Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Benton-Banai dies at the age of 89

- By Amy Eorliti And EeliViA Eon7eVA

Eddie Benton-Banai, one of the founders of the American Indian Movement, has died at the age of 89.

JINNDAMOLI­O >> Eddie Benton- Banai, who helped found the American Indian Movement partly in response to alleged police brutality against Indigenous people, has died. He was 89.

B ent on - B a n a i d ie d Monday at a care center in Hayward, Wisconsin, where he had been staying for months, according to family friend Dorene Day. Day said Benton-Banai had several health issues and had been hospitaliz­ed multiple times in recent years.

Benton-Banai, who is Anishinaab­e Ojibwe, was born and raised on the Lac Courte Oreilles reservatio­n in northern Wisconsin. He made a life of connecting American Indians with their spirituali­ty and promoting sovereignt­y, and was the grand chief, or spiritual leader, of the Three Fires Midewiwin Lodge. Day said he was someone people looked to for guidance in the religious practice of the Anishinaab­e Ojibwe people — and he gave countless babies their traditiona­l names.

Benton- Banai’s place in the American Indian Movement, a grassroots group formed in 1968, can be traced to his launch of a cultural program in a Minnesota prison, said cofounder Clyde Bellecourt.

Bellecourt was in solitary confinemen­t when he heard someone whistling “You are My Sunshine,” and he looked through a tiny hole in his cell and saw Benton-Banai, a fellow inmate, recognizin­g him as an Indigenous man.

Bellecourt said Benton- Banai approached him about helping incarcerat­ed Indigenous people, and they started the prison’s cultural program to teach American Indians about their history and encourage them to learn a trade or seek higher education. Bellecourt said that BentonBana­i thought they could do the same work in the streets, and the program morphed into the American Indian Movement, an organizati­on that persists today with various chapters.

“It started because I met Eddie in jail,” Bellecourt said. “Our whole Indian way of life came back because of him. … My whole life just changed. I started reading books about histor y of the Ojibwe nation… dreaming about how beautiful it must have been at one time in our history.”

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 ?? J. rALTER GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Eddie Benton, a holy man of the Chippewa Indian Tribe, shows a prayer he wrote to Linda Jeffers, of ’ineyard Haven, Martha’s ’ineyard, Mass., a member of the rampanoag Tribe in Cambridge, Mass.
J. rALTER GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Eddie Benton, a holy man of the Chippewa Indian Tribe, shows a prayer he wrote to Linda Jeffers, of ’ineyard Haven, Martha’s ’ineyard, Mass., a member of the rampanoag Tribe in Cambridge, Mass.

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