[Note: I am only one of many
purveyors of what is currently happening in and around Big Mountain.
It is done in hopes that others out there will see the need for the support
of the Dine'h, and will become activitely involved in whatever way they
can. I do this with permission only because it is the right thing
to do. The time now is to think with your heart.]
Dear Friends, Supporters and
Relations,
This is a brief and long update.
I have included some information about the traditional Hopi positions
and a brief background. As a Dineh from Big Mtn., I feel I can speak about our
relatives who are also in struggle and are affected by the same harsh
policies. Some of my great teachers in the movement have been Hopi elders,
and they have tremendously inspired me to
continue the fight to save
Black Mesa and to stand up for Indian communities
that are in resistance against
the capitalist aggression of the U.S.
At home in Big Mountain, winter
is still trying to reclaim the season despite the altered global
climate. The BIA Range Technicians with their BIA Police on guard in the distance
have been notifying the elder livestock owners about the new regulations
for the year 2001. Most resistors do have far too many animals, and
a few are trying to keep their animals safe from the Range Techs. Though things
seem quiet, the BIA-Hopi authorities continue
to monitor: supporters, wood
hauling, repair work done to corrals or homes, any evidences of ceremonial
gathers, and occasional aerial surveys of grazing activities.
The Office of the U.S. Attorney
has just, late this past year, opened a new office in Flagstaff. They
aren't disclosing much but that they only stated they are there to deal with
issues on the reservations and national parks. As some of you might know,
they are to be responsible of the finally
eviction proceedings of the
last, remaining Dineh resistors. Despite this new development, the elders
are still determined to stay on their ancestral lands and their birthplaces.
Also, Peabody Western Coal Company is planning on opening a new mine on the
"HPL" which will ultimately be infringing upon
the sacred Big Mountain geography.
This means that Peabody's lease will expand into most of Cactus
Valley and the northern perimeter of Big Mountain, and that some of
the current resistors are still holding residency in this area.
I. State of Dineh-Hopi
Alliance to Resist Cultural Determination
There had been much important
concerns raised, among indigenous and non-Indian supporters, about
support from the traditional Hopis for the Dineh resistance against relocation.
Stories and information have surfaced,
recently, in relations to
this question, but these information seem to have slightly touched upon what
the overall atmosphere is with the Hopi traditionals who are opposed
to the coal mining and the current relocation activities.
Though, I'm from Big Mountain
and have had close association with the late traditional Hopi leaderships,
I still cannot get a better glimpse of how certain traditionally-minded
Hopis feel towards the injustices inflicted upon their Dineh neighbors.
First let me apologize for the lack of a clear understanding on traditional
Hopi position. However, I like to make you aware of how events of Dineh
and Hopi alliance have, perhaps, shaped the present statuses and will
shape the struggle in the future against the termination of their culture
in northern Arizona.
These information which have
come about points to the fact that there is a state repression occurring
within the Hopi villages. Witness reports have stated that certain Hopi traditionals
who wish to maintain alliance with the Dineh, relocation resistors
are living under a state of fear. These Hopi traditional voices, that still
question Peabody Coal Company's involvement of the 70s in the creation
of the "land-dispute" legislation, are being silenced by the progressive
Hopi tribal council. The few Dineh resistors who have attempted to make direct
contact with Hopi support have been confronted with little response or
actions due to this sort of official, BIA-Hopi 'gagged order.' Some successful
contacts made with the traditional Hopi support were in a controlled setting
and were conducted briefly and in secrecy. Those Hopi activists
in the village have confirmed a sense of fear of potential repercussion
if they openly demonstrate such alliances within the well, divided village
communities.
How could this be possible?
The Relocation Law from 1974 is supposed to cater, unconditional, to all
Hopi rights related to their needs or concerns. This law and its proponents
had sought to revive Hopi culture since much of the 'lands' have been lost
to "Dineh squatters." The 1974 Law, supposedly, provides freedom for Hopis
to decide how to utilize the 900,000 acres "awarded" to them by the U.S.
Congress. Thus, this repression against the traditional village members
only confirms that there are certain hidden clauses in the 1974 Act designed
to eliminate the ancient and the untainted Hopi sovereign authority.
Thereby, the new Hopi government is given responsible to enforce the
undermining of traditional Hopi activism, and the efforts to maintain ancient
practices for the Hopi Way of Peaceful Living. One example is a couple of
editorials from the past year written by Hopis which all basically states
concerns about how new regulations tends to dictate how preparation for
seasonal dances will be conducted, and how they can be performed. The editorials
strongly mentions that the original way of doing the ceremonies is much
endangered, and it is rapidly transforming into nothing but a festival or
a social entertainment instead of being a highly sacred form of worship.
