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  • “We’ve used a passive approach to the telling of the brutality at Sand Creek for the purpose of showing the ignorance of utilizing killing as a means to solve problems. Violence always leaves an impact, but the graphicness of the murders, the rapes, the mutilations, even after people were dead, leaves a remarkable imprint on students, parents, and educators. They see an historic reality that motivates them to do more to circumvent violence in the present as a means to solve problems. And that includes fourth graders who viewed the film in an elementary school in Centennial, Colorado who shared their thoughts with me after the screening.”

    -Donald L. Vasicek
    Award-Winning Writer/Filmmaker/Consultant

    “We Cannot Be Who We Are Not” “Always keep in mind that the main issue which has led to so many other issues is land. The earth has always been the Cheyenne/Arapaho’s power. As their lands dwindled because of European immigration, their power dwindled.  Today, most older, and many younger Native Americans are living without that power. Instead, they are living on reservations that yield little, ifany resources. This has reduced Native Americans
    to a cross between their native heritage and the incursion of others into their space. Many know little about moving forward, because the past is where all of their power resides, and, it is gone.

    Native Americans are born to roam the earth.  Many of their ancestors went where the buffalo went. The buffalo were the source of their existence. In the beginning, the Cheyenne and Arapaho people had 51 million acres of land. They were free. They lived with the elements and they prospered. Today, most conceive themselves as prisoners of a society that has little bearing to who they really are, what they inherited from their ancestors, not too unlike each one of us.  How can we be who we are not? The answer is, we cannot be who we are not, and until we discover who we are, then live that way, is when we experience the ultimate peace of who we are. It is my belief that most Native Americans are not who the society they live in forces
    them to be, in order to survive.

    So, if you surround yourself with this attitude, with this approach, with this theme, then, everything else you are being asked about which to understand, will fall into place.”

    -Donald L. Vasicek

    “Award-Winning Sand Creek Massacre Film Archived”

    August 27, 2008 — CENTENNIAL, CO — Golden Drover Award winner for Best Native American Film in the Trail Dance Film Festival, “The Sand Creek Massacre”, has been archived in The Billie Jean Baguley Library in the Heard Museum in Phoenix.

    Award-winning Writer/Filmmaker/Consultant, Donald L. Vasicek,
    said, “By having the film archived in these prestigious institutions,
    my goal of informing, educating and creating awareness for the
    Cheyenne and Arapaho people via their oral histories in the film,
    helps all American native people. The Cheyenne and Arapaho
    people, vowed, after the Sand Creek Massacre, that they would live
    on this earth forever. The film keeps their dream alive regardless
    of the genocide that has stalked all American native people from
    the inception of European people’s arrival on their lands to the present.
    The film is a permanent recording of their ancestors and who they are as
    a people.”

    Vasicek continues his efforts to record the Cheyenne and Arapaho
    history. He has placed, “Ghosts of Sand Creek”, a two-hour, six
    episode series, into development. Vasicek said, “Ghosts of Sand
    Creek” will dimensionalize the Cheyenne and Arapaho people’s
    story. It will show the white man’s continuing invasion of their human
    rights.

    “I read recently where actor Brad Pitt raised $500,000 for
    people in Darfur. He should now raise money for American native
    people so that they can also eat. Walk down the main street
    in Lame Deer, Montana, on the Northern Cheyenne’s reservation.
    Cruise the Northern Arapaho Wind River Reservation in Wyoming.
    American natives on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
    need groceries, socks, underwear, shirts, shoes, trousers, fuel to
    keep warm, etc. And they have to go across the border into
    Nebraska to buy liquor. You will experience, as I have, many times
    over, the abject poverty American natives experience. This is
    genocide at its finest in all centuries.”

    Vasicek said, “America’s native people need America’s help. Be part
    of ‘Ghosts of Sand Creek’.” Go to donvasicek.com for details.

    Contact:

    Donald L. Vasicek
    Olympus Films+, LLC

    The Zen of Writing


    dvasicek@earthlink.net

  • “Notes from Dachau and Anne Frank’s House”

    June 18, 2008 – Centennial, CO – Donald L. Vasicek, award-winning writer/
    filmmaker for the Sand Creek Massacre documentary film recently traveled to
    Europe.  Amongst his stops was Dachau, a Nazi concentration camp about nine
    miles or fifteen kilometers northwest of Munich.  Vasicek, known for his campaign
    to educate others about American native people, nevertheless, was stunned by
    what he saw and experienced at Dachau and in Anne Frank’s house in Amsterdam.
    Part of his notes are as follows:

    ENTRY TO DACHU
    ENTRY TO DACHU

    “To escape from Dachau, one had to sprint across an eight-foot wide
    strip of grass.  The grass was nurtured there for prisoners.  It encircled
    the interior of the camp.  If one stepped on the grass, they were shot.  If
    one made it past  the grass to a v-shaped cement moat that also surrounded
    the interior of the camp, they had to scamper down into the moat, up the other
    side of it to barbed wire that was spread on up-sloping ground.  An, at least
    ten-foot high electric fence with barbed wire curled on top of it like large circles
    drawn with barbed spikes on it, was the last barrier to escape from a place
    where an estimated 50,000 human beings were murdered.
    ENTRY (ORIGINAL)TO DACHU
    ENTRY (ORIGINAL)TO DACHU

    “As I toured the camp and listened to the tour guide’s description of the camp,
    what was there, and what is presently there and why, I felt like I had stepped
    into the past.  All of the books I had read,  all of the movies and documentary films
    I had seen, all of what I had learned about that horrific time, came to the surface there.  I got a
    dose of reality.  I could feel the terror, the pain, and the sorrow.  I constantly
    asked myself, how could anyone create such a horrifying place?  I was stunned
    to realize how real Dachau had been, how much hate had been generated to mask
    the reality of breathing human beings.

