They call him the "Godfather of Whiteclay." He chuckles when
someone refers to him that way....but his eyes don't smile. He can
probably think of a lot of other things he'd rather be called than the
king of the streets in a place where the streets are dark even in
daylight; the place where the Lakota have committed death by Budwieser
for decades. I can usually smell him before I see him...and still I am
happy to see him. If you look at him through eyes that don't see him as
the gift he is, then he is torn and tattered and beyond saving. But
look again. His spirit shines through. With human contact and the
calling of his name...his spirit shines through. When he sees me he
says "There she is!" and my spirit shines through. I love him like the Son loves me...fully, joyfully, even when my sin makes me stink too.
Eli
is writing a book. You won't find it on Amazon, but you will see it
laid bare chapter by chapter if you will just take a few minutes and
speak to him.
This chapter is entitled "Hell in a Handbasket."
"Look
at our young men!" he cries out in a rare moment of sobriety, pointing
to the constant stream of the Seventh Generation coming and going at
the liquor store across the street from the building that houses my new
ministry. "They have no direction. No one to tell them go this
way...don't go that way." He shakes his head and mumbles in Lakota. "I
have been here for 28 years...longer than they have been alive. I would
tell them don't come here...but they won't listen to me."
We
talk about how the respect he has on the streets could be used to
change the lives of these young men...but then we agree that the next
time he gets clean and sober he needs to stay away from here. "Yeah,
that's where I go wrong everytime," he admits. "I get sober and then I
come here to help before I am well enough to do that." We nod our
heads in unison and watch the stream across the way turn into a river.
Someone needs to put a "Deadly Undertow" sign on its banks.
The
last day I was on the reservation, Eli had a seizure on the front porch
of our building and wrote a chapter called "All Is Grace." A woman
from the tribe came in to tell me. She spoke with the same urgency that
someone might have used to say they had found a pair of sunglasses in
the parking lot. Someone else called 911 and I went out to Eli. By
the time I got there he was coming out of it and his muscles were
hurting badly from the spasms. He was shouting to God at the top of his
lungs.
"Grandfather! Grandfather! You want me? Come
and get me! Please come and get me! Why do you leave me here to
suffer?" I held his hand and he just hung his head and whispered.
"Grandfather. Grandfather. Grandfather." I found myself praying for
God to save Eli from this place. He drank three bottles of water and
quickly ate the sandwich we got for him. I went back inside to help
someone who had stopped by and needed diapers, and came back to check
on him. I heard him chuckle. "I can feel you coming. I know you are
there before I see you," he said. Spirits shining through.
Once
he had collected himself he began to talk to me of a Father's love. Not
his earthly father...but Tunkashila...the God who created the man
called Eli. The eternal Grandfather. "I sleep in that old abandoned
house over there," he says. "I got nothing. But every morning when I
open my eyes I say thank you my Father for another day. Thank you my
Father for this gift. Today maybe I can help someone." He lowers his
head and clasps his hands together. "Just like this...I say thank you
my Father. And He takes me in his arms, brings me in the fold and says
he has not forgotten me. And I say again...thank you my father."
And
I say thank you, my friend. I think of you everyday. I pray for you
everyday and I can feel you praying for me. And now I will ask you,
dear reader, to dare to repeat Eli's words every morning yourself.
"Thank you my Father for this gift of another day. Today maybe I can
help someone."
Do that...And you will see The Spirit shining through...on the wings of Eli Bald Eagle.
To see a 2 minute video of Eli on my Facebook page...click here.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
thank you an incredbile moving true life story. it saddens me that this is not what we are talking about in our next election. so many people are suffering, why do we except homelessness? thank you for stepping up and doing what you can.
KC,
Your spirit is truly shining in the darkness surrounding these precious people. Thank you for the gift of letting those of us who cannot be physically there to know these stories and join you in prayer. May the Lord continue to bless the work of your heart and hands!
Hi KC,
How are you my friend?? I have you in my prayers and thoughts daily!!
I loved watching Eli in the video. He is such a dear gentle soul. The Lord loves him very much!!
KC I have included a link to my blog for you to go to. I have made a "Cow Girl" bag in honour of you and the work you do on the Res.
I will be making more and part of the proceeds I will be collecting to send to you to help the people of Pine Ridge. I am making good use of the box of fabrics you had sent to me!!!
God Bless you and your hubby and the beautiful people of the Pine Ridge Reservation in S.D.
Love and hugs,
Susan
http://sjmcdowell.blogspot.com/
Post a Comment