The 1974 Law ("Navajo-Hopi
Land Settlement Act") has helped to strengthen the modern, progressive Hopi
tribal council by adapting various, anti-indigenous ordinances
which regulates the lives of Dineh within the 'partitioned areas.' Likewise,
these same ordinances apply to the few Hopi traditionals who still honor
old covenants with Great Spirit. This Law has also allowed the federal government
to forced payment onto the Hopis for lands claims....a payment
which the traditional Hopis have long opposed. So basically, the Hopis having
no treaty status with the U.S. have no lands, now. All of northeastern Arizona
that once encompassed Hopi religious and migrations sites, including
the present village areas and the 1977 partitioned areas has been
officially SOLD. Along with millions of dollars in federal government rewards
(i.e. after the success with the Accommodation Agreement) plus the 55 million
dollars for the land claims, the new, progressive Hopi government
can be the most efficient and effective council to pose much threat towards
their own Hopi Way of Peace. The new way of peace is the systemically-improved
BIA-Hopi police force. This particular law enforcement agency is
to serve and protect the State and its energy companies by exterminating
the lives of the Dineh and traditional Hopi resistors.
This law has mainly served
and catered to Indian interest by strengthening the colonial emphasis for
tribal governments through such 'tribal ordinances and constitutions.' The ultimate results is to severe all traditional and ancestral ties to the Mother
Earth. With the new bursting, economic budget of tribal councils and the
rural, isolated region of Dineh-Hopi nations, the vicious Public Laws of the
U.S. continues to dictate the removal of Hopi ancient practices and the
physical removal of Dineh residents. This is, only, some of the reasons
why the approaches in confronting this corporate greed must be initiated from
the indigenous point of view meaning that, it must involve an honor for
any indigenous input. This is what it means to Honor Indian Treaties, Honor
Native Resistance and working at the
international level. At this
time in point, WE as Dineh or Hopi and non-Indians supporters should
have learned that, when we deal in domestic laws and judicial systems
we further deplete the little aboriginal rights and identity that native resistance
still defends. Yes, the Indians are to continually be reminded and
be assisted in rebuilding its acknowledgement towards its responsibility
in making this happen. Yes, it must be recognized what aspect of Indian activism
are responsible in making this happen, and what aspects are there to
seek 'hand-outs'.....those remnants of the "hang-around-fort Indians."
As the high tech-world anticipate
a new and efficient era of leisure and convenience, traditional indigenous
societies are vanishing and certainly, the poisoning of the environment
increases. Similarly, it is happening on Black Mesa, and WE must educate
ourselves about the history of the Big Mountain and traditional Hopi
resistance, thoroughly, and stop making assumption about what localized
legal maneuvers might help Dineh elder resistors. Let's try to understand
that, one example is that WE must physically work alongside
elder resistors in securing their livelihood and establish a promise/trust
that, the Peoples' new time of activism will be there for them. According
to the state of indigenous resistance of Black Mesa, someday, Dineh activism
might have to help in the liberation of the traditional fulfillment of
the Hopi Way of Peace.
II. Legacy of the Navajo-Hopi
Unity Committee
There is another untold story
which supports the claims that, there is
mining company interest or
involvement and that, there is no actual land-dispute in existence.
For about 40 years, there has been traditional Hopi opposition to the modern,
Hopi tribal council --a council, originally, formed for the purpose of leasing lands for mineral explorations. These traditional Hopi resistance
to the Bureau of Indian Affairs' educational system and tribal government
constitution have confronted various attempts to eliminate their village
sovereignty. Since 1944, the traditional Hopis begin rejecting the U.S. Military
draft that caused many of them to be imprisoned on Alcatraz Island
in the San Francisco Bay. They continued their refusal to American rule and
began outlining their ancient prophecy to the General Assembly of the United
Nations. Their message to the world was about the foretelling of the atomic
bombs, future world disorder that can engulf America and future losses
of land to corporate greed.
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s,
they maintained strong opposition against the formulation of a permanent
tribal government. They organized non-violent demonstrations to stop water
and electrical lines from entering their traditional communities, and
the new minority, tribal council's modernization efforts failed.
