She
was ten years old when she was captured by enemies and carried away into
captivity. There she was raised as a servant, learning the language and skills
of her new people. At the age of sixteen she was sold to a white trader who
made her his wife.
It was at that time, when she expecting her first child
that she met two white men whose lives would change the course of the new
American national’s destiny. It was the winter of 1804-1805 and these American
explorers, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were wintering on the Missouri
River near the villages of the Mandan and Hidatsa Indians where they had built
Ft. Mandan. Sacagawea, the Shoshone Indian girl who had been captured as a
ten-year-old girl and who was now the wife of Toussaint Charbonneau, a French
Canadian trader living with the Hidatsa Indians met the two explorers who were
exploring the new American continent.
On
February 11, 1805, Sacagawea gave birth to a son, Jean Baptiste; when the
explorers left in April for the West, she, Charbonneau (and the baby) went
along as guides to the unknown territory.
All summer the group followed the Missouri River west
across what is now Montana. When they reached Three Forks, near the mouth of
the Missouri, Sacagawea recognized she was in Shoshone area where she had been
kidnapped years earlier. When they reached the end of the river and knew they
needed horses to continue, they approached a tribe to purchase horses; it was
the tribe Sacagawea had been kidnapped from years earlier, and the chief was
her brother.
Not only were they able to trade goods for horses, they were given
a guide who knew the way through the Bitterroot Mountains to the Clearwater
River which emptied into the Snake and Columbia River and eventually drained
into the Pacific Ocean.
Lewis and Clark and their company were able to map and open the whole area for
western expansion of the United States.
Sacagawea
played a central role in helping Lewis and Clark blaze a trail across the
western part of the American continent and made the “Louisiana Purchase” an
integral part of America. Without her help, it may have taken the expedition
much longer, or they may not have been successful. Sacagawea was truly prepared
for her
“mission” in life—leading these explorers across the unknown territory.
Sacagawea’s kidnapping, her knowledge of life as a Shoshone and a Hidatsa and
her relationship to the chief of the Shoshone was priceless. Sacagawea was
carefully prepared for her important mission in life, and she fulfilled it.
Another
valiant woman who was prepared for a special role in her life—to save her
people, the Jews—was Esther in the Old Testament. Esther was a righteous young Jewish
woman who along with the other Jews were in captivity, but King Ahasuerus of
Persia and Media had chosen her as his queen. A wicked man named Hamman was jealous of the
Jews and wanted to destroy them, so he made a law that on a certain day, all
Jews throughout the 20 providences of the king would be killed. When Esther heard about this decree, she asked
her uncle and all the Jews to fast and pray for three days that she could influence
the king to cancel the degree.
Her uncle Mordecai told Esther “who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdom for such a time
as this?”(Esther 4:14)
Of course Esther saved the day, even at the risk of her
own life—she went into her husband in his chamber without being asked (which
was punishable by death), but he spared her life, and granted her request to
cancel the wicked decree to kill all the Jews, and killed Hamman instead.
Esther had been preparing all her life for this mission--to save her people, the
Jews, from death.
I
know each of us came to earth with a mission, great or small, to fulfill. I’ve
often contemplated what my mission in life is. I know my mission is not a great
important mission like Sacagawea or Esther, but it is important for me to
understand my mission, prepare for it, and then do it.
I think one of my most important missions in my life has
been to be a mother. This is not easy in this day and age when motherhood,
especially a stay-at-home mother, is denigrated, devalued, and careers are seen
as so much more significant in a woman’s life.
Although I stayed at home with
my children for 25 years, I also worked for most of the years of my youngest
child’s school years, while my husband who had retired from the military became
the “primary caretaker.”
During those years I often prayed and struggled to
understand what is the best thing to do--best for my family, my child, me?
Life isn’t black and white; our mission in life isn’t
clear-cut or crystal clear as Sacagawea or Esther’s was. Is it to be a good
neighbor? Involved in community service? Involved in government service? How
much time do I devote to volunteer work?
I read about women who have organized service projects
to help hundreds of people in Africa, and I wonder if that is what I should do.
I see women who write books and hold down full time jobs and still have six
children and are wonderful mothers. I see women whose musical voices touch
hundreds or millions of people, but I know that is not my talent or my mission.
All I can do is to live each day the best I can; to pray
for guidance to know what I should do TODAY. Then I can listen for inspiration
and look around every day to see what I CAN do. It won’t be earth-shaking,
world-notable things that history will record that I have done in my life, but
the words of my favorite poet has been my touchstone all of my life.
“If I can stop one heart from breaking, or ease one
heart the pain, or put one robin into his nest again, I will not have lived in
vain.” Emily Dickenson.
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