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The Last of Us to Look Back

October 28, 2023 by Cliff Taylor 2 Comments

Sacred Ponca corn planted in the path of the historic “Trail of Tears”. (Photo: Mark Hefflinger)

 

After being threatened, terrorized, and
starved out, our Ponca tribe was death-marched
down to Oklahoma.
My ancestors had to leave everything;
a thousand years of our life torched;
lanced a thousand times so that America
could keep growing.
Twice in my twenties I tried to read
Dee Brown’s Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee
but couldn’t finish it because the descriptions
of what happened to our Native people were
so graphic and overwhelming that I kept
getting woozy, grief-sick, and needing
to throw up.
(There’s a chapter on us Poncas and my grandpa
Chief Standing Bear in that book too.)
Recently and older now, I read about
that period when we were broken down into
submission, about the things we had
to leave behind, and a part of one sentence
referenced our fields of healthy standing
corn that we had to abandon.
You pull hard enough and you can break
a connection a lot of times.
How many hundreds of miles were we marched
down our Trail of Tears before some of
those connections to our corn snapped?
Or can such things ever truly be broken,
can they ever really be snapped?
We Poncas didn’t plant our corn again
for 137 years after that summer
that we were viciously and violently
ripped from our homelands.
137 years without a food, a being,
a central multi-faceted annual relationship
that we’d woven ourselves around for
a thousand years.
Who was the last of us to look back and
have our last visual moment with our corn
before the crop and growing all went silent
for that time, and what did they feel?
I walk out to my backyard in Astoria
and look at my seven stalks of Ponca corn
in 2021 and pray for my people,
pray for everything we once had
to keep coming back.

Filed Under: Culture, Featured Writing, Food, Plant Medicine, Poetry, Spirit Tagged With: Chief Standing Bear, Ponca, Trail of Tears

About Cliff Taylor

Cliff Taylor, an enrolled member of the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska, is an award winning writer, poet, speaker, and storyteller. He is the author of two memoirs, "The Memory of Souls" (2020) and "The Shining Hands of My Ponca Ancestors" (2025, North Dakota State University Press), and two poetry collections, "The Native Who Never Left" (2023) and "Notes of an Indigenous Futurist" (2024, Hema Press). Taylor was a recipient of the Great Plains Emerging Tribal Writer Award from South Dakota State University in 2016 and strives to be a voice for the Ponca culture. A Nebraskan through and through, he currently resides in Astoria, Oregon, with his partner Aislinn.

Comments

  1. Watt Childress says

    October 30, 2023 at 7:30 am

    Thank you Cliff for replanting and growing your heritage! This good act of cultural cultivation feeds every soul on the planet!

    Reply
  2. Darrell Clukey says

    November 2, 2023 at 6:14 pm

    When people are ripped from their land, their heart is left behind. You are returning to the heart of the Poncas by planting your corn. May it grow strong and healthy forever. From its new seed, new hearts are grown.

    Reply

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    May 13, 2026 at 3:18 pm
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    Deep gratitude for your learnings and teachings dear Cliff.
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    April 25, 2026 at 8:01 am
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    Wow… Taylor: a deep poetic Ponca man. So full…overflowing with wisdom, with heart, with courage to share. I’m thankful for
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    April 22, 2026 at 6:12 pm
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    Thank you for these beautiful words that go straight to the heart of healing.
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    Couldn't agree with you more. We're dealing with that all right now trying to get the air museum in tillamook
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