I know this is a very outdated post but being Czech, and being new to this forum, I would still like to react from my point of view, should someone still be interested. Without wanting to sound defensive, I believe some of the points discussed here need a bit of clarification. I would like to explain a little bit about these people's fascination with what they believed to be "Indian ways".
Paskievich quickly takes us to a series of up-close interviews with the Czechs. They discuss, without irony, how Russian communism left them lacking any sense of community, able to trust no one but their immediate family. One man describes how the "Indian" way of life has given him trusted friends and taught him that "human beings exist as part of a larger whole and only then does life have meaning."
I'd put that down as a not very successful attempt of a justification, probably said this way because these people knew that they were talking to persons from 'America'.
It may not be a very succesfull attempt of a justification, but what is quoted there is no pretense. Although it may seem bizarre, I know many many people for whom the "Indian ways" were the only ideal where they found refuge that gave some real meaning to their life. Unfortunately, it is also part of the reason why anything "Indian" that comes to our country is welcomed with an open heart, sometimes without critical judgment (e.g. the Rainbow movement, or now the Little Grandmother videos
and others). So I believe that this is genuine, even if based on the limited (mis?)information these people had access to.
In fact, from what I heard in discussions with people who lived in former GDR, there was more of a community in those times. Many people will tell you there was more solidarity between people, families stuck together more than they do now, people were much more prepared to help each other.
As the original quote says, you could trust no one but the immediate family. People led double-lives. Officially no religion was allowed and was practiced in secret.
Another point is that the planned economy in the East relied on collectives ('brigades') in the workplace, so there was not only the community in private life, but also a formal structure of community in a sense.
This sounds rather like a joke to someone who actually lived here. These collectives were centered around the Communist party and were forced upon people - they were part of the life that was lived "on the outside", nothing to do with a real feeling of community! The word collectivization itself leaves a very bitter taste in the mouth - collective farming originated in 1948 when people's land and animals were stolen from them and proclaimed "national".
"The final phase of collectivization was carried out in April 1948, two months after Communists took power by force. Farms started to be collectivized, mostly under the threat of sanctions. The most obstinate farmers were persecuted and imprisoned. The most common form of collectivization was agricultural cooperative. The collectivization was implemented in three stages (1949–1952, 1953–1956, 1956–1969) and officially ended with implementation of the constitution establishing the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, which made private ownership illegal."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_farming#Czechoslovakia_.281948-90.29Although the histories are of course incomparable as to the magnitude and severity, I think this is actually one of the reasons why Czech people resonated with the stories they heard about the Indian history. They too were robbed of what was once theirs. They too had once been a sovereign nation, a kingdom, later ruled over by the Austro-Hungarian Empire, then Germany in World War II, and from 1948 to 1989 they were a satellite country to the U.S.S.R.
Also I would like to point out that the Czech Republic (formerly Czechoslovakia) is landlocked and we never had any colonies as did countries with marines. Yes, we are white Europeans, but historically, rather than the experience of colonizers we are more familiar with the feeling of being colonized.
So much about history and the above posts.
To counter this, I know that nowadays there are some resorts called "Western Towns" and they are very bad taste and purely commercial. And of course, New Age is also popular in our country...
I am thankful that I can learn more about the First Nations from this forum and how in our times the New Age movement has continued to colonize and distort their culture and even religion for financial gains. I had never thought of it this way.