    “When I walked up to the crematorium, I traced the steps of prisoners who could
    no longer work or work, like women, children, elders, the sick, prisoners who were gay,
    prisoners who were gypsies and other “throwaways”, as Nazis often called them.

    “The first room was the room where prisoners had to strip themselves naked.  Then, they
    walked to the next room, which had a lower ceiling than the rooms in the rest of the building
    and no windows.  They were told they were going to take showers, but instead, poison
    pellets were dropped into the room in two hinged box-like containers in one wall that
    were filled with the pellets from outside of the building.”

    Think about that.  Just think about that.

    “The next room was the crematorium.  I stood in front of the ovens as the tour guide
    explained that towards the end of the war (World War II), the Nazis escalated the job, or
    as they called, the final solution.  They backlogged at Dachau.  The tour guide showed us
    how bodies were piled up, both inside and outside of the crematorium waiting to be
    burned.  Pictures taken at the time were prominent there.

    I stepped back from the photos.  I realized that anywhere I stepped, I stepped where
    Nazis and people condemned to death by ignorance had either once stood, or lay.  I
    know I am unique, different, because there is no one else who is me.  I just don’t like
    the idea that killing is a solution to solving problems.  Genocide is ignorance based on
    fear.  And according to some, fear is the second most powerful human emotion next to love.

    The tour guide mentioned that the German people, as recent as 1999, had decided to
    “come out” with their horrific past.  German children are now required to study World War II
    Nazism and come to the camps to learn.  The tour guide said the reason the German people
    had waited so long to “come out” was because of their shame for the
    terror  and devastation the Nazis had perpetuated on millions of others.”

    It is time, now, for the American people to do the same thing.  We must come out
    of our shame and stop genocide in America.  That is the very least we can
    do for the native people of America.  Our children must learn about native people,
    their cultures, their history, and who they are as human beings so that they can relate
    to them as human beings.

    No one is better than anyone else regardless of achievements, social standing, religion ,
    culture, race and/or material wealth. We are one because  we are human.  We are a collectiveness
    consciousness.  When we hurt someone, we  damage that consciousness.  This, in turn, causes
    all human beings to lose some of the positive energy this kind of
    consciousness brings to each one of us. 

    If one isn’t convinced, walk in the hidden recesses of a building next to Princes Gracht Canal
    in Amsterdam where thirteen year-old Anne Frank hid from the Nazis with her family for three
    years until they were betrayed and sent to camps. Walk in the rooms.
    I did.  Guess what?  Anne Frank was a talented girl, a writer, a young person with
    dreams and goals.  A Jewish girl who loved her family more than anything else
    in her world.  A human being.

    Princes Gracht Canal - Amsterdam
    Princes Gracht Canal – Amsterdam

    Feel her there.  Feel the terror.  Anne Frank, at age sixteen, died from typhoid in a concentration
    camp because of ignorance fueled by fear.  Genocide in its finest form.

    Then, there is the Sand Creek Massacre.  I’ve been at the site several times.  Sat in the grass
    by Sand Creek, camera in hand, alone, recording sounds, the sun warm on my back.  I felt like
    others were there.  You know, invisible, but there.  Perhaps apparitions, if I looked hard enough.
    On November 29, 1964, there were over five-hundred Cheyenne lodges there, perhaps a thousand
    or so Cheyenne people, seven-hundred soldiers, their horses, their equipment, their canons,
    their guns, their sabers, and Indian dogs and horses.  Their ignorance.  Their fear.  Their  hate.
    And there was murder there.  Rape. Mutilations.  Carnage.

    There is a prominent person who has done work at the Sand Creek Massacre Site.  I asked
    her if she ever “felt” anything while she was there doing her work.  She said, “No, not really, but I’ll
    never go out to the site at night.”  I asked her why.  She said, “I don’t know why, I just won’t go.”

    You might want to check it out, see how it makes you feel.  Perhaps it can remove you,
    even for a moment, from your reality and plunge you in the depths of losing sight of who
    human beings, all human beings really are, human beings, just like you and me.

    ####

    Contact:

    Donald L. Vasicek
    Olympus Films+, LLC

    The Zen of Writing


    dvasicek@earthlink.net
    303-903-2103

  • Award-Winning Writer/Filmmaker Donald L. Vasicek Launches New Sand Creek Massacre Website

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    “Award-Winning Writer/Filmmaker Donald L. Vasicek Launches New Sand Creek Massacre Website”

    May 21, 2008 — CENTENNIAL, CO — Award-winning filmmaker, Donald L.
    Vasicek, has launched a new Sand Creek Massacre website.  Titled, “The Sand Creek Massacre”, the site contains in depth witness accounts of the massacre, the award-winning Sand Creek Massacre trailer for viewing, the award-winning Sand Creek Massacre documentary short for viewing, the story of the Sand Creek Massacre, and a Shop to purchase Sand Creek Massacre DVD’s and lesson
    plans including the award-winning documentary film/educational DVD.

    Vasicek, a board member of The American Indian Genocide Museum (www.aigenom.com)in Houston, Texas, said, “The website was launched to inform, to educate, and to provide educators, historians, students and all others the accessibility to the Sand Creek Massacre story.”

    The link/URL to the website is sandcreekmassacre.net.
    ###

    Contact:
    Donald L. Vasicek
    Olympus Films+, LLC

    The Zen of Writing


    dvasicek@earthlink.net