When Peabody Western Coal Company got its first mining lease in 1962,
traditional Hopis joined the traditional Dineh in opposing Peabody's establishment
of the mines. These humbly but intelligently alert, traditional
Hopis have traveled to the headquarters of Los Angeles Water and Power
and Southern California Edison to protest these utility companies' involvement
with Peabody. Armed with their non-treaty status, their credible prophecy
and sovereign powers, they also traveled to Washington D.C. and, numerous
times, to the United Nations to call for Peace, and a stop to the mining
of Black Mesa. They turned their attention
to the Hopi tribal council's role in the so-called, "land-dispute,"
around 1971. The traditional spokes people like Mina Lansa, Earl Pela, David
Monongya, and interpreter, Thomas Banyacaya, warned Navajos in the Joint-Use
Area about the Relocation and Land Partition Bill being introduced into
the U.S. House of Representatives. The traditionals from both sides
formed the Navajo-Hopi Unity Committee to work vigorously against this
Relocation Bill and against the actions of the progressive members of the
Hopi tribal council. Despite the powerful forces of the Unity Committee, the
federal government and its BIA-backed tribal governments succeeded in having
the Bill become an Executive Order. In the decades following and until
their deaths, these outspoken, traditional Hopis continued their reassurance
to the Dineh relocation resistors that, the ancient Way of Hopi Life supports
a continued and homogenous Dineh-Hopi cultural existence on Black
Mesa and Big Mountain.
"I just want to say," Hotevilla
Hopi elder, David Monongya, reiterated, "that We never want you, Navajos,
to ever give up in protecting this land! Stay on your land! If (they)
move you off this land, (they) will destroy Mother Earth, and there will
be nothing but great famine." (Katenay, notes from Dineh Nation Resistance
Conference, November 1977)
Thomas Banyacaya, traditional
interpreter, also, reminded the Dineh resistors, " We, the traditional
Hopis, are NOT the ones who wishes for you all to relocate or that, We
are NOT the ones who want the Land. It is the Hopi tribal council and their
white lawyers who are helping the coal company so that, these lands can be
mined after you all have been relocated. All the coal and water resources that
(they) take out is NOT for us, Indians, but it is to make electricity for
cities like Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Phoenix." (Hard Rock Chapter Meeting,
Summer 1974)
III. Support is Still Important
and most Urgently
Finally, there is a long ancient
and historical integration among Dineh and Puebloan societies that have
been obliterated by modern anthropologic thoughts and assimilation.
Even in Big Mountain and elsewhere throughout Black Mesa, there are unique
old stories of Dineh-Hopi interactions and cooperation. Furthermore,
there are endless amount disclosures of contemporary native resistance
and movements that has influenced the original foundations of the
Dineh-Hopi alliance to save Black Mesa and the Four Corners region. On the
other hand, there is also the mechanism of the colonial establishment and
its Indian policies that has instituted tribal governments and constitutions.
Dineh elder resistors of today is only 'thetip of the iceberg' so, we all need to see deeper if we wish to help strengthen our commitments
to indigenous rights or to universal endeavors of grassroots movements, environmental
activism and reinstating appropriate justice and equality for all
of humanity. Helps us, through your strong will for understanding and curiosity
for human wisdom, and we need to, as difficult as it is, demonstrate
solidarity with the actual sounds of Prayer. Live what we say: Solidarity, Honor, Respect, and Prayers for the Elders!
I will suggest several things
you all can do to help and protect these resistors' culture and human
rights. Also, you will have to make other contacts with other resources
to further see what additional ideas there are. You can forward this
info to others or have Alternative Media outlets reprint this. Put this type
of info about Big Mountain on community radio stations. Set up call in radio
shows or taped interviews. If you are a student or have access to
colleges or university, introduce this information to student organization and
suggest inviting speakers. Groups and organization can also try
to invite speakers to benefit events or other related events like environmental
conferences or indigenous gatherings. You or your friends might have
time to visit Arizona, and they may have extra time to help the elders or people on the land so, try to arrange for a visit and a stay on the land, but
find out more about the conditions in helping and staying. On-Land Support
for the elders is always requested. At the moment, some of the resistors
are requesting for help, and long-term help is most helpful. Please take
notice that, the Big Mountain region is very remote and is located far
from any towns or cities with airports or other necessary conveniences.
We shall speak, again. Thank
you for your time and your continued thoughts for the Dineh elders resistors
and for the Hopi relations.
In the Spirit of Chief Barboncito,
Bahe Reachable via Other Contacts or Options for
acquiring about further information and
Louise Benally via Dennis Kootshongsie via Hopi
Indian Nation
Local Support Group based in
Flagstaff, Arizona:
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"We will be known by the tracks
page created January 17, 2001,
by Louve14
we leave hehind."
Dakota Proverb