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From: redorman@theofficenet.com
The View From The Hogan #11
"The sound little eagles make"
month March 2000
Notes from Big Mountain
Ya'a'tee
Things are starting to quiet down round here
now, so I have had the chance to read the local papers from the
past month or so, and am somewhat disturbed by some of the
propaganda being churned out by the Hopi Tribal
Council. Most of it is simply transparent, but there are two
related themes that I find disturbing. The first is that the HTC
are speaking for the Hopi people. Now I don't know any government
that speaks for the people they
purport to represent, and the history of the Hopi people this
century makes it quite clear that in the case of the imposed HTC
this is very much the case. As with most (if not all)
governments, the HTC speaks and acts for a
small elite who benefit by their policies. The second point,
related to the first is that the Hopi people are being told by
the HTC that they (the people) are being blamed for the actions
of the HTC, that they are being
demonized, and that supporters of the resisting Dineh are somehow
threatening them. I even heard that on the day of the deadline
(Feb 1st) one Hopi village "closed" itself to
outsiders. This is absurd,... there were no supporters anywhere
near the Hopi villages, and I have never heard anyone make any
threats against the Hopi people. A government creates terror in
its own people with imaginary enemies. Does this sound familiar?
So, I would like to state categorically that I have never, and
will never, blame the Hopi people for what their Tribal Council
is doing, and I hope the Hopi people know that the supporters of
the resisting Dineh are in no way a threat to them. Divide and
conquer is a well tried formula.
On a related theme, in a couple of days is the
first "exclusion" trial in Hopi Court. As I've stated
before, this is an insidious piece of legislation, that if acted
upon gives the HTC the power to exclude anyone at all from Hopi
land who they consider a threat to the Hopi Tribe. This first
trial is for Arlene Hamilton, and her "crime" is that
for 6 weeks she co-ordinated last summers Education/Witness camp.
How this is a threat to Hopi people is beyond my powers of
imagination. The students who came to the camp to learn
traditional Dineh skills were invited by the residents of the
land. They caused no trouble, left no mess, where is the threat
to people who live 30 miles away? The simple fact is that the
Witness Camp was a help to the Dineh residents. This is what the
HTC wishes to discourage. If they get away with this exclusion,
then the way is open for the HTC to banish any supporters of the
Dineh, and ultimately will give them the power to evict the
residents themselves.
As of today, I have not heard of any eviction
notices being sent out yet. Things are quiet. Maybe they are
waiting till all the visitors leave and interest wanes. Maybe
they are waiting to see what the outcome of the
Manybeads case is. Maybe they just really don't know what the
hell they are doing. I didn't go the Manybeads hearings myself,
but I've had a couple of reports. Seems like the judge will make
his decision in a matter of weeks or months. Personally, I don't
think there is a snowball in Hell's chance that the case will be
won. Of course, if there was any justice then the people would
win the case, as most blatantly and obviously their
constitutional rights are being trampled on, but I think the US
Govt. cannot allow the case to be won. Then the floodgates would
be opened for any other "Land-based" religions to make
claims for the return of their land. I can't see the
military/nuclear complex giving back Nevada to the Indians, so I
suspect we will see some semantic gymnastics proving that the
peoples case has no merit.
When the Prayer Walk came through here I was
wearing a totally cool "T" shirt, and many people asked
if they could buy one. Unfortunately I didn't know where to get
them at the time, but have since tracked down the supplier.
The design is a black line drawing of Roberta Blackgoat with the
following words. "BIG MOUNTAIN...... Roberta Blackgoat the
Warrior..... They are taking away all I have, my life, my
culture, my homeland.... All I have left are my dreams and
footprints to show you that I was here. This they cannot take
away from me and I will fight forever..... My children, pick up
my feathers and follow in my footsteps..... this is our home and
I will not go away...". If you want to see the T shirts
design, go to www.lisn.net,
then link to the page of Roberta's statement (is anyone
listening?). The email address for the shirts is giannahorse75@hotmail.com.
Be the envy of everyone in your neighborhood and order one today.
On February 17th the European Parliament
passed a resolution condemning the forced relocation of the
Dineh, and the continuing mining operation, and calling for both
activities to cease. Of course, having more guns and bombs than
anyone else means that the U.S. Govt. doesn't really care what
anyone else in the world thinks, but I think the American people
should know that their Govt. is being watched, and their claim to
be guardian of human rights in the world is a hypocritical
stance.
The Big Mountain benefit in Prescott AZ is
coming up on the 16th. Scheduled to appear are Burning Spear (who
I am reliably informed are a political Hip-Hop band), Company of
Prophets (a spoken word group), and Art
and Revolution (a group using puppets and theatre) As well there
will be other presentations, and a rug show. All proceeds will go
to the purchase of supplies and food for the residents of Big
Mountain. Doors open at 6, and
tickets are $12 in advance and $15 on the night.
The Feb 17th-23rd issue of Boulder Weekly has
an excellent article on Big Mountain, with some beautiful photos.
