BEYOND THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE WORLD: A Navajo Woman's Journey
by Emily Benedek [The Wind Won't Know Me]. B&W photo section.
Condition: UNREAD 1995 Borzoi hardcover & DJ (in mylar jacket), first edition. This is an EX-LIBRARY book never checked out, but does have library markings.
Content: This biographical portrait of a Navajo woman and her family holds important lessons for those seeking to restore bonds of family and community. College-educated Ella Bedonie, born on a northern Arizona reservation in 1952, and her husband, Dennis, an elementary school counselor, navigate two worlds - Native American and white, sacred and secular. At the age of six, Ella was forced to attend a government boarding school, where she endured beatings and was punished for speaking Navajo. Then she spent 10 years with a protective Mormon foster family in California, after which she returned to the reservation to confront a longstanding Navajo-Hopi land dispute, which jeopardized her parents' ranch and camp: Ella's future inheritance. In 1989, she and Dennis moved to Flagstaff, Arizona, and built a house, but their teenage son, Kimo, joined a gang and dropped out of school. Diagnosed with breast cancer, Ella moved her family back to the reservation; Kimo straightened out and her cancer
went into remission. Benedek evokes Navajo society, customs and a cosmos in which the gods are nearby and life is imbued with purpose. Through Ella's eyes, Benedek presents a vivid portrait of Navajo culture, describing the need for the Navajo people to re-create their beliefs and traditions in order to survive alongside white society. In the book's most striking section, Ella and her family return to the reservation when she is stricken with cancer. There she participates in the traditional ceremonies in an effort to counteract her illness, and she rekindles her faith in Navajo beliefs, which serve as a source of strength and ultimately allow her to live successfully in both worlds. [1 copy available]
$ 6.50 + $ 3.19 media shipping.
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Price: $ 6.50
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