DL: Any thoughts on Fort Snelling?
RO: Kind of like Nazi Germany’s oven house, Auschwitz. It wasn’t a place of brotherhood and unity and sharing. Not our idea of Dakota. They had a bent sense of purpose, colonization and forced religion, racism. I did the plaque down in the park down below.
DL: We’ve seen that.
RO: My brother, Clifford, shaped it; he and I did the inscription.
DL: That’s beautiful; we’ve seen it.
RO: Dad asked us to do that for the Dakota people. It’s a piece of stone, so it’s a sacred piece of stone. And that’s one of the places where people will get a different understanding of history.
DL: Right there on that spot.
DL: Overlooking the camp.
RO: Yes. [Governor] Rudy Perpich signed the declaration and proclamation and said, so be it.