Morris
Jenis Jr.’s father knew only his son, a Native American student at the
Genoa Indian School in Nebraska 100 years ago, had not been seen in a
year.
Morris ran away from the school in 1921 — “deserted,”
according to the militaristic language school officials used — like
hundreds of other young Indigenous children who resisted the boarding
school policies that forcibly stripped them of language and identity,
often hundreds of miles from home.
“The father…is very anxious to
see where his son has gone,” a school clerk wrote the superintendent on
the father’s behalf. “He recently heard that a student from Genoa was
killed in Montana by a horse and he fears that this may be his son.”
Public
archives do not provide any answers about Morris, nor his age and
tribal affiliation. The school told his father that they could not find “any trace of him,” and reportedly returned the $26 — worth about $450 today — his family previously paid to send him home.
The plea is among thousands of stories made public by the Genoa Indian School Digital Reconciliation Project, one of many efforts
to digitize elusive school, state and federal records, to bring the
stories of Indigenous survivors and those who never made it home back to
their families and tribes.
Last summer, the discovery of more
than 900 child graves at former Canadian residential schools tore
through international media and reignited investigations of U.S.
boarding schools; reports focused on brutal abuse and quantifying death.
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