"We lost part of history" -Choctaw tribe reflects on COVID onslaught as U.S. nears one million deaths
Record ID:
1671510
"We lost part of history" -Choctaw tribe reflects on COVID onslaught as U.S. nears one million deaths
- Title: "We lost part of history" -Choctaw tribe reflects on COVID onslaught as U.S. nears one million deaths
- Date: 5th May 2022
- Summary: CHOCTAW, MISSISSIPPI, UNITED STATES (MARCH 7, 2022) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) SHEMAH CROSBY, CHOCTAW INDIAN PRINCESS, SAYING: "I lost my 'pokni,' or my grandmother. She-- to say, to say one word, she was an angel. She was. She touched-- she touched everybody who had the experience, who had the opportunity to meet her." DRONE SHOT OF RESERVATION (MUTE) TRIBAL CHIEF CYRUS BEN WORKING BEHIND THE DESK TIGHT SHOT OF NAMEPLATE ON DESK READING "CYRUS BEN" NEXT TO PICTURE OF AN EAGLE (SOUNDBITE) (English) TRIBAL CHIEF, CYRUS BEN, SAYING: "In two months of June and May of 2020 - I know that's just 60 days, but over 60 lives were lost." TRIBAL MEMBER, JEREMY BELL, WALKING THROUGH THE PARKING LOT OF THE BUS MAINTENANCE SHOP BELL OPENING THE DOOR OF THE BUS AND LEANING IN TIGHT SHOT OF SIGN ON DOOR READING (English): "COMMUNITY REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION" PAN UP TO BELL LEANING INTO BUS (SOUNDBITE) (English) JEREMY BELL, TRIBAL MEMBER, SAYING: "When you lose the first five, you're going to cry. But it got to the point where I got desensitized. I mean, it was just like, 'you heard about your cousin passing?' 'Yeah.' Somebody said, 'What's the worst that you've ever had?' I said, 'I buried a cousin at 11 o'clock on a Saturday, and I stayed down there because at one o'clock I was burying another cousin.'" ZOOM IN TO BELL OVERSEEING WORK OF MAINTENANCE WORKER ON BUS TIGHT SHOT OF WORKER'S HANDS TWISTING BUS PART BELL AND WORKER SPEAKING PHILADELPHIA, MISSISSIPPI, UNITED STATES (MARCH 7, 2022) (REUTERS) WIDE EXTERIOR OF CHOCTAW HEALTH CENTER TIGHT SHOT OF SIGN FOR CHOCTAW HEALTH CENTER SIGN READING (English): "TRIBAL ELDER PARKING" RECEPTIONIST ANSWERING PHONE INSIDE HEALTH CENTER TWO FEMALE HEALTHCARE WORKERS TALKING BEHIND A DESK TIGHT SHOT OF NATIVE AMERICAN ART ON WALL WIDE SHOT OF PERSON WALKING DOWN HALL TIGHT SHOT OF SIGN FOR LAB WITH WRITING IN CHOCTAW LANGUAGE WIDE SHOT OF MARY HARRISON, INTERIM DIRECTOR OF THE CHOCTAW HEALTH CENTER, SPEAKING IN CHAIR (SOUNDBITE) (English) MARY HARRISON, INTERIM DIRECTOR OF THE CHOCTAW HEALTH CENTER, SAYING: "The deaths - it was really hard because we had our tribal members. They're local artisans. They were part of our traditions, and culture - from every age demographic. A lot of it were our keepers. They were keepers of our history, and each time a death occurred, we lost part of that history." VARIOUS SIGNS FOR CHOCTAW HEALTH CENTER 39. WIDE SHOT OF HEALTHCARE WORKER WORKING IN LAB 40. HEALTHCARE WORKER PUTTING SWABS IN LIQUID SOLUTION IN TUBES 41. TIGHT SHOT OF HEALTHCARE WORKER'S FACE 42. TIGHT SHOT OF HEALTHCARE WORKER REMOVING SWAB FROM TUBE 43. HEALTHCARE WORKER PUTTING SWAB IN COVID-19 TEST HOLDER CHOCTAW, MISSISSIPPI, UNITED STATES (MARCH 7, 2022) (REUTERS) 44. VARIOUS OF TRIBAL MEMBER, JEREMY BELL, WALKING THROUGH THE MAINTENANCE GARAGE
- Embargoed: 19th May 2022 15:02
- Keywords: COVID-19 Choctaw Health Center Choctaw Indian Princess Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians Tribal Chief Cyrus Ben coronavirus covid deaths
- Location: PHILADELPHIA + CHOCTAW, MISSISSIPPI, UNITED STATES / UNIDENTIFIED
- City: PHILADELPHIA + CHOCTAW, MISSISSIPPI, UNITED STATES / UNIDENTIFIED
- Country: USA
- Topics: Health/Medicine,United States
