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After the U.S. seized their lands more than 150 years ago, the Diné (Navajo) people embarked on the Long Walk—a 300-mile trek to exile. Photographer Dakota Mace shares their stories. In 1864 ...
In 1864, Lincoln signed the second Pacific ... He co-wrote a book about his journey called "Send a Runner: A Navajo Honors the Long Walk." What's being built near The Van Buren in downtown Phoenix?
Once there, the Diné, as the Navajo call themselves, were imprisoned. Hundreds perished during what became known as the Long Walk; several thousand would die in the brutal conditions experienced ...
It came to be called the Long Walk -- in the 1860s, more than 10,000 Navajos and Mescalero Apaches were forcibly marched to a desolate reservation in eastern New Mexico called Bosque Redondo.
whose name translates to “Corn Pollen Man,” is famous among the Navajo for defying the U.S. government’s ethnic cleansing and deportation efforts during the Long Walk of 1864-65. He also ...