DL: Tell us about the experience of your grandparents, you said that they were forced to leave Minnesota.
CC: Yes. DL: How did they – what happened to them? How did they have to leave? Were they related to Little Crow or any of the warriors?
CC: No. Wakute was our band leader. Some of our relatives in the Canku family were captured in 1862 and sent to Fort Snelling. There was nine of our family that were sent there. And then the rest escaped and went to the Plains.
DL: Was there any reason why they were imprisoned?
CC: They were implicated for being Dakota.
DL: Not necessarily that they had taken up arms and fought? It was just because they were Dakota.
CC: Yes. They were implicated. Just being Dakota means that you were guilty before any consideration of being innocent.
DL: Were they part of the group of 303 warriors who were supposed to die, according to the U.S. Government and Cavalry? CC: I'm not certain yet. We're still doing studies on who were the descendants that were severely incarcerated, and punished, and hung and sent to different concentration camps in Minnesota.
DL: So we're at the point now where these nine members of your family are being held.
CC: Yes. DL: What was their fate? How did their stories end?
CC: Nobody knows what happened to them. It's like when you go to war, some people disappear. And we can just imagine that if they died they were…Their burial is right east of Fort Snelling.
DL: Do you recall hearing the names of any of them?
CC: Only what the U.S. Army provided us, the record, of only nine members of the Canku family. We didn't know their first names.
DL: That is a tremendous mystery that your family lives with...
CC: Yes.