Saturday, April 29, 2006


Yesterday I learned that a former student in my 5th grade classroom was killed in Fallujah in early January. It has been a sobering day.

Brett Lundstrum was a Marine who followed in his father's footsteps in more ways than being a Marine. His father, Ed, is a retired Marine Major and a decendant of White Cloud, the Oglala Sioux chief. Brett understood what duty to family, community, and nation ment. He also knew the dangers in his "standing-up". He has paid a price for that with his life. For this, more than our elementary school history, I'll always hold his memory dear to my heart. I still remember his easy smile, his graciousness with others, the effort that he put into his work, but something has replaced that and that is an image of a lone warrior standing strongly on a ridge guarding his family and friends. Remember his name, Brett Lundstrum, remember too that he placed himself in harm's way to protect all of us.

Wake  for an Indian warrior
Oglala Sioux bestow a lasting tribute - a name - to  first tribal
fatality in Iraq By Jim Sheeler, Rocky Mountain  News

January 21, 2006

KYLE, S.D. - Two miles from the Pine Ridge  Indian Reservation the car
radio crackled, then locked onto the  signal.   "I understand they are
currently escorting Brett's body back,"  the disc jockey said. "There
are several police cars, followed by the hearse  and
vans filled with Marines. We'll let you know when they are on  the
reservation."    Inside their rental car, two Marines from  Colorado
stared out at the road, winding through the rolling brown grass of  the
desolate Badlands.  A few cars ahead, through the back window of the
hearse, they could see the flag-draped casket of the first Oglala Sioux
fatality of the war in Iraq.  A few minutes later, the disc jockey
broke in again.  "Right now they are at the reservation line with the
body of Corporal Brett Lundstrom," she said. "I've got eight songs
queued up  here, and we will play them back to back. So here they are,
going out to  Corporal Lundstrom . . ."   She started with a spoken word
piece that  began just as the procession rolled across the reservation
line.

"Throughout time, American Indians have had to defend themselves and
their  way of life," said the solemn voice of songwriter Wil Numkena.
"American  Indian warriors have a long tradition of protecting their
families, tribe and  nation . . "   The Marines listened as they drove
past weather-beaten  wooden houses and lone mobile homes, through the
second poorest county in the  United States, toward the geographic
center of the 2 million-acre  reservation.  "By tradition, American
Indian people have always  embraced their warriors upon their return
from battle," the voice on the  radio said.

"Embraced them in heart, embraced them in spirit . ."
Since arriving at the home of Cpl. Lundstrom's mother in nearby Black
Hawk to  inform her of her son's death, Marines from Buckley Air Force
Base in Aurora  had spent two days helping with plans for a nonstop,
42-hour wake on the  reservation - the beginning of nearly five full
days of traditional  honors.

As the procession advanced, residents poured from their homes.  The
hearse passed families sitting on the hoods of their cars, their
children wrapped in colorful blankets. One couple stood at the side of
the  road,  their heads bowed. A boy on horseback watched with his dog
near a  barbed-wire fence. A man in a rusty pickup stared from atop a
grassy  hill.   The procession continued to grow as cars from the side
of the  road pulled in, stretching the line for more than five miles.
On  their car radios, the tribute continued.

"We mourn, but honor the  warriors who have given of their lives in the
field of battle. We embrace  their spirit, for they are our very breath
of life.  "Great Spirit,  we ask of you to receive our warriors."

From hearse to wooden  wagon Three tribal chiefs in feathered
headdresses waited on horseback  off to the side of the road, along with
a dozen other riders and a small  empty wooden wagon.  The procession
arrived from over a hill, and as  the Marines got out, the two bands of
warriors nodded to each  other.   The Marines lifted the flag-draped
casket from the new Cadillac  hearse,
transferred it to the old pinewood wagon, and fell in line,  issuing
clipped commands under their breath. They stood at attention in
spotless dress blue uniforms, white gloves and shiny black dress  shoes.
The Oglala Sioux escorts wore blue jeans, Windbreakers and  dusty boots.
They spoke to their horses in the Lakota language.  "Unkiyapo," someone
said. "Let's go."  They walked together, the  Marines marching in crisp
formation behind the chiefs.

The last horse in the  procession - an old paint - ambled along  behind
them all.  In a funeral  tradition that goes back generations, its
saddle was empty.   The  procession was quiet, other than occasional war
whoops and horse whinnies,  until it reached the gym at Little Wound
High School. At the parking lot of  the school, one woman sat alone in
her car, crying.

Then the drumbeat  began.

