As a result of continuing misconceptions, “Indian children are struggling for their identity.” The first Native American Grammy winner, Navajo flautist Raymond Nakai, faced rejection after he, band teachers from his school, and tribe members wrote Julliard on his behalf. Julliard officials wrote that although his GPA and test scores were good, he would find it difficult to survive in music school because Native Americans do not have a significant music culture. “I need to show people that my culture is important,” Nakai said in response. On the flip side, in 1959 Native American artist Oscar Howe’s submission to an Indian art show was rejected because it was deemed “non-Indian.” Howe retorted, “Indian art can compete with any art in the world, but not as suppressed art.”
“The arts are vital weapons on this shifting battlefield,” Strickland said. “Art and literature, music and dance, theater and film attack the false image through beauty and majesty, satire and pathos, in real and imagined situations.”
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