EditorialYoung people are asked to carry boxes holding artifacts to the mass gravesite in Wounded Knee, S.D., on Dec. 29, 2022. (Tara Rose Weston/The New York Times)
EditorialESTADOS UNIDOS. MEMORIAL A CABALLO LOCO (CRAZY HORSE MEMORIAL). Monta?a con la imagen esculpida de Caballo Loco (1840-1877), jefe sioux oglala, en construcci?n. Black Hills. Estado de Dakota del Sur.
EditorialTwo members of the Oglala Lakota tribe visit a mass grave of the victims of the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre, on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, July 1, 2013. (Kevin Moloney/The New York Times)
EditorialESTADOS UNIDOS. MEMORIAL A CABALLO LOCO (CRAZY HORSE MEMORIAL). Monta?a con la imagen esculpida de Caballo Loco (1840-1877), jefe sioux oglala, en construcci?n. Black Hills. Estado de Dakota del Sur.
EditorialMarlon Hunte, right, prays with Helen Flood, 76, of Gering, Neb., an Oglala Lakota woman whose husband was hospitalized with the coronavirus, at an evening service at Word of God Ministries church in Fort Yates, N.D., on Dec. 27, 2020. (Victor J. Blue/The New York Times)
EditorialA young Oglala girl sitting in front of a tipi, with a puppy beside her, probably on or near Pine Ridge Reservation, John C. H. Grabill was an american photographer. In 1886 he opened his first photographic studio.
EditorialA young Oglala girl sitting in front of a tipi, with a puppy beside her, probably on or near Pine Ridge Reservation, John C. H. Grabill was an american photographer. In 1886 he opened his first photographic studio.
EditorialA young Oglala girl sitting in front of a tipi, with a puppy beside her, probably on or near Pine Ridge Reservation, John C. H. Grabill was an american photographer. In 1886 he opened his first photographic studio.
EditorialESTADOS UNIDOS. MEMORIAL A CABALLO LOCO (CRAZY HORSE MEMORIAL). Monta?a con la imagen esculpida de Caballo Loco (1840-1877), jefe sioux oglala, en construcci?n. Black Hills. Estado de Dakota del Sur.