
-
Patient release encourages another round of accusations
The impending release of the first patient in the nearly two-decade history of the Minnesota Sex Offender Program has prompted Republican legislative leaders to call Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton’s administration “reckless” and Dayton to accuse the Republicans of “shameful” demagoguery.
-
Truck fire closes Range Street
A block of Range Street was closed for about an hour tonight while North Mankato firefighters doused a pickup truck that caught fire.
- More Local News Headlines
-





