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ON THE TRAIL OF GERONIMOGERONIMO, Apache Chief by his great-grandson Harlyn. GERONIMO
SUR LES PAS DE GÉRONIMOby Corine Sombrun and Harlyn GERONIMO Available in bookstores May 20th, 2008 A new book has just come out on the legendary Apache Indian GERONIMO, published by Alban Michel.Harlyn Géronimo, his great-grandson, was present in Paris to lauch the edition based on his ancestor Geronimo (1829-1909)One of the last Indians to lay down his weapons at the end of the wars, after holding out to over a half of the U.S. cavalry, he finally had to surrender with a handful of his bedraggled followers and despite the white army's promises, was never to see his native Arizona again before dying in captivity. His sepulcre at the military cemetary at Fort-Still in Oklahoma, was profaned by the Skull and Bones Yale fraternity and never returned to his ancestral home. In 2008, Harlyn Geronimo, the co-author of this account, decided to hire a top lawyer to sue the US army to regain the remains of his illustrious forebear and bury them according to his original wish on his homelands. The project was initiated after a Frenchwoman, Corinne Sombrun met Harlyn Geronimo in 2005 in New Mexico. They retraced the path to the source, at GILA, the place of Geronimo's birth. Thanks to this fruitful and glorious collaboration, Harlyn Geronimo authorised Corine to record his testimony and publish the book in French. Harlyn also relates his continual life as a warrior but this time in Vietnam and his political commitments, cultural resistence, tutoring the Indian culture to young people and talks about the Indians today,their state and challenges they face. Being an apache is a lesson in life, goes the old Indian proverb " Be brave, like your ancestors in the face of their enemies, and defend yourself - Bi da a naka enda. " THE AUTHORS Born in 1947, Harlyn Geronimo, the great-grandson of the famous Apache chief and warrior, Geronimo, is himself a medicine man, living on the Apache Reserve in New Mexico and upholds the traditions and rights of his people. Corine Sombrun, a trained pianist and composer, is the first Western woman initiated into the Mongol Shaman rite. A world traveller, she reports for magazines, the BBC, and collaborates in Canada with scientists in the study of shamanism and its effects on the human brain. She lives between Paris, London and Mongolia, where she spends several months a year. Albin Michel Press Attachée is Anne-Emmanuelle Robicquet 01 42 79 10 59 (1 vote) 11.05.2008 | Helen's blog Cat. : Alban Michel Ambiance Anne-Emmanuelle Robicquet Apache Indian Apache people Apache Wars BBC Canada Chiricahua Code name Geronimo controversy Converts to Christianity Corine Sombrun Corinne Sombrun Entertainment Entertainment Geronimo Geronimo Harlyn Harlyn Harlyn Géronimo Human Interest Human Interest London Mongolia Paris Religion Religion Technology Technology Vietnam Yale
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Comments (3)
Finding my roots
I have been searching for help, mainly for my own peace on how I can go about finding out some infomation. Years ago my mother used to tell me stories of what her mother used to tell her about how we are related to geronimo, and that he was my great great grandfather.
My oldest sister however tells me that my grandmother was cherokee and unfortunately my grandmother or my grandfather who was blackfoot never registered that I know of. My grandmothers name was Ethel Robinson (her maiden name) she was born Missouri in 1902 and died in 1973, I tried doing some researches but have never been successful in any findings. But either way weather my grandmother was apache or cherokee I have always been proud of my native american heritage.
TRIBAL HISTORY
Hundreds of years ago, long before white men came to America, the mountains, plains and deserts belonged to the MESCALERO Apaches, who were essentially nomadic hunters and warriors, dwelling at at one place for a temporary time, in brush shelters known as a "Wicki up", short rounded dwellings made of twigs or teepees made of elk and buffalo hides. The Mescalero roamed freely throughout the Southwest including Texas, Arizona, Chihuahua, Mexico and Sonora, México.
Today three sub-tribes, Mescalero, Lipan and Chiricahua make up the Mescalero apache Tribe which lives on their reservation of 463,000 acres of what once was the heartland of their aboriginal homelands. Within this territory lie the four sacred mountains : sierra blanca, Guadalupe Mountains, Three Sisters Mountain and Oscura Mountain Peak. These four mountains represent the direction of everyday life for the Apache people.
Harlyn Geronimo is my age and I wonder ...
If he knows what Indians lived in Las Cruces and Deming? I'm searching for my roots and they are continuously showing in Ancestors.com living in Lower Mimbreno region; New Mexico. Does anyone know what tribe lived there? My mother visited back there when she was 12 years old with her Grandmother Cruz Salas/Bravo to see her mother. They walked for miles and miles before they found her home and it was made of straw in Las Cruces. Her mother's name was Beatrice Salas - and she was an Indian. I just don't know what tribe? Please advise? Thanks, a bunch. P.S. I have a deep feeling within me when I talk to other Indians that I'm related -- its a strong sense. Cecilia in Illinois