THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN H. E. WADSWORTH, Superintendent VOLUME 17 NOVEMBER, 1914 NUMBER 2 OUR INDEBTEDNESS TO THE AMERICAN INDIAN JY LFO ,J. FRACHTHNIHi RG, Bureau of American Ethnology IVIL,IZATION and culture are the result of an extensive co-operative system to which every individual inhab iting our globe contributed and still contributes his share. No achievement, be it literary, economic or sci entific, has ever been accomplished by a single man or group of people, without the aid that has resulted from the efforts of those who had previously directed their energies towards the attainment of a certain goal . Our present philsophi cal systems owe their origin to the studies of human mind and nature made by ancient and mediaeval scholars; our writers draw their inspira tion from the works of their predecessors, and our great scientific inven tions have been facilitated by the former endeavours of the savants of all nations. Thus, our present civilization consists of an infinite number of elements contributed by every people, by every nation and by every race of this universe. American culture, for instance, has been effected by the combined efforts of the Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Teutons, Slavs, Semites, Mongols, and others; each of these groups contributing its particular, typical portion. It should not, however, be supposed that only the higher and more ad vanced types of nations participate in the creation of a certain form of civilization. In this respect everybody's co-operation is invited and welcome, and no services, even those of a most primitive character, are rejected. We Americans, especially, who are probably the most civil ized and advanced people in the world, owe a great portion of our progress and success to primitive races above all to the Ameri can Indian. How many of us will, in blissful ignorance, underesti mate and even ridicule the intellectual pro we? s of the Red Man, and boast of the superior attainments of the White Race? And yet, many of our accomplishments may be traced directly to the assistance received