With a ceremonial fire burning outside and the aroma of sage wafting inside, a tribute to an influential American Indian activist began Wednesday at a south Minneapolis gym.
As people around the world sent condolences, hundreds filed into the American Indian Center to say their final goodbye to Dennis Banks, who died Sunday from complications of open heart surgery. He was 80.
He'll be laid to rest in a buffalo robe Saturday on northern Minnesota's Leech Lake Reservation, amid the traditions and Ojibwe songs he fought to reclaim for his people.
Banks spent a lifetime working for changes that would help generations to come. He called out police violence against Indians, declared war on drugs and pushed to end violence against women.
To other activists who stood with him, he was fearless, powerful, compassionate and funny. To the young people who only read about him, he was a hero.
His legacy allows "our children and the coming generations" to be who they are, said Mitch Walking Elk, stopping to compose himself as he talked about the man he'd known since 1978. "For the system, he was a challenge, because he was committed," Walking Elk said. "He made the whole world look at us."
Banks, or "Nowa Cumig" in his native language, was born on the Leech Lake Reservation and raised in the Anishinabe traditions and language. When he was 4, he was sent to boarding schools, part of an effort to assimilate Indians into white culture. Years later, he launched a decades-long battle to reclaim what was taken from his people and to push to improve their lives.
In 1968, Banks helped found the American Indian Movement, which began in Minneapolis as he and others protested police treatment of Indians and fought to combat crime in the south Minneapolis neighborhood that was home to many of his people.