Inside the gymnasium - "Home of the Mustangs" - a 30-foot-tall  tepee
dominated one end of the hardwood floor.  The Marines brought  the
flag-draped casket to the front of the tepee, then two of them took
their  post at each end, beginning a shift that would last for the next
two  days.  Several rows of elderly men moved forward slowly, some
supported  by gnarled canes. Many had pulled their hair into dark gray
ponytails, framing faces that looked like the landscape.  Many of  them
wore old caps and uniforms emblazoned with distinctive patches:
Airborne, Special Forces and the revered combat infantry badge - along
with  dozens of gleaming medals. On the back of their caps, some also
wore a single  eagle feather.   At the front of the tepee, a funeral
director opened  the casket.

Descendant of Chief Red Cloud
Cpl. Brett Lee  Lundstrom grew up in the wake of warriors.  Among his
distant relations  was Dewey Beard, also known by the Indian name Iron
Hail, who fought in the  Battle of the Little Bighorn, and who also
survived the 1890 massacre at  nearby Wounded Knee. A grandfather on his
father's side was Red Cloud, one of  the great Lakota leaders of the
1800s.  More recently, his  great-uncle, Charlie Underbaggage, was
killed at the  Battle of the Bulge  during World War II. Another
great-uncle, Alfred Underbaggage, was killed in  Korea. He has relatives
at Pine Ridge who served in Vietnam and Desert Storm.  His father, Ed,
was a career Marine, and retired recently as a  Major.  At the time of
Brett's death, his brother, Eddy - his only  other sibling - was serving
in the Army, stationed in the Iraqi hot spot of  Tikrit.

"He was born to be a Marine," said Philip Underwood, who first  met
Brett when they were teenagers.  By then, Lundstrom had long since
decided  to join the armed forces. The two friends spent the bulk of
their  time razzing each other, rarely serious - until it came to the
Corps,  which spawned a conversation that's rarely spoken, even among
the best  of friends.  "As a friend, he told me one time, 'I will die
for  you,' " Underwood said.  Lundstrom's parents grew up on and around
reservations - his father at nearby Rosebud, his mother at Pine Ridge -
but  due to Ed Lundstrom's job with the Marines the family moved around
the  country, spending most of their time in Virginia.  Though the
family  returned to the reservation only periodically -  primarily when
Brett was  young - Brett retained an interest in Indian tradition.

In January  2003 he enlisted, not only in the Marines, but in the most
dangerous job in  the Corps - one that would almost certainly send him
into battle.  "I always told him he volunteered twice. Not only did he
volunteer as  a Marine, he volunteered to be infantry," Ed Lundstrom
said.  "I  tried to talk him out of it. He had so many other options
besides  enlisting.  But he knew what he was getting into. He went into
it eyes wide open," he  said.  Brett served three months in Afghanistan
in 2004.  Nine months  later, in September 2005, he headed to Iraq with
the 2nd Battalion, 6th  Marines, 2nd Marine Division based at Camp
Lejeune, N.C.
One result  of his frequent moves to new towns: The strapping 6-foot-2-
inch tall Marine  with the wide grin had no problem making new friends.
The last entry on his  Web page - written from Iraq - said, "I'm outta
here in three months and I  can't wait to come to Colorado."   His
parents recently divorced, and  his mother, Doyla Underbaggage
Lundstrom, planned to move to the Denver area  this month. After his
hitch was up with the Marines, Lundstrom had talked of  settling near
her, and becoming a Broomfield police officer.

On one  of his last nights in Colorado, Brett had spent the night in his
aunt and  uncle's home in Thornton, in the same room as his cousin,
13-year-old  Richard Munoz.  Before he crashed on the couch that night,
Richard  said, the Marine left him with his last words.    He said,
'Live life  while you can,' " the boy remembered. "Then he went to
sleep."

Cpl.  Lundstrom was killed by small-arms fire Jan. 7 in Fallujah. He
was 22.

His people bestow feather.  Next to the casket in the  Pine Ridge gym
stood a tall staff crested with buffalo hair and lined with  eagle
feathers to represent local members of the tribe stationed in Iraq. The
middle of the staff was pinned with photos of their faces.  A  similar
memorial was set up in the school's cafeteria, by mothers who formed  a
support group. Every Wednesday, they huddle in a sweat lodge, where they
pray for their deployed children.  "Sophia Young Bear" . . . "Jason
Brave Heart," their names read, in part, "Kimberly Long Soldier" . . .
"Lisa  White Face" . . .  Atop them all was the photo of Brett
Lundstrom.
Upon their return from Iraq, tribe members receive the  highest honor
for bravery: an eagle feather. If they are injured in combat,  the
feather may be stained red with blood.  Before the first night's
ceremony began, a 65-year-old Vietnam veteran named John Around Him
looked at  the staff, and then at Brett Lundstrom's flag-draped casket.
"He  earns the American flag from his government," he said. "He earns
the eagle  feather from his people."  Near 11 on Saturday night, the
gymnasium  fell silent. Along with his first and last eagle feather,
Cpl. Lundstrom was  about to receive something even more enduring.

