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Shawnee warrior Tecumseh and his brother, the prophet Tenskwatawa, organized an ambitious pan-Indian resistance movement. This is a story of strength, pride and pronounced courage.
In the spring of 1805, Tenskwatawa, a Shawnee, fell into a trance
so deep that those around him believed he had died. When he finally
stirred, the young prophet claimed to have met the Master of Life.
He told those who crowded around to listen that the Indians were in
dire straits because they had adopted white culture and rejected
traditional spiritual ways.
For several years Tenskwatawa's spiritual revival movement drew
thousands of adherents from tribes across the Midwest. His elder
brother, Tecumseh, would harness the energies of that renewal to
create an unprecedented military and political confederacy of often
antagonistic tribes, all committed to stopping white westward
expansion.
The brothers came closer than anyone since to creating an Indian
nation that would exist alongside and separate from the United
States. The dream of an independent Indian state may have died at
the Battle of the Thames, when Tecumseh was killed fighting
alongside his British allies, but the great Shawnee warrior would
live on as a potent symbol of Native pride and pan-Indian identity.