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In this episode, I discuss the ethnocide experienced by the Lakota, and other indigenous Americans, during the "Kill The Indian, Save The Man" movement of the late 19th- early 20th centuries. I also take a closer look at the creation of boarding schools and assimilation programs and how those operated and how they adversely impacted the Indigenous Americans.
Please Support This Podcast!- Visit The Link To Support/Donate!- https://www.buymeacoffee.com/blackhills6
Support It On Anchor!-https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/josh-martinez96/support
Visit My Website- https://blackhillsbookandpodcast.weebly.com
Join Email List- https://forms.gle/VJFMjBap9HaqSJVm8
Hi listeners, thank you for listening to this episode! It's been over 1 1/2 years since I've made an episode for this podcast, but I hope to make more in the near future! The issues discussed in this podcast are important and must not be forgotten. These ethnocide programs were ethically wrong and the events that went on at many of these programs were terrible to the future of the Lakota culture. While this issue affected more Indigenous Americans then just the Lakota, so it is important to understand the broader scope of this issue. While "Kill The Indian, Save The Man" was not a success, many of these nations and their cultures still need help! And sharing and listening to this podcast and not allowing those stories to be forgotten is a very good way for you to help!
If you have any friends, family, etc. who you think would enjoy this podcast, PLEASE SHARE it to them! I'd love to grow my audience even more and educate more people on the history of Indigenous Americans and the Lakota people. Another way you can support this podcast is by visiting my website (https://blackhillsbookandpodcast.weebly.com ) and by going and looking at all the content. Also, visit my Linktree and support/donation site (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/blackhills6) to help this podcast remain free! When you go to the buymeacoffee site, you aren't actually "buying me a coffee", I am just going to use the money to make this pocast better! Thank you for the support!
I have a linktree with all the important links for this podcast and for support- https://linktr.ee/blackhillshistoricalpodcast
Check out all the links in the above linktree link!
Thank you all for listening and please share, donate & continue to listen and support!
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
By Josh Martinez4.4
1414 ratings
In this episode, I discuss the ethnocide experienced by the Lakota, and other indigenous Americans, during the "Kill The Indian, Save The Man" movement of the late 19th- early 20th centuries. I also take a closer look at the creation of boarding schools and assimilation programs and how those operated and how they adversely impacted the Indigenous Americans.
Please Support This Podcast!- Visit The Link To Support/Donate!- https://www.buymeacoffee.com/blackhills6
Support It On Anchor!-https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/josh-martinez96/support
Visit My Website- https://blackhillsbookandpodcast.weebly.com
Join Email List- https://forms.gle/VJFMjBap9HaqSJVm8
Hi listeners, thank you for listening to this episode! It's been over 1 1/2 years since I've made an episode for this podcast, but I hope to make more in the near future! The issues discussed in this podcast are important and must not be forgotten. These ethnocide programs were ethically wrong and the events that went on at many of these programs were terrible to the future of the Lakota culture. While this issue affected more Indigenous Americans then just the Lakota, so it is important to understand the broader scope of this issue. While "Kill The Indian, Save The Man" was not a success, many of these nations and their cultures still need help! And sharing and listening to this podcast and not allowing those stories to be forgotten is a very good way for you to help!
If you have any friends, family, etc. who you think would enjoy this podcast, PLEASE SHARE it to them! I'd love to grow my audience even more and educate more people on the history of Indigenous Americans and the Lakota people. Another way you can support this podcast is by visiting my website (https://blackhillsbookandpodcast.weebly.com ) and by going and looking at all the content. Also, visit my Linktree and support/donation site (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/blackhills6) to help this podcast remain free! When you go to the buymeacoffee site, you aren't actually "buying me a coffee", I am just going to use the money to make this pocast better! Thank you for the support!
I have a linktree with all the important links for this podcast and for support- https://linktr.ee/blackhillshistoricalpodcast
Check out all the links in the above linktree link!
Thank you all for listening and please share, donate & continue to listen and support!
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

15,723 Listeners