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NATIVE PRIDE: West, left, and
Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo, MA ’72,
MA ’74, PhD ’93, at the museum's dedication.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP |
Rick West looked out over
a crowd of thousands of Native Americans gathered on
the National Mall and said “welcome home.”
In September, after 15 years of planning, fundraising,
advocacy and negotiation by West, JD ’72, the
National Museum of the American Indian opened in Washington,
D.C., the latest and likely last addition to the Mall
complex.
West, a Southern Cheyenne, has been director of the
museum since 1990, a year after President George Bush
signed legislation authorizing its construction. West
had to overcome partisan squabbling, two recessions
and questions about the project’s direction to
complete the museum, originally slated to open in 2002.
“Once in a great while, something so important
and so powerful occurs that, just for a moment, history
seems to stand still—and silent—in honor,”
West said at the grand opening ceremony September 21.
“[The museum] is a symbol of hope, centuries in
the making, that the hearts and minds of all Americans,
beyond this museum and throughout the Americas, will
open and welcome the presence of the first peoples in
their history and in their contemporary lives.”
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A SYMBOL OF HOPE: The National
Mueum of the American Indian opened in September.
Tim Sloan/Getty Images |
The museum will showcase the history of Native Americans,
including the catastrophic invasion of their homelands
by settlers and governments, but will emphasize how
Indian people have kept their cultures alive. “In
our minds and in history, we are not victims,”
West said at the dedication. “As the Mohawks have
counseled us, ‘It is hard to see the future with
tears in our eyes.’” |