"This evening I want  to take a few minutes of your time to name my
grandson," said Birgil Kills  Straight, Cpl. Lundstrom's great-uncle.
"Before he enters the spirit  world, it's important for him to have an
Indian name, because that's how the  ancestors will know him," he said.
Earlier that night, Kills Straight  had gone to an Inipi, a sweat lodge,
to pray for the name, and to ask the  spirits to guide the fallen
warrior.  After the ceremony, long after  midnight, the Marines would
take Lundstrom's body into the tepee, where  Lakota beliefs hold that
the spirits of Lundstrom's ancestors would  communicate with his.
First, Kills Straight said, they needed to know  who he was.  "His name
is Wanbli Isnala," Kills Straight said, and then  translated:  "Lone
Eagle."  With that, he took the eagle feather,  walked to the open
casket, and placed it on the Marine's chest.  "He, alone, above
everything else, is an eagle," Kills Straight said.  "He  will fly to
the highest reaches of the universe. He may bring back news to us  in
our dreams."   He looked to the stands of the stadium, and spoke of
Lundstrom's well- known warrior ancestors.

"The blood of these  people you've probably heard of runs in the blood
of Brett . . . this is who  Brett is," Kills Straight said. "He is a
warrior."  After placing  ceremonial grasses in the casket and offering
prayers in Lakota, he turned  again to the crowd.
"Now I want to name my other grandson," he  said.  From the back of the
room, Pfc. Eddy Lundstrom walked in wearing  his desert camouflage
uniform, the one he was wearing only a week earlier  in Tikrit, when
told of his brother's death. As the only surviving son in  the family,
he had the option to spend the rest of his tour  stateside.  Instead, he
plans to leave Tuesday to go back to  Iraq.  In the days leading up to
the naming ceremony, as Birgil Kills  Straight searched for the proper
names to bestow on the two brothers, he said  he specifically wanted a
name that might help ensure Eddy's safe  return.

As the 21-year-old private stood at attention, his shoulders  straight,
his fingers curled slightly at his sides, Kills Straight took out
another eagle feather.  "His name is Wicahci Kailehya," he said
finally.   "Shining Star."

Anguished cry wonders why American Indians have the highest per-capita
participation in the  armed services of any ethnic group. According to
the Web site  icasualties.org,  23 American Indians and Alaska Native
Americans have died in  Iraq as of the end of last year.  "People always
ask, why do the  Indian people, who were treated so badly,  step forward
to serve their  country?" said James Shaw Sr. during one of the
ceremonies. "It's that good  old nation pride."  For John Around Him, an
Army combat infantry  veteran who served in Vietnam and whose son
recently returned from Iraq, the  bond is more tangible.  "In 1876, the
Lakota Sioux took that flag  from Custer," he said, nodding toward the
U.S. flag near the casket. "So that  flag is ours, too."
Still, after so many centuries of battle, they  also know the
consequences all too well.  "I saw his name on CNN and  I let out a war
whoop," said Velma Killsback  - whose daughter served in Iraq  - as she
looked at the casket that held Cpl. Lundstrom. "I sat here in
disbelief, wondering why. For a war that shouldn't go on."

On the  reservation, where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans
9-1,  the war in  Iraq is largely unpopular. The men and women fighting
it, however, never  are. "When we would have late-night talks, he would
tell me how he  was fighting for me to do the things I do in everyday
life," said  Brett's  cousin Amanda Munoz. "No matter how much I was
against it, I  gradually understood. No matter how much I hated it, and
said, 'Please Brett,  don't go,' he was doing what he wanted to do. It
was his  calling."

Generosity of the star quilts By the time the wake  entered its 30th
hour, eyes had begun to sag, clothes had rumpled and stubble  covered
the faces of many male mourners.  The energy level never  waned.
Periodically, drum groups formed circles that pulled the drowsy  from
the bleachers. Visitors ate buffalo soup and fry bread.  While  most
tribe members left each night to return home, some slept near family
members on the floor of the gym, or under the bleachers, refusing to
leave  the man few of them had ever met.  All the while, the group of 12
young  Marines from Colorado - most of whom had never visited an Indian
reservation  - continued to post watch in  30-minute shifts.  They stood
without  flinching, listening to relatives cry over the open casket, and
as friends  and family members placed letters, a rose and sports jerseys
alongside his  body.   On Saturday night, while many of their friends
back in  Colorado concerned themselves with the outcome of the Denver
Broncos playoff  game, the Marines watched as the family showed
childhood photos of  Brett Lundstrom's life, projected on a screen next
to his open  casket.  After the ceremony on the reservation, they would
head back to  Colorado for Lundstrom's burial at Fort Logan National
Cemetery.