- Reuters ID: LVA005167803032022RP1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: When Shemah Crosby was crowned Choctaw Indian Princess last summer, it offered a brief reprieve from the cloud of grief that hangs over her rural Mississippi community, where COVID-19 has wreaked havoc.
But even as she tries to uplift her fellow tribe members, she still struggles with her own loss.
"I lost my 'pokni,' or my grandmother," Crosby said through tears as she visited the COVID-19 memorial for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. "To say one word, she was an angel."
The United States is on the verge of reaching one million deaths in just over two years of the pandemic.
COVID-19 has taken a disproportionate toll among Native Americans due in part to widespread chronic diseases in their communities, such as diabetes, and the historic underfunding of Indian healthcare systems.
As of March, 130 Choctaw in the Mississippi reservation had succumbed to the virus, a per capita death rate of 1,300 out of every 100,000 residents. That is three times higher than the state average, according to a Reuters tally of public health data. Mississippi leads the nation in deaths per capita.
Tribal Chief Cyrus Ben became emotional as he recalled their worst period.
"In two months of June and May of 2020, I know that's just 60 days, but over 60 lives were lost," he said.
Among them were many family members, co-workers, and friends of Jeremy Bell, who runs the community's bus service.
"When you lose the first five, you're going to cry, but it got to the point where I got desensitized," he said, adding that he had lost more than 30 family members to COVID-19.
"I buried a cousin at 11 o'clock on a Saturday, and I stayed down there because at one o'clock I was burying another cousin," he recalled.
Mary Harrison, interim director of the Choctaw Health Center, said the COVID deaths have left a huge void in their tightly-knit community.
"They were local artisans. They were part of our traditions, culture - from every age demographic," she said. "They were keepers of our history, and each time a death occurred, we lost part of that history."
Now, many tribal members say life on the reservation is slowly returning to normal. A pivotal moment for Bell was when tournaments for their beloved sport of stickball resumed last summer, for which he was an announcer.
"It was good to see people smiling and seeing people in the stands enjoying life once again," he said.
But the devastation wrought by COVID-19 was never far from their minds. The event began with a tribute to those killed by the virus.
Chief Ben said that amid the grief, he draws strength from the resiliency of their tribal ancestors.
In the early 19th century, the Choctaw tribe was the first of the Indian nations to be driven from ancestral land in the southeast of the United States by the government.
Thousands died of starvation, illness, and exposure to the elements on a 500-mile (805-km) long journey on foot -- known as the Trail of Tears -- to what is now Oklahoma after President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act.
"Our ancestors went through a lot of adversity and tragedy," said Ben. "Hopefully, one day, the future generation can look upon us to know that we were strong and resilient in our own rights."
As for Crosby, she hopes that even as pandemic restrictions lift and people forge ahead, they don't lose sight of the enormity of the loss.
"A lot of us are so ready to move on, but we haven't even reflected on what we've lost," she said. "I feel like we need to take a step back, learn what we've lost...before we can even forget that COVID happened."
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