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Elected by Colorado to the U.S. Senate in 1992, Ben Nighthorse
Campbell was the first American Indian to serve in the Senate
in more than 60 years. His own Senate website includes a brief
biography: “born in Auburn, California on April 13, 1933,
his Mother, Mary Vierra, was a Portuguese immigrant, and his
father, Albert Campbell, was a Northern Cheyenne Indian.”
Ben’s family had a lot of problems when he was a child,
problems that affected him a lot. His dad had grown up in a time
when it was shameful to have an Indian (Cheyenne, Apache, Pueblo)
background. In addition, his dad was addicted to alcohol and would
leave home for weeks and months at a time. “He had it bad
with the booze, like unfortunately a lot of Indian people do,” Campbell
says. Eventually his father deserted the family.
“
Most people have goals they want to achieve. I think when
I was a kid I had goals I wanted to avoid. I didn’t want
alcohol in my life.” Ben says.
Ben’s mother came to America from Portugal at age six and
landed near Sacramento, California where there was a Portuguese
community. At a young age she contracted tuberculosis and it was
while she was later hospitalized that she met Ben’s father
who was receiving treatment for alcoholism. They were married,
but it was an unhappy marriage and a very sad childhood for Ben
and his sister Alberta.
Because of their mother’s illness, Ben and his sister lived
much of their young lives in orphanages. For the times they were
able to live with their mother, they couldn’t be close because
her tuberculosis was very contagious. Campbell says, “Little
kids always hug their mother. I could never do that.” He
says he has a memory of living for a short time in the hospital
where his mother was being treated. But he and his sister
were separated from her by a glass window.
"I never knew a mother's touch," he says, “I raised
me.”
In his teenage years, Ben struggled in school, clashed with the
law, and when his mom was readmitted to the hospital, quit school
and joined the Air Force. He served in Korea and credits the military
with giving him predictability, structure, and a regular paycheck,
all new experiences in his life.
With his tour with the U.S. Air Force finished, Ben had no career
direction. To earn money for living expenses and to get time to
figure out his life, he took work in the fruit and vegetable fields
of California, picking tomatoes for fifteen cents a box.
While he was picking produce, Ben got to know one of the truck
drivers who transported tomatoes from the field to the grocers.
Gradually they got to know each other better and the truck driver
became concerned about his new friend’s future. He believed
in Ben and wanted to help him. He taught Ben how to drive a truck
and let him practice maneuvering his truck in the field, not getting
upset when he backed the truck through a fence. Later he helped
Ben get his first driving job.
With his mentor’s guidance and support, Ben stopped working
in the fields.
He drove truck and was able to support himself and finance
his college education. He earned his degree in physical education
and fine arts from San Jose State University.
Around this time, Ben got interested in the sport of judo. Learning
and perfecting the sport required hours and hours of practice and
Ben pursued it with determination. In college he was the youngest
person in the United States to hold the fourth degree black belt.
He traveled to Japan to further study with judo masters and participated
in the 1964 Olympic Games as a member of the U.S. Olympic Team.
He went on to teach judo and considers the sport an excellent way
to develop self- discipline, self control, and self respect. He
credits judo with helping him to pull his life together, allowing
him as a young man to burn off energy and aggression without breaking
the law.
When Ben Nighthorse moved to Tokyo in 1960 to Train for the 1964
Olympic games, his interest in metal working grew when he studied
under a Samurai sword maker. He began to develop techniques of
laminating metals and jewelry designs. The skills he developed
can be seen today in his world class work. His has received more
than 200 first-place and best-of-show awards for his jewelry designs.
Ben Nighthorse Campbell didn’t plan on getting into politics.
Attending a local political gathering where nominees for state
offices would be selected, he decided on the spot to oppose an
attorney running for the Colorado State Legislature. He won (the
year was 1987) and went on to be elected to the U.S. Senate in
1992 and was re-elected in 1998.“I believe everybody has
his own way of making change”, he says.
Being in the sometimes formal and stuffy senate did not change
the senator fromn Colorado. Back in his hometown of Igancio, he
regularly roared on his bike, bedecked in red bandanna, ponytail
flying. He says: “Some people criticize me for not being
senatorial because I drive trucks and ride motorcycles (another
one of his passions).” In Washington D.C., “Sometimes
when I ride up on my motorcycle (a Harley) and park it next to
all the big town cars, they (colleagues in the U.S. Senate) look
at me a little strangely. But then one of ‘em will come up
to me and whisper “Gee, I’d like to get one of those,
too.’”
In 2004, at the age of 70 and after 22 years in state and national
politics, Ben announced that he would not be running for a third
term in the U.S. Senate. He says he is resigning because of health
problems and desire to spend time with his family. He said, “To
my family, I love you as only a man who grew up without a family
can.”
Community means a lot to the Senator. He says, “It starts
with family- which I didn’t have when I was young. But that
doesn’t mean one can’t go out and find it in other
circles.” He believes that a person can create community
by simple participation. As the saying goes, ninety percent of
it is showing up.
Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread
in it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things
are bound together.
Chief Seattle (1790-1866) Chief of Duwamish, Squamish and
other Puget Sound Tribes
Senator Campbell is a renowned jewelry designer, athlete, trainer
of quarter horses. He has been married to Linda for more
than 35 years and is the father of two grown children and grandfather
to
three little ones. He and his family enjoy many activities
together, including (naturally) riding motorcycles.
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