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Prayerful Correctness: RC Bishop, Jesuits Say Seventh Cavalry Medals Endorse Hostility and Genocide at Wounded Knee

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth invoked the tired old cry of political correctness in attempting to shut down calls for the revocation of the politically motivated Medals of Honor granted to Seventh Cavalry soldiers for their murderous rampage at Wounded Knee in 1890.

The Rapid City Catholic Diocese and the West River De Smet Jesuits respond to Hegseth’s historical whitewash with a more apt term, prayerful correctness, which they say motivates their stand against that massacre and the current administration’s immoral endorsement of that 135-year-old sin:

On September 26, 2025, U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced that the twenty soldiers who participated in the 1890 massacre of hundreds of Lakota men, women, and children at Wounded Knee would retain the Medals of Honor awarded to them. He declared the decision final, stating, “Their place in our nation’s history is no longer up for debate.” Secretary Hegseth further stated that U.S. soldiers deserve these medals for their bravery and suggested that any contrary opinion would favor “political correctness” over “historical” accuracy.

The facts of the tragedy at Wounded Knee Creek on December 29, 1890, are clear. On that day, U.S. Army soldiers massacred nearly 300 Lakota women, children, and unarmed men. This was not a battle. To recognize these acts as honorable is to distort history itself. Our response, therefore, is rooted not in “political correctness” but in prayerful correctness, grounded in truth, conscience, and compassion.

We, the De Smet Jesuit Community of West River, South Dakota—including the Jesuit Residences at Holy Rosary Mission (Maȟpíya Lúta / Red Cloud) on the Pine Ridge Reservation, St. Isaac Jogues Parish in Rapid City, and St. Francis Mission on the Rosebud Reservation—together with Bishop Scott E. Bullock—serve among our Lakota brothers and sisters. We acknowledge the government’s intent to honor its troops, yet we reject any narrative that erases the humanity of the victims or glorifies acts of violence.

The Congressional Report: Wounded Knee Massacre Memorial and Sacred Site Act cites a “General Miles Letter to Mary Miles, Jan. 15, 1891,” in which Miles described Wounded Knee as “the most abominable, criminal military blunder and a horrible massacre of women and children.”

In light of our lived experience with the Lakota people—and the hope they embody—we firmly reject Secretary Hegseth’s decision. We share the sentiment of the South Dakota Senate, which in 2024 overwhelmingly approved Senate Resolution 701, stating that:

Allowing honor to the Seventh Cavalry for acts in the Wounded Knee Massacre dishonors the Medal of Honor and is an implication of hostility and genocide against the Great Sioux Nation and the persons who were killed by the United States at Wounded Knee.

As Catholics and followers of Jesus Christ, we proclaim the infinite dignity of every human life. We confess that humanity—capable of love and goodness—is also capable of terrible evil. Our Lord Jesus, out of love for the world, accepted the cross rather than take up arms against others. His crucifixion and resurrection reveal that true victory comes not through killing but through suffering love, mercy, and truth.

Those who died at Wounded Knee are sacred. Jesus stands with all who suffer and die at the hands of others. Those who committed the violence are also sacred; for this reason, Jesus offers them mercy and healing. Yet the acts themselves were grave evils and cannot be honored.

If we deny our part in history, we deepen the harm. We cannot lie about the past without perpetuating injustice and moral blindness. Even if we are not personally responsible for Wounded Knee, we bear a moral responsibility to remember and speak the truth.

Let us, through the power and love of Jesus, choose—like him—to stand with our brothers and sisters, walking together in truth, remembering the victims, and seeking reconciliation rooted in honesty and compassion. Only by facing the cross of our shared history can we move toward resurrection—a future of just and lasting peace for all God’s beloved children [Bishop Scott E. Bullock, Rev. L. Ryen Dwyer, Rev. Edmund Yainao, Rev. Phillip Cooke, Rev. David Mastrangelo, and Rev. Peter J. Klink, “A Faithful Response to the Wounded Knee Decision,” Catholic Diocese of Rapid City and De Smet Jesuit Community of West River, 2025.10.20].

Prayerful correctness recognizes the infinite dignity of every human life and commands a moral responsibility to remember and speak the truth—our Catholic neighbors here profoundly contradict the fake Christianity and constant cruelty and deceit of King Don’s court.

One Comment

  1. Hegseth is a coward. He would lose any debate on this issue.

    He stopped one boat in the Caribbean for drugs but it didn’t have any aboard soooo now he simply murders the crew by blowing up the boats. The old let God sort them out philosophy. Judge jury, and executioner. Racist too.

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