Monday, March 4, 2013

The Osage Indian, a Story of an American Warrior



Looking back on my life, I agree with those who believe that Native American’s go berserk when they drink booze.   I was an Osage Indian.  My people migrated from Kentucky to settle in Western Missouri near the Osage and Missouri Rivers where we were discovered by the Frenchman, Jacques Marquette.  He wrote, “These are the tallest men in North America ranging from six feet to six and a half feet tall and have both white and red skin.

I was born in 1922 and was never given a first name, just the initials M. W. Cooper.  Some people said the initials stood for Mad Wolf.  I was tall, fair skinned, good looking and charming.  Men liked me.  Women adored me until I had a few drinks.  I was already drinking by the age of fifteen and when I drank I became a cruel SOB.  The SOB came naturally.  Known as Ms. Walker, my mother was the local Madam.  Each of her ladies had their own one-room crib in the trashy little town of Weedpatch, California…the town where Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath was filmed.

In 1938 my grandmother literally followed me, with a horsewhip in her hand, to the Selective Service office where she swore I was seventeen years old.  The army became my career.  In 1941 I made friends with a fellow about my age who introduced me to his teenage sister.  I was smitten but she refused my marriage proposal.  During World War II I fought in Europe.  In Germany I lost part of my skull.  They replaced it with a metal plate.  In Germany I also took a wife.  I was stationed in Japan during the U.S. occupation and saw the aftermath of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.  Between the occupation of Japan and serving in Korea I married my friend’s sister.  By then she was 24 years old.  I now had a wife in Germany and one in California.  In Korea necessity forced me to finish cutting off my severely severed left leg. I spent months at Letterman’s Hospital in San Francisco and occasionally experienced bouts of severe headaches. 

After being released from the hospital and receiving a medical discharge, I lived in an alcoholic haze and would disappear for days at a time.   During those times, using my crutches, I was known to viciously beat anyone who made me angry.  But the police always let me go. 

When my California wife went into labor with our first child I dropped her at the door of the hospital while I went to park the car and I didn’t return for two weeks.    Many times, when I was on a drinking binge she and the children had to hide from me.  Once, to get away, she jumped through a large plate glass window.  Why did she keep taking me back?   

For my military service I was awarded the WW II Victory Metal, Army of Occupation Medal, National Defense Service Medal, with three bronze stars, and the United Nation’s Service Medal.  One never gets over the fear, the sights, sounds and experiences of war; but, some seem better able to live with peace.  I never knew peace.

At the age of 40 the headaches became debilitating I prayed for relief and begged others to pray for me.  A cerebral hemorrhage ended my life.  Not until several years later did my California wife learn of my German wife.   I am buried near Weedpatch where, though no longer in use, my mother’s seven little shacks still stand.
                               
Rachel Nemitz, March 2013

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