TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Joy Harjo Interview: The Power of Poetry | THE THREAD Documentary Series

27m 20s4,323 mots612 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

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we're here for a reason and in the Mogi

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way it is not because all the resources

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were given to us by God it's like we are

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here as as citizens of a

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larger of of an incredible diverse place

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of beings and ideas and thoughts and so

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on

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so storytelling is what we do

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[Music]

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can you tell me about how you learned

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that you became the 23rd us poet

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laurate yes I was living downtown we had

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an apartment given to us by the I was a

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Tulsa artist

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fellow and uh Rob Casper was head of the

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poetry and literature center of the LI

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at the Library of Congress well I knew

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Rob we all did I remember I had a book

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an American Sunrise coming out so I got

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a call from him and he says you're on

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speaker

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phone he says I have the librarian of

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Congress Carla Hayden here who wants to

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speak with

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you and then she said ask me if I would

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be the 23rd us poet laurate and it was

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like lightning I mean I didn't and I but

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I my thinking mind I'm very analytical

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even as I'm very intuitive my thinking

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mind started thinking you're so busy how

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can you do this right now you're already

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too busy I had just told my uh agent to

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please don't book me any more interviews

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I don't like doing he don't do me any

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more interviews you know and then and

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I'm thinking so that's what went through

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my mind first was like H but then I knew

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I had

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to because it you know I'm very service

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or I think we're all in service

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positions and I knew it was important it

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was important for native people and I

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said yes I mean I couldn't say no I'm

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going to jump around a little bit I want

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to go back to 1975 when you published

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your first book The Last Song can you

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tell me about that experience yes I

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wound up in creative writing classes

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which I it was different for me but

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there was something that took hold and

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that first little book it's called the

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chat book which is a book of small book

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of poems and I Illustrated it but that

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was exciting to have something like that

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by then I was a creative writing major

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that surprised me but there I was

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writing poetry and I remember we were

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all thinking about graduation and people

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were concerned like why are you taking

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poetry as a major you should be taking

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education you can write poetry

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anytime but something in me something

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larger than myself or like was knew that

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there was something in me that I knew I

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had to follow it it's like knowing the

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truth of something and you may not it

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may be a hard road to follow it you

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don't know and it's not usual but

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something that wiser

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self knows and if you go against it you

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always

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suffer I mean I didn't go into poetry

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because I didn't want to suffer I went

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into poetry because it became using

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Words which is something I was never

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that good at in regular life but using

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words in what I would call a sacred and

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Powerful manner overtook me and to use

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them even in situations that seemed

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impossible or

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dire became important to

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me how did your family settle in

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Oklahoma can you tell me the origin

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story of coming to Oklahoma back with

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your great great grandfather yes that's

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one story I know pretty well there's

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other family lines that I don't know as

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well but from the time I was conscious

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in this place you know I've always been

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you know I was close to my father a lot

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of daughters are you know that's um was

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really close to him and he was so proud

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of being Mogi Creek and that was

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important to him and it was also

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important to me one of my Mogi Creek

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lines was through manahi he fought

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against Andrew Jackson in the battle of

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Horseshoe Bend along with many others he

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lost one of his wives at that battle and

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children but he made it to Oklahoma my

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aunt Lois harjo tell me a story of how

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once he got here they were in the town

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of

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okoi and he saw a white man beating his

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wife in the middle of the street and he

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went and took the whip away from the man

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and beat him with it he had to go into

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hiding

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because they were looking for him to

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kill him and um I know where his grave

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is when I wrote poet Warrior I left out

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particulars to finding it exactly

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because I didn't want people over there

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or desecrating or but it's in a small

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family Mogi Family Cemetery um not far

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from

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eala and uh there's he's buried where

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he's buried there are seven cedar trees

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around his grave have you visited I

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visited that yeah I've been over there

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can you tell me some of your earliest

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memories of the msog Gatherings and

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rituals well if I think of Mogi

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Gatherings and rituals I just think of

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my dad you know my dad because we

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weren't

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really social I think the social thing

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came with parties at the house and The

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Bootlegger lived next door you know I

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think Oklahoma was dry because of the

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the uh evangelicals or the church the

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the power the the church has over the

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state and still does and um although

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it's not dry anymore and uh and so yeah

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most of most of

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um most of that was just family you know

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most most was just family can you paint

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a picture of what it would be like to

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experience joining one of these parties

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well it could be fun it's like any party

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it could be really fun and then it could

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get out of hand you know where people

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are drinking because of the bo

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Bootlegger but having a good time I

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remember the twist remember that Fat's

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Domino and and the song Blueberry Hill

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and all of that you know I just I

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remember those songs most of the music

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we got then was radio was from the radio

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or LPS were 33 33s and 7 a few 78s we

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I'm not I'm kind of not the 78

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generation and um so there was a lot of

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music

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and I like that my mom wrote songs she

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um often had um some of the well-known

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country swing players I mean Tulsa is

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very known for its music and country

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swing and the the movers and shakers so

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to speak of country swing they often

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came to our house and played music and

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so that was cool so when I think of

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those parties I think of music and I

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think of dancing my parents are really

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good dancers I remember years ago being

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at some friend's house at tells peblo

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and their Grandfather at that age he was

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pretty pretty old he was probably in his

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80s with white hair and he remember I

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met him for the first time and he says

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you know those Creeks are you guys are

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really good

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dancers because that's crucial to that

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origin story and it has everything to do

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with Mogi Creek people with manahi with

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you know that music is all embedded in

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the history

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yeah

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absolutely can you tell me what it means

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to belong to Hickory

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ground can you tell me about that yeah

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that's my family's ceremonial ground

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especially on that that line and our

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people are on the roles at removal for

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Hickory ground and I didn't come there I

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was at another you know PE sometimes

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people move around at the grounds uh

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often they might belong to another

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ground and go to their wife's or you

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know part part's

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ground and um I had been at another one

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and I it was really powerful to go back

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because so much of the stories are there

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so many of the stories or that

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connection and there are connections

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that are without

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words and so it was like coming home for

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me to family because we're all related

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ultimately everybody is but you know

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there's an old old relationship and

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stories that it was finding a connector

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    Joy Harjo Inter… - Transcription Complète | YouTubeTranscript.dev