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Title: Looking for Lost Bird : A Jewish Woman Discovers Her Navajo Roots by Yvette Melanson, Claire Safran ISBN: 0-380-79553-1 Publisher: Perennial Pub. Date: 01 January, 2000 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $12.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 4.3 (10 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: Enthralling story written from the heart!
Comment: LOOKING FOR LOST BIRD is an extreamly well-written book. Yvette takes us into the private details of her life - from growing up in a loving Jewish household, to her trials and tribulations as a fighter in Israel, to the difficult and rewarding search and homecoming to her "true" birth family. It was emotional to follow her journey on the roller coaster of life. She lets you in on the intimate moments of Navajo life, and how she was able to mesh it with her own ingrained beliefs. You find yourself laughing, crying, and wanting to encourage her family (both of them!) not to give up. I couldn't put it down! Living in Arizona, this book opened a new world for me - one I want to learn more about!
Rating: 5
Summary: Wonderful story about loved ones being reunited!
Comment: Like many of the readers I couldn't put the book down until I read it from cover to cover. While reading the story I found out these people were my extended family! I know everyone mentioned in the book. As a youngster I remember the crusade of Aunt Desbah, Uncle John and others in finding the twins who were stolen as babies. I wept at the end when Yvette participated in the holy Hozhoji ceremony to be reunited with her birth place, family, culture, and environment. Very moving!
Aunt Betty, Yvette's biological mother lived a very brave life as she longed and searched everyday of her life wanting to be reunited with her twins. May God bless her soul.
Rating: 5
Summary: Looking for Lost Bird: A Review
Comment: Looking For Lost Bird:
A Jewish Woman Discovers Her Navajo Roots.
Yvette Melanson with Claire Safron
Bard Books. 233 pages. $22.00
By Elliot Fein
Looking For Lost Bird is a true story that is disturbing yet compelling. A Native American Navajo Indian woman gives birth on her reservation home in Arizona to twins, a girl and a boy. During their infancy, both children get sick. The mother takes the children to the nearest local hospital for a diagnosis.
Hospital staff members instruct her that they will need to keep the two children over night for observations. When the mother returns the next day, the children are gone. The hospital has no record that they were ever admitted.
The kidnapped infant children are each adopted in Florida by two different families. One of the families is a young Jewish couple that lives in a New York City suburb. Looking for Lost Bird is the story of the Navajo girl, Yvette Melanson, who is raised in that Jewish household.
As an adult, Melanson discovers her Navajo origins and searches for her family roots. She finds her family (minus her mother, who died of a broken heart grieving for two lost children) still living on the Navajo reservation in which she was born. At the age of forty-three, Melanson decides first to visit her birth family in Arizona, then to move there permanently with her husband and two children.
While adjusting to the reservation, Melanson learns and begins practicing the religion, culture, and way of life of her birth family. In this process, she abandons many of the Jewish cultural practices (but not necessarily Jewish values) in which she was raised.
Melanson's Jewish parents (particularly her mother) provide a loving and caring environment for their daughter. In Yvette's recollection of how she was raised, their warts do surface, particularly the shortcomings of her father. After her mother becomes ill and eventually dies during her teen years, the father changes into a different, less appealing character.
Melanson never reveals whether her Jewish parents knew about her Navajo origins. The reader is left to speculate whether the knowledge, if known by her Jewish parents that she was stolen from a Native American Indian family would have impacted their decision to adopt.
What is surprising in the telling of this life story is the absence of any form of anti-Semitism by the author. When Melanson writes critically about her mother and father, she writes about them as individuals. She does not associate her criticism of them with Judaism as a faith tradition.
On the reservation, when she begins taking on Native American Indian ways, Melanson naturally compares Navajo culture to Judaism. In this comparison, Melanson writes with respect, affection, and even admiration about the religious tradition in which she was raised.
Melanson tells her life story (with the help of Claire Safron) with compassion, humor, and eloquence.
I recently led a book club at my synagogue. A member of the club recommended that I read Looking for Lost Bird. After reading it, we immediately decided to include Looking for Lost Bird one of our featured selections. The book provides a great opportunity to learn about Navajo culture and to see how it compares to Judaism as a religious tradition. The book is also a true gift for adopted individuals, particularly native American Indians, seeking to uncover their past.
Elliot Fein teaches Jewish Studies in the Tarbut V'Torah School in Irvine.
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Title: Selling the Indian: Commercializing and Appropriating American Indian Cultures by Carter Jones Meyer, Diana Royer ISBN: 0816521484 Publisher: University of Arizona Press Pub. Date: 01 November, 2001 List Price(USD): $22.95 |
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Title: Children of the Dragonfly: Native American Voices on Child Custody and Education by Robert Bensen ISBN: 0816520135 Publisher: University of Arizona Press Pub. Date: 01 May, 2001 List Price(USD): $19.95 |
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Title: Bowman's Store: A Journey to Myself by Joseph Bruchac ISBN: 1584300272 Publisher: Lee & Low Books Pub. Date: 09 April, 2001 List Price(USD): $6.95 |
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Title: The Girl Who Married the Moon: Tales from Native North America by Joseph Bruchac, Gayle Ross ISBN: 081673481X Publisher: Bridgewater Books Pub. Date: 01 March, 1996 List Price(USD): $5.95 |
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Title: Prison Writings : My Life Is My Sundance by Leonard Peltier, Harvey Arden ISBN: 0312263805 Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin Pub. Date: 16 June, 2000 List Price(USD): $14.95 |
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