American Indian Movement
American Indian Movement (AIM), organization of the Native American
civil-rights movement, founded in 1968. Its purpose is to encourage
self-determination among Native Americans and to establish international recognition
of their treaty rights. In 1972, members of AIM briefly took over the
headquarters of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
in Washington, D.C. They complained that the government had created the tribal
councils on reservations in 1934 as a way of perpetuating paternalistic control
over Native American development. In 1973, about 200 Sioux, led by members of
AIM, seized the tiny village of Wounded Knee, S.Dak., site of the last great massacre
of Native Americans by the U.S. cavalry (1890). Among their demands was a
review of more than 300 treaties between the Native Americans and the federal
government that AIM alleged were broken. Wounded Knee was occupied for 70 days
before the militants surrendered. The leaders were subsequently brought to
trial, but the case was dismissed on grounds of misconduct by the prosecution.
AIM also sponsored talks resulting in the 1977 International Treaty Conference
with the UN in Geneva, Switzerland.