Kevin Costner's gold rush.

AuthorJohansen, Bruce E.
PositionPlans a casino in the South Dakota Black Hills

Rapid City, South Dakota

Have you been wondering where Kevin Costner may invest his slice of that theater ticket you bought to see Dances with Wolves? The Lakota Sioux, who helped Costner make the movie, are generally not happy about his proposal to build an eighty-five-acre, $95 million resort and casino in their sacred Black Hills.

An editorial in Indian Country Today compared Costner's "gold rush" with the invasions of the Paha Sapa ("hills that are black") during the 1870s by General George Armstrong Custer, who violated treaties and triggered a rush in the hills for what Lakota holy man Black Elk called "the yellow metal that drives white men crazy."

"A 'bigger is better' attitude doesn't always serve the area, especially the sacred Black Hills," Indian Country Today editorialized. "Mining has already torn into the Hills; the mega-tourist traffic needed to maintain such a multi-million dollar operation would further erode the area. Will this be the new gold rush into the Hills?"

Lisa Prue, a Sioux who studies in Omaha, recalls that as Dances with Wolves was being filmed, Kevin Costner was made a member of the Sioux Nation. "He was made a brother to everyone," she says, but that was before the resort and casino plan. Now Prue and other Sioux feel betrayed. "You don't do this to your family," says Prue. "Has he seen how people live at Pine Ridge? He seems like just another white man with a forked tongue."

The same sense of betrayal was reflected in an Indian Country Today cartoon titled "Dancing with Dollars," in which Costner, dreaming of riches, dances with a wolf wearing a bewildered expression and asking, "Who is this Wasi'cu?" "Wasi'cu" is Lakota for "takes the fat" and, by extension, "white man."

Tim Giago, editor of Indian Country Today, proposed that "perhaps the cash-rich Costners [Kevin and his brother and business partner, Dan] would consider using a small portion of their fortune, earned at the expense of the Lakota/Dakota people, to help the Indian tribes build gambling casinos on Indian lands. This can be one small way they can show their gratitude for the use of our language and history in creating a movie that made them wealthy."

The Black Hills were guaranteed to the Lakota by the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868. Organized Native American opposition to the extra-legal expropriation of the area began at Custer's...

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