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Proposed deletion of Joseph A. Suneg
The article Joseph A. Suneg has been proposed for deletion because of the following concern:
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Paul I. Manhart
Paul Ignatius Manhart (2 January 1927 – 1 May 2008) was ordained a Jesuit priest of the Catholic Church and served in various capacities on the
Early Life
Paul I. Manhart was born in Omaha, Nebraska, 2 January 1927, the third of twelve children of Paul Ignatius Manhart Sr. and Catherine Eleanor
Published Works
Beginning in 1902, shortly after arriving in the United States from Germany, Fr. Eugene Buechel, S.J. taught Lakota boys English at the St. Francis Mission school on the Rosebud Indian Reservation. By the time of his death in 1954, Buechel had collected and translated over 28,000 Lakota words, intended to be aggregated into a dictionary. He preserved hundreds of oral histories, cultural objects, and interpretive information that is displayed at the Buechel Memorial Lakota Museum, St. Francis, South Dakota.
Starting in 1955, at the request of Fr. John F. Bryde, principal of Holy Rosary Mission school, Fr. Manhart continued Buechal’s work by compiling, preparing and publishing in 1970 the first edition of Buechel’s Lakota Dictionary. Fr. George P Casey composed a brief version of Buechel’s A Grammar of Lakota so that it could be included in the dictionary. Five thousand case-bound books were printed, and in 1980, a second print-run of two thousand copies were produced. Buechel's collected Lakota terms were accompanied by their English definitions, pronunciations, parts of speech, examples of usage, and their sources.[1]
Around the time of the
Thirty-two years after its original publication, Fr. Manhart in 2002 completed his revision of the Lakota Dictionary to include English translations of the term usages, a second edition published by the University of Nebraska Press. Containing over thirty thousand entries, the Lakota Dictionary remains the most comprehensive dictionary of the Lakota language to date, serving everyone interested in preserving, speaking, and writing the language. Included the 2002 publication, other Lakota speakers contributed to the expanded edition’s collection of Lakota words; credited in the “Word Sources” section.
Wounded Knee Incident
The
The takeover was described by an observer from the press as, “a commando raid in the most accurate sense: well organized, lightning fast, and executed in almost total darkness” (Rapid City Journal, March 1, 1973, p.1)[4] The Wounded Knee occupation by AIM lasted 71 days during which two Indian activists were killed—one struck in the head by a bullet that also pierced the wall of the Catholic church. At one of the roadblocks, U.S. Marshal Lloyd Grimm was seriously wounded when AIM militant gunfire struck his chest and left through his back.[5] The psychological stress of these events required evacuation to Rushville Hospital unconscious hostage Wilber Riegert (87 years of age), at which Fr. Manhart administered the Anointing of the Sick to him.[6]
During Means’ federal trial, The Denver Post reported, “The priest heard the front door unlocked from the inside. He walked quickly to the altar and observed 15 to 20 persons milling about. Four to six had shotguns and rifles and the others carried bayonets, machetes and clubs.” Means soon entered, and the priest said, “Russell, do you know this is a sacred place?” Means did not answer. In a few minutes he told his men, ‘Take him out of here. Take him to the basement and tie him up.” Thousands of rounds of ammunition were exchanged between AIM members and the FBI from their positions outside the church. After federal officials promised to investigate their complaint, AIM leaders and their supporters ended the occupation on 8 May 1973. On 16 September 1973, After an eight-and-a-half-month trial the U.S. District Court of South Dakota (Fred Joseph Nichol presiding judge) dismissed the charges against Banks and Means for conspiracy and assault because of the U.S. government’s unlawful handling of witnesses and evidence.[7]
Tekakwitha Conference
Fr. Manhart was an invited speaker 3-7 August 1981 at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Tekakwitha Conference, a Roman Catholic institution that supports Christian ministry among Native Americans.[8] Pastoral concerns about Northern Plains native communities are addressed by invited speakers at an annual event. Since 1939 priests, religious brothers and guest speakers discuss concerns ranging from reservation life and Catholic schools to urban relocation, native customs in Catholic worship, native deacons, and native self-determination.
Writings
- Buechel, Fr. Eugene and Manhart S.J., Fr. Paul, Lakota-English Dictionary,1st ed.: Pine Ridge, South Dakota: Holy Rosary Mission, 1970
- Rigert, Wilber A. with assistance by Fr. Paul Manhart, S.J., Quest for the Pipe of the Sioux, Rapid City, South Dakota, 1975.
- Buechel, Fr. Eugene, Stars, Ivan, Iron Shell, Peter and Manhart S.J., Fr. Paul, Lakota Tales and Texts, Red Cloud Lakota Language and Cultural Center, 1978
- Manhart S.J., Fr. Paul, Lakota Tales and Texts in Translation. 2 vols., Tipi Press, Chamberlain, South Dakota, 1998.
- Buechel, Fr. Eugene and Manhart S.J., Fr. Paul, Lakota-English Dictionary,1st ed.: Pine Ridge, South Dakota: Holy Rosary Mission, 1970; 2nd ed.: University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London, Nebraska, 2002.
Later Years
After taking sabbatical semesters in 1993 at Gonzaga University and Creighton University Fr. Manhart returned to Holy Rosary Mission to resume his pastoral duties and continue work on the revised edition of the Lakota Dictionary, published in 2002. With his health declining in 2003, Fr. Manhart moved to the St. Camillus Jesuit Community in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. He died 1 May 2008 at the age of 81. He was buried at Calvary Cemetery, Milwaukee, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, 8 May 2008.
See Also
- Lakota Language
- Lakota mythology
- Category:20th-century American Jesuits
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Speedy deletion nomination of Thomas lord kimball
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Draft:Thomas Lord Kimball
Hi. I've moved your article to draft space where you can work on it and then submit for review. I'm not sure that you have made a convincing case for notability as yet. Deb (talk) 17:55, 9 August 2023 (UTC)
Your submission at Omaha Club (September 3)
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Your submission at Omaha Club (September 8)
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- ^ Buechel, Fr. Eugene and Manhart S.J., Fr. Paul, Lakota-English Dictionary,1st ed.: Pine Ridge, South Dakota: Holy Rosary Mission, 1970; 2nd ed.: University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London, Nebraska, 2002. p vii
- ^ Buechel, Fr. Eugene and Manhart S.J., Fr. Paul, Lakota-English Dictionary,1st ed.: Pine Ridge, South Dakota: Holy Rosary Mission, 1970; 2nd ed.: University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London, Nebraska, 2002. p ix
- ^ New York Times, "Indians at Wounded Knee Free 11 Held for 2‐Days", March 2, 1973, p1
- ^ Lyman, Stanley David, Wounded Knee 1973, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London, Nebraska, 1991. p xxiii
- ^ Spokane Daily Chronicle, “Marshall Wounded”, March 27, 1973, p2
- ^ https://soundcloud.com/psteinauer/paul-manhart-interview A July 5 1973 interview: Fr Paul Manhart’s account of being held hostage by Lakotas of the American Indian Movement and his analysis of the Wounded Knee incident by Clyde Dollar July 5, 1973 from the Clyde Dollar Wounded Knee Oral History Collection, Manuscript Collection 294, Special Collections, University of Arkansas Libraries.
- ^ Christenson, Ron, Political Trials, 2nd ed. Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, U.S.A., p223
- ^ https://www.marquette.edu/library/archives/Mss/HRM/HRM-jesuits.php