"I  hope they will take this message back, that they'll say, 'We went to
Pine  Ridge, and it was one of the greatest honors we've ever seen,' "
John Around  Him said.  "They're witnesses, to take this honor and share
it."  According to Staff Sgt. Kevin Thomas, they have no choice.  "I was
a  history major. I learned about the Western expansion, I learned about
the  Indians," Thomas said. "But I never really understood."  As the
ceremony progressed, many of the mourners brought handmade gifts,
including  elaborate dreamcatchers, miniature illuminated tepees and
traditional star  quilts. By Sunday night, more than 50 of the quilts -
which can take weeks to  make and can sell for between $300 and $600
each - lined an entire wall of  the gymnasium.  Then, as is customary,
the family gave them all  away.   "Value doesn't mean nothing to the
family - earthly property, it  doesn't mean nothing right now - it's
life that has worth," said  82-year-old  Sylvester Bad Cob, a World War
II and Korean War veteran. "They  give it out now, but they'll get it
back someday."  One by one, the  family called up everyone who had
helped organize the ceremony, and presented  them with one of the
elaborate star quilts.

They began with the  Marines.   "I had a picture of this in my mind, but
to actually see it .  . . It's just overwhelming," said Capt. Chris
Sutherland, shortly after Doyla  and Ed Lundstrom wrapped him in one of
the quilts, and - as they did with  each of his Marines - sealed their
gift with a hug.  "If you think  about it, in our culture, we give
thank-you notes,"  Sutherland said, shaking  his head. "Just thank-you
notes."  Once the gifting ceremony was over,  however, the Lundstroms
found out that Sutherland also had something to  return.  As the gym
once again quieted, Sutherland took out a small red  velvet bag, and
walked toward the Marine's parents.  He dropped to  one knee and tilted
the bag. He then pulled out a watch - the same one that  the corporal
was wearing when he was killed. He handed it to Ed Lundstrom,  who
hadn't slept for the past 36 hours, while remaining near his son's
casket. The former Marine major held tight to the watch, then crumbled
in  tears.  Sutherland tipped the bag again, and softly folded the
remaining contents into the hands of Brett Lundstrom's mother:

Her  son's dog tags.
Sunday night near midnight, 65-year-old Regina Brave  stood up from the
bleachers and made her way to the floor.
"As a  rule, I don't go to wakes, I don't go to funerals. But for some
reason, I had  to come to this one," she said. "After I heard about him,
I knew I had to be  here. I walked for a long time."
Two days earlier, Brave had  hitchhiked more than 100 miles across the
reservation to attend the wake. For  the entire journey, the Navy
veteran carried one of her handmade star quilts,  in memory of her son,
a Marine who served during the first Gulf War. Earlier  that night, the
family gave the quilt away with all the others.
"My  father told me, 'Everywhere you go, you're there for a reason,' "
she said. "  'You're either there to help somebody, or they're there to
help you.'  "

Inside the gymnasium, Brave joined more than a hundred men and women
who lined up behind the Colorado Marines, for the last official ceremony
of the wake, the "Final Roll Call."  She was soon joined by men and
women from all services, ages 19 to 90.
Some hobbled in walkers, others stood  in desert camouflage, some wore
the same clothes they had for the past two  days. As Sunday stretched
into Monday, they came to attention.   For  the next 15 minutes, they
all waited for their name, and then barked
the same  response:  "Here, Sir."   "Here, Sir."    "Here, Sir . .  "
each of them said, one after another, until they reached the last
veteran  in the building.   "Corporal Brett Lee Lundstrom . .
"Corporal Brett Lee Lundstrom . . .   "Corporal Brett Lee  Lundstrom."
Finally, Capt. Sutherland answered for the Marine who  never would.
"Not here, Sir," he said.   As the Lakota warrior  songs began, John
Around Him took the microphone once more.  "This  ceremony will continue
on - because in the past, in our history
with our  great warriors, and how they defended our land, their culture
and their way  of life - it passes on, generation after generation," he
said.   "These veterans, they love us. They care for us."  He looked
over at  the groups of old men and women, the groups of young  ones, and
thought of all  the wars in between.   "To all the veterans who are here
tonight,  welcome home," he said.   He then looked over at the open
casket at the  man with a feather on his  chest, and said it again,
"Welcome  home."