Like the rest of the country, California has two separate histories
- one that's sterilized, disemboweled and taught to children in grade
school, and the truths that Native Americans know on a visceral level.
But if the state's native past is especially brutal, it also has been
hidden particularly well.
"It's kind of a buried past," said Dave Singleton, program analyst
for the California Native American Heritage Commission. "It's an untold
history."
Maybe that's why the past constantly resurfaces in the present.
Throughout North America, the struggles of First Nations peoples
continue. The Elsipogtog people of New Brunswick have been using their
bodies to blockade
at a fracking project on sacred land by Houston-based Southwestern
Energy Company. Their efforts resulted in a paramilitary-style raid on
their encampment in October by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. But
their action continues.
Meanwhile, as Native Americans nationwide are pushing to change the name of an NFL team from a racial slur, Lakota Indians are petitioning
the United Nations with complaints against the US government of
genocide. The Kizh-GabrieleƱo of Los Angeles and Orange counties filed a
grievance
with The Hague over desecration of Indian burials in Downtown L.A., an
issue that continually plagues them in a region beset by high land
values and relentless development.
Environmental destruction and cultural desecration of sacred sites
and burials have driven Native Americans to initiate broad
indigenous-led movements like Idle No More and the Dakota Unity Ride, demanding protection of the Earth, natural resources, sacred ancestral lands and grave sites.
But while those battles rage on the national and even global level,
in California, many indigenous find themselves blocked from achieving
the most basic hurdle in self-determination - federal recognition.
Specifics of California history make it impossible for many to meet
federal criteria as they battle misperceptions that no California
Indians are left.
"How many people think all California Indians are dead? But we are
still here,"
This is the opening of an article with links which can be read in full here and what follows are snippets from the same. Genocide, forced assimilation, denial of history, repeated traits of capitalist development. These people are not dead - they are alive and kicking back.
In the layered history of Spanish missions, Mexican and American rule
meant tribes were dispersed genetically and geographically, many
brought to the brink of extinction. In the mid-1800s, 18 treaties
setting aside 7.5 million acres of land were negotiated with Indian
communities, but thanks to powerful political lobbying, none of the treaties was ratified.
"People assume no reservation means no Indians, but that's backward,"
As settlers spread west at the commencement of American rule,
discovery of gold and high-value real estate created a zeal to take land
and rid it of its original inhabitants, resulting in unquenchable
bloodlust, with the government paying people to kill California Indians.
"In 1854 alone, the federal government paid in excess of $1.4 million
(to kill Indians) at $5 a head, 50 cents a scalp," Sayers said. "In the
1850s and 1860s, to say you were Indian was suicidal with the amount of
money paid to professional Indian killers."
Furthermore, the need for free human labor prompted the 1850 Act for
the Government and Protection of Indians, known to critics as the Indian Slave Act, which allowed whites to basically kidnap Indians and force them to work against their will.
While Californians are generally familiar with large out-of-state
tribes like the Iroquois, Cherokee, Navajo and Sioux, few have heard
about the Ohlone, Kizh, Esselen or Kumeyaay. The three-layered history
of colonial conquest in California was so ruthless that destruction of
the state's native peoples seemed inevitable. Throughout California,
there are little-known or unrecognized sites of Indian massacres – Las
Flores Canyon, McCain Valley, Mendocino and Modoc counties, just to name
a few.
"All those massacres around the gold country, California has not owned up to the genocide,"
While entire family units fleeing Europe were landing on the East
Coast, the Spanish were intent on protecting geopolitical interests by
creating a physical buffer zone with native converts and colonial
subjects. The task of Franciscan padres and accompanying soldiers was to
subjugate Indians, not wipe them out.
But Spanish imperial rule set off a disastrous chain of events so
destructive that between 1769 and 1900, the California Indian population
declined by a catastrophic 95 percent.
"There really is a very specific California story that comes out of these missions," said Leslie Dunton-Downer, writer for the California Mission Ride,
a documentary film team that rode 600 miles on horseback through all 21
missions. "There is the universal colonial story, but what happened
here was a very particular thing."
Even though the goal wasn't outright genocide during the 64 years of
Spanish rule, the missions, stretching from the San Diego border to
Sonoma, were characterized by forced conversions, dehumanizing corporeal
punishment, slave labor, deadly disease outbreaks and widespread rape
and abuse by Spanish soldiers.
But when the Spanish era ended in the early 1820s, Mexico secularized
the missions. And for the GabrieleƱo, this resulted in a massacre at
Las Flores Canyon near what is now the Rose Bowl. According to the
eyewitness account of a Californian named Philippe Lugo stored at the
Huntington Library in San Marino, Mexican forces destroyed "the greater
part of them."
The few survivors lived in fear and hid with Mexican families,
changed their names and identities, gave up their native language and
learned Spanish, Salas said.
Or tribe members were terrorized and physically separated from each other.
"Many of the native peoples would go back to their village that was
no longer, and they were rounded up. Usually, one or two were killed to
set an example for runaways,"
The Bureau of Indian Affairs' Office of Federal Recognition criteria
require that native tribes applying for recognition demonstrate a
semblance of cohesion from "historical times" to the present period, something rendered impossible for many California Indians.
"About 50 percent of California Indians are not recognized tribally,"
Sayers said. "The criteria for recognition, for anyone that's
affiliated with a mission, there's no way in hell they can make the
requirements. So consequently, it leaves the un-federally recognized
tribes in a very horrible situation."
For example, she said, federal law makes it impossible for the Ohlone
to claim about 12,000 burials sitting in a basement of an old gymnasium
at UC Berkeley. They are prevented from burying their kin according
Ohlone beliefs and customs.
Whole article with links here
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