Scarecrow Press
Pages: 656
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-0-8108-4962-4 • Hardback • June 2004 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
Howard M. Bahr is Professor of Sociology at Brigham Young University and the author of Diné Bibliography to the 1990s: A Companion to the Navajo Bibliography of 1969 (Scarecrow Press, 1999).
Part 1 Abbreviations
Part 2 Series Editor's Foreword
Part 3 Foreword
Part 4 Acknowledgments
Part 5 Introduction
Part 6 Part 1: Beginnings
Chapter 7 1. The Birth of the Navajo Missions
Chapter 8 2. Beginnings of St. Michael's Mission and School
Chapter 9 3. First Christmases
Chapter 10 4. "Suspicion Is almost a Virtue Here"
Chapter 11 5. Father Anselm's 1899 San Juan Exploration
Chapter 12 6. First Impressions and Councils with Headmen, 1900
Chapter 13 7. Fall 1900: Students to Santa Fe, Headmen to Cienega
Chapter 14 8. Mission to the San Juan, 1904
Part 15 Part 2: Indian Policy
Chapter 16 9. Federal Policy and Indian Missions, 1869-1916
Chapter 17 10. What Are We Doing for the Indians?
Part 18 Part 3: Early Ministry: 1901-1910
Chapter 19 11. Neighbors
Chapter 20 12. Chin Lee in Retrospect
Chapter 21 13. Time in the Saddle, Students, and Sacraments
Chapter 22 14. Law and Order, American Style
Chapter 23 15. The Navajo Trouble of 1905
Chapter 24 16. The Case of Des Chee Nee
Chapter 25 17. The Last Warrior
Part 26 Part 4: Navajo Land
Chapter 27 18. Land Claims: Learning to Use the Law
Chapter 28 19. White Profits from Navajo Lands
Chapter 29 20. The Navajo Indians: A Statement of Facts
Chapter 30 21. My Work on Navajo Land Problems
Part 31 Part 5: Among the People, 1911-1920
Chapter 32 22. The Faith for One and All
Chapter 33 23. Shortcoats and Longgowns
Chapter 34 24. Tales of Lukachukai
Chapter 35 25. A Sick Call to Crystal
Chapter 36 26. Navajo on the Warpath?
Chapter 37 27. St. Isabel's: The Missing Pages
Chapter 38 28. "You Ministers Seem to Make Trouble for Us Wherever You Are"
Chapter 39 29. Life at Chin Lee Mission, 1917-1918: Contrasting Views
Chapter 40 30. The Struggle for Chin Lee
Chapter 41 31. Influenza Epidemic
Chapter 42 32. Priorities
Part 43 Part 6: Navajo Customs and Character
Chapter 44 33. Navajo Land and People
Chapter 45 34. The Character of the Navajo
Chapter 46 35. Navajo Names
Chapter 47 36. Family Love and Family Work
Chapter 48 37. The Navajo Woman and Her Home
Chapter 49 38. Mealtimes with the Navajo
Chapter 50 39. Pawn, Games, Gambling
Chapter 51 40. Navajo Ethics
Chapter 52 41. Prayer and Sacrifice in Navajo Perspective
Chapter 53 42. The Natural and the Supernatural
Chapter 54 43. The Navajo and Christianity
Part 55 Appendix: Franciscan Friars of the Province of St. John Baptist Serving the Navajo Missions, 1898-1921
Part 56 Bibliography
Part 57 Index
Part 58 About the Contributors
This volume succeeds brilliantly in bringing to life the writings of first-generation Franciscans who worked among the Navajo. With meticulous archival work as well as careful editing and juxtaposition of texts, Bahr (Brigham Young Univ.) provides an in-depth introduction to the mission and the Franciscans' multifaceted work as pastors, preachers, ethnologists, legal advocates, peacemakers, and linguists....Highly recommended. All readers.
— Choice Reviews
Howard Bahr's The Navajo as Seen by the Franciscans, 1898-1921, is an invaluable sourcebook for the extraordinary confluence between the Dine and the early Franciscans...Many of these writings are difficult to access, and their being assembled in one book is a great contribution to the study of the Franciscan view of the Navajo during the pivotal years, 1898-1921....Bahr's book, with its brilliant introduction detailing the friars' contribution to the mutually enriching Franciscan/Navajo confluence, is an illuminating account of the sensitivity of the early Franciscans to the Navajo.
— The Catholic Historical Review
These records provide absolutely engrossing reading and make a significant historical contribution.
— American Reference Books Annual
In their efforts to convert the Navajo to Catholicism, the Franciscans at the St. Michael mission in Arizona, lived among the Navajo to study their language and culture. This sourcebook collects the friars' observations from the early period of the mission, 1898 to 1921, as recorded in their correspondence, journal entries and administrative reports. Bahr...uses primary and secondary material and provides biographical and historical background for his selections.
— Reference and Research Book News