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A girl, having escaped a concentration camp holding the Cherokee, is pursued by . . . |
Introduction A young girl of the Cherokee people has, during the 1840s, escaped from a United States government concentration camp, or reservation, set aside by the United States to hold Native Americans who had been forcibly removed from their ancestral homes. This was done to open up their land for resettlement by non-Native Americans. Below is a song she sang after escaping and trying to make her way back to her beloved home in Tennessee after the death of her mother. Her name was Matamis . . . When she was seven years old, United States soldiers killed her father and forced her and her mother to relocate to Oklahoma. This is her song . . . These are her memories . . . The Redbud Tree Whispers to Me Her Name The redbud tree in Tennessee whispers to me As in the midst of the Oklahoma night I walk A pouch of parched corn rests on my shoulder And a sharp flint knife is in my hand I am far from the Oklahoma prison of my leaving As for the men who pursue me The blade of the sharp flint knife in my hand Awaits them Along this Oklahoma road of sorrow Unafraid, I walk And if I listen closely When the wind has silenced herself I can hear the Tennessee redbud tree Whisper to me my name Matamis she whispers Matamis Matamis She murmurs Above the sound of parched corn being chewed In the still of the night when all is revealed On an east wind her words are carried Matamis Run to me Little one Aie-e-e-e-e The Great Smokey Mountain redbud tree Whispers to me her name Come to me little one she adds Matamis the eyes of evil Reach for you On all my lonely days and nights I miss you In Tennessee I await you Oh father Your daughter Matamis calls to you From beneath a sky of blue Hear her words Sing for her once more Hold her again father In your arms Teach her The ways of your people Wipe away her tears Cause her to smile Mother Come to me Hug me tight When I think I am alone In the wilderness Of night Whisper in my ear Beneath the starlight Your words of love I long to hear |