The article is titled "The New Long Walk" and is by Ben
Corbett. Boulder Weekly's web address is
WWW.boulderweekly.com,
and their email is: editorial@boulderweekly.com.
I'm sure they can make the article available.
Last month , I made the observation that many
of the people who come here to help and witness are creative
people of various kinds. As I look around the hogan, there are
paintings, drawings, poems, photos, leatherwork,
jewelry, ceramic objects,..... all kinds of beautiful things that
have been made by these visitors while they were here, and I
realize one characteristic of creative people is that wherever
they go, they leave something behind. The converse is also true,
when they leave they take something of Big Mountain with them. An
exchange takes place. This is a subject that has come to
fascinate me. I think what has been happening at Big Mountain for
the past 25 years or so is a unique cross-cultural laboratory. On
the one hand you have the largest community of traditional
indigenous people left in the US. Most of the elders do not speak
English, and continue to live in the ways of their ancestors. On
the other hand, over the years there have been many thousands of
visitors from other cultures who have spent time here. Many of
these people have been powerfully affected and changed by what
they have experienced here, and this is what fascinates me. I
believe that in the stories these visitors have to tell is
information that is vital to be heard. I believe true
cross-cultural exchange has taken place, and if the cultural
diversity of the planet is to be saved, then these stories are
relevant.
So, my request is this, if you have spent time
here at Big Mountain, and have been changed by this experience, I
would like to hear your stories. I'm not interested in names,
dates, places, rather the experiences that triggered
internal changes. I have already heard from many ex-sheepherders,
and already there are commonalties in their stories. Anything you
share with me will of course be confidential.
All land is sacred. All life is sacred, and
life is fed by the land.
That's not complicated to figure out. But there are places that
are more sacred than others. Big Mountain for instance. Over the
past weeks I have listened as visitors try to put into words just
what the power is that they
experience here. Whatever that power is, it must be
connected to the people who live in a sacred way upon sacred
land. When those people are removed, the land will suffer.
Down south of here, in Apache country, there
is another sacred Mountain being abused. Known as Mount Graham to
the dominant society, the mountain, which is very important to
the traditional Apache is being desecrated by the construction of
Observatories. The main culprit seems to be the University of
Arizona, though the German Max Planck Institute is a partner, as
is the Vatican..... seems like they are looking for aliens to
convert (honestly).
Anyway, some years ago a coalition of Traditional Apaches and
environmentalist were successful in a law suit against the U of
A. They were breaking Indian religious Freedom law and
environmental law. No problem
though, as a local congressman added a "rider" to a
bill that exempted the U of A from these laws. The point of this
ramble is that each summer a Sacred Run is held, running across
the rez and up the mountain. Those of you who enjoyed the Prayer
Walk might like to take part. Drop me a line and I'll have more
info for you.
Back in the real world, spring is arriving,
which basically means some days its winter, some days its summer.
The days are noticeably longer, which by coincidence means there
are more chores to fill the day. Out with the
sheep I have come across the first "wild carrots"
popping up. Good sheepherder munchies, though they taste more
like radishes than carrots. Also wild onions are appearing. Every
now and then I come across the trail that
the Prayer Walk took across the land, and the footprints are
still visible. I get Goosebumps still. The garden is being
prepared, and the Angora goats are stating to molt already, so
shearing cannot be far away.
I'd like to introduce you to the number one
spectator sport round here right now. I call it Kindergarten Cop.
The deal is this. You have a corral, and in the corral a flock of
sheep and goats with their recent offspring.
The object is to separate the the babies from the rest of the
flock. The reason is that the little ones are just not strong
enough to keep up with their mommas. I've seen sheep in other
parts of the country, and they are
just let out into a field full of thick grass and just lie around
all day. That's not how it works here. This is high-desert, and
life is hard for the 4 legged as well as the 2 legged. To get
enough to eat, the flock must cover a
lot of ground, and when its cold they tend to move fast. Its no
walk in the park either, rather scrambling up and down canyons,
over ridges etc, so the little ones need to stay behind until
they are strong enough..
Until the little ones are 3 or 4 days old,
they just stand there and let you pick them up, but after 4 days
they have figured out the game and will do whatever they can to
avoid being caught. Beginner sheepherders usual try the straight
forward lunge,..... but I have to tell you that over a short
distance, a week old lamb can out sprint a 2 legged and also,
like a rabbit or a good running back a lamb can radically change
direction instantaneously.
This usually leads to the sheepherder sprawling into the ground.
(Much to the amusement of the audience that usually gathers to
watch) One preferred method of catching the little ones is with a
lariat. Unfortunately my rope-throwing skills are not adequate,
so I prefer the use of a walking stick with a curved handle. This
in effect give me a 5 foot arm. Even so, the little ones usually
catch on and make sure they stay out of reach, so I resort to
trickery. I approach obliquely, at a tangent to the one I want to
snag, and I point, look, and talk in the opposite direction, then
at the last moment a quick swipe with the stick and I've got'em.
