A Cheyenne Chief takes viewers on a telescopic tour of his great-great grandfathers journey from the Sand Creek Massacre in 1864 into the 20th Century while images of Darfur magnify genocide. Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples oral histories color the tour. Their ancestors transform from peace-seeking to fighting to vowing theyll stay on this earth forever. The fabric of the film exhibits genocide, past and present. It weaves a story of unfulfilled peace treaties. The peace-seeking Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle evolves from peace-seeking to peace-seeking when he is finally murdered at Washita. The enigmatic Colonel John M. Chivington who said, Nits make lice in referring to Indian children, transforms from a minister, to a war hero, to a murderer, and the man termed, Americas first 19th century real estate developer, Colorado Territorial Governor John Evans, who said, We need to get rid of these pesky Indians, develops from a medical doctor to a governor to being forced to resign because of his part in the Sand Creek Massacre.