Hand the prisoner over to my assistant outside the corral who
then puts it in the kindergarten pen, then I go for the next. It
can take a good while to catch them all. I'm thinking of trying
to get it entered as an Olympic event,.... sure is a lot more
interesting than synchronized swimming.
It may appear that there is not much
"news" from here right now. In fact that's the best
news. Life goes on as it should.
At the end of this letter is an even more
recent statement by Roberta Blackgoat. Over the years she has
been very prolific in the output of her statements, and I am in
the process of transcribing them to disk. So far I have 15
completed, with about 20 more to go. Many of you out there are
putting Roberta's statements on Web Pages, so if any of you would
like to put up an archive of all her words, please let me know
and I can send them to you, and send more as I finish
transcribing them.
And finally, there is another strain of
thought that is being put out by the mainstream media and the
various clowns (Washington, Window Rock, Kykotsmovi), and that is
that it's "all over" here. That the forced removal
of these Elders is inevitable.
HAH!!!!!
But then, what the hell do I know, I'm just a
sheepherder
Thank you for giving
me your time by reading this
Your prayers, support, & correspondence are invited
"Those who can
make you believe absurdities can make you commit
atrocities"
For all my relations
BoPeep
(reachable via unclejake74@hotmail.com)
P.S. To all those who have written to me, please be aware that my
highest priorities are the flock, the firewood, and the Grandmas,
email is not, therefore it may take as long as a half moon
between when you write, and
when you hear back from me. Around here the information
superhighway is sometimes no faster than the Pony Express. Please
be patient, you will hear from me.
If you have received this update as a forward, but want to sure
of getting them in the future, please let me know and I will add
you to the list. Also if there are any "back
issues" you don't have, again, let me know.
Please feel free to distribute (unedited) this email.
STATEMENT BY ROBERTA BLACKGOAT. Feb 2000
My name is Roberta Blackgoat. I am of the
Bitterwater Clan, born for Salt Clan. I was born October 1917,
thus I am 83 years old.
I am still living on the land that I was born
on and the land that my ancestors passed on to me. Oral history
tells that this land was given to us by the Holy People;
boundaries drawn with prayers and ceremonies between the sacred
mountains with instructions to take care of the land. The four
sacred mountains encompass a hogan. The area we are on, Big
Mountain, is the altar in the hogan. Dzil leezh (Mountain
Bundles) were made to bind us to the earth. The bundles have
hooghan biyiin (hogan song) and dzil biyiin (Mountain song) that
have been handed down, unchanged through the generations. That is
the road to life. Today's colonialist educational system has
disturbed these precise instructions.
Our bundle is not respected by the relocation
law (PL 93-531) nor by the non-Indian society. Our religion is
disregarded, discounted and invalidated by laws devoid of
understanding of the spiritual ties to land and life.
The U.S. government enlists our Native
Americans to serve for this country's ideals. They are using them
to protect liberty and justice for their elite few. Our Dine
language was even used in World War II to help turn
the tide of the war in the South Pacific.
The exploitation of Mother Earth's natural
resources is destruction of sacred land and genocide of
Indigenous/Dine people. We further grieve the loss of land by
Presidential decrees to establish National Monuments. Instead,
these lands should be given back to the rightful
owners/guardians, the Native Americans.
Many of my relatives have been relocated to
land contaminated with radioactive waste. The Navajo Hopi Indian
Relocation Commission is still actively pressuring Dine facing
relocation to move there. Residents have to
buy and transport potable water. Many of the relocatees have died
of suicide, homicide, loneliness and health reasons. My relatives
are in concentration camps similar to Fort Sumner and Auschwitz.
The present action of the U.S. government is a historical repeat
of the Long Walk of 1864-1868, when eight thousand Dine people
perished.
I am appealing to the American public and
citizens of the world to protest our demise and eventually repeal
Public Law 93-531 (Navajo-Hopi Indian resettlement Act of 1974)
and any subsequent genocidal laws. Your hard
earned tax dollars fund these atrocities as well as expanding the
police state in America. This fleecing of America is happening
unbeknownst to you and your elected leaders. However, a few are
even architects of these policies of
destruction.
All I want is public support to assist our
valiant struggle to maintain our sovereign sustainable lifestyle;
free to carry on with our lives, culture and traditions. I want
our youth to utilize the land and carry on Dine instructions and
our religious traditions. Join me and my Dine people in our quest
for freedom and human rights.
I choose to remain on my ancestral lands. If
they want to relocate me, they have to "SUE THE
CREATOR!" first, because the Creator is the one that put us
here.
This is a BIGMTLIST post.
Email addresses---
To Post message: BIGMTLIST@onelist.com
To Subscribe: BIGMTLIST-subscribe@onelist.com
To Unsubscribe: BIGMTLIST-unsubscribe@onelist.com
For more information on this on-going human rights crisis in the
United States, visit my web page at http://www.theofficenet.com/~redorman/pagea~1.htm
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Link to; The story of the takeover of the Pine Ridge Council Building
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Link to; The View From The Hogan #10
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