294 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
294 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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The View from the Hogan 5 August 1999 170 Days till the "final solution"
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Notes from Big Mountain
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Ya'a'tee
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I have been overwhelmed, both by the quantity of, and the sentiments
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expressed in, the correspondence I have been receiving. Many times I'm asked
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how come I remain so positive and hopeful in the midst of so much suffering,
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and my answer is quite simple. The human beings I interact with on a daily
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basis fall into two groups. The Traditional elders, and those outsiders who
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come here in support. Both groups are among the finest human beings it has
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been my privilege to come into contact with. To put it crudely, I rarely
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meet assholes. Now, thanks to the wonders of the Information Superhighway, I
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am hearing from many other fine human beings. I pass some of your messages
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on to some of the Grandmas, and, like myself, they are strengthend by your
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support. My thanks to you all, and to Unclejake for letting me use his
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email.
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Many people have enquired as to what is the best way to support Big
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Mountain and the resisters, so I offer the following thoughts.
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The question of how to support an issue can sometimes be complex.
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Sometimes its easiest to pop a cheque in the mail to some big organization,
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and let them take care of it. However, as usual, the easiest solution is
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rarely the best. If you are like me, that is to say have access to less
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than infinite resources, you would want to make sure your support was as
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effective as it could be. Most bang for your buck, so to speak. The
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question of support for Big Mountain is complicated by a couple of
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factors that contribute to misunderstanding. Both of these factors
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are intrinsic to what the traditional Dineh considers respectfully
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relating to others. The first factor is that no-one speaks for anyone
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else. Each individual speaks for themselves. Consequently there are
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no "organizations" that speak for everyone. This can also give the
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illusion that resistance here is without unity. The second factor
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is that it is considered improper to tell another person what to
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do. For instance I might ask a Grandma "do you want me to chop
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some wood?" and I may well get the answer "I don't know", whereas
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if I were to ask "would it be good if some wood got chopped?" I would
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more likely get a positive answer. This again means there is some
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misunderstanding of what the elders are saying, if the question was
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asked in a particular way.
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Therefore it should be absolutely clear that anything I write is just me
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speaking for myself. Its just my opinion, though it is opinion that is
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informed by listening to the Grandmas and the rest of the people here, and
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by observing how different forms of support affect their struggle.
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In the following visual metaphor, the boundary between "bands" is blurred,
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and energy travels in towards the center, and also outwards.
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Imagine a circle with concentric circles inside it, kind of like a bulls
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eye. In the outer ring I would place support activities that fall under the
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heading of outreach and awareness. Such simple things as talking to your
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friends and family about what is happening here. Producing material such as
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video and flyers. Writing to politicians. Getting stuff in the
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media.(forwarding this email?) The more attention that gets focussed here,
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the safer these people will be. On the next band in I would place all
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support activities that allow the resistors themselves to speak out. Such
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things as providing lodging, food, and travel costs to allow resistors to
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attend benefits, rug shows, court hearings, and also (gulp!) help with
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lawyers. Such simple things as postage stamps, enevelopes, fotocopying cash,
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etc. As we get closer to the heart of the resistance here we come to the
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next band, on-land support. There are people who come here and help out by
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herding the sheep, chopping wood, hauling water, driving the elders, fixing
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things etc. In the main these people live so far below the poverty line that
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its laughable. Many times a little sponsorship of food, tobacco, etc means
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they could stay longer. Also there are organizations that help provide
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on-land support and do not use any donations except to support the people
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here. The presence of people here acts as a deterrence to the abuses of
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certain "law enforcement agencies". As the deadline approaches, this kind of
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support will be more necessary. Most people cannot come here, but maybe you
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can support those who do. For myself, the strength of the resistance here
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comes from daily life,... a way of life,... a way of "being in the world".
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Anything that is done to aid these people simply live their lives,
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contributes to the resistance. So we come to the next -to-last ring. Helping
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the people live their lives. At any particular time, you could ask a family
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what their pressing needs are and you would get differing answers. For some
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it might be food. For others gas money. For someone else a part to fix their
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truck. Maybe some building supplies for repairs. Or hay and grain for the
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animals.Again, I know of organizations that bring in food and supplies and
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don't spend donations on administration. The centre of the mandala I have
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been constructing for you is ceremony. The people here have resisted the
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multinational corporations and U.S. government for close to 30 years. (some
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would say 500 years). I know of no-one else who has succeeded in this to the
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extent of these people. The reason is ceremony. This is where there strength
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comes from Ceremonies. can be expensive, so any financial support given for
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this purpose is, as far as I'm concerned, the most effective place to put
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money.
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I have of course omitted the simplest, yet most inconvenient, way to
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support here,.... BUY LESS STUFF! Use less water, electricity, oil, etc That
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is the ultimate cause of the situation here. Our unacknowledged greed is
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what fuels the need for the genocide being practised here and in too many
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other spots on the planet. I do not subscribe to the commonly held view that
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all of this is inevitable. We need to just say no, and the best place to
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start is in our own daily lives. Examine the things you purchase, ask
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yourself which part of the planet was raped to provide it, which people have
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suffered to provide it to you so cheaply. Most of all ask yourself do you
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really need it. Each of us is complicit in varying degrees to the situation
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here at Big Mountain. We have a choice.
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The preceding ramble shows, I hope, a wide array of opportunities for
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people to make a difference. If I can be of any assistance in connecting
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sources of support with recipients of support, then please contact me. In
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offering support here I would ask you to think about what it is you would
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want your support to achieve, and I would reccomend that you try to make a
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personal connection, and build upon that. I must strenuously add that for
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myself I am not asking for any money, got no need for the stuff. I have a
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warm, dry place to sleep, and most days my belly is full. My other needs
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amount to tobacco, good non-fiction books to read, and postage stamps, most
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of which is met by gifts from friends.
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While I was writing this piece I was pleasantly interrupted by the visit to
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the office of two of the Grandmothers, Pauline Whitesinger & Roberta
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Blackgoat. I asked them what I should tell you, and this is what they said.
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Roberta says "Tell them to write to the Congressional leaders and tell them
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that the Creator placed all the indian people in their own lands, with their
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own language and ways, so if the Government wants to move us off our land
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they should first of all SUE THE CREATOR." Pauline says " I need lots of
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help here on the land. There are Hogans and corrals to be repaired and
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built." I would add that those unwilling to work hard need not apply.
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Paulines address is PO Box 1073, Hotevilla, AZ 86030. Robertas is PO Box
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349, Kykotsmovi, AZ 86039. They can also be reached thru this email address.
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Roberta is I'm sure well known to many of you. There are hundreds of
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articles in newspapers, magazines and books, and hundreds of hours of her
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presentations on video and audio tape. At the continued expense of her
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health she still travels widely to tell people about what is happening here.
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Pauline is maybe not so well known, so I would like to tell you about one of
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the first times I met her.
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It was Thanksgiving. I had just picked up 2 other sheepherders and we were
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heading towards Big Mountain. We were attired in our sunday-go-to-meeting
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clothes, which to the untrained eye looked just like the clothes we herded
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sheep in. I was driving War Pony, an "older model" pick-up truck. If War
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Pony ran for 6 months of the year then it was a good year. For the last 2
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days it had performed admirably, driving several hundred miles delivering
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food to the outlying homesites for Thanksgiving. Every year a caravan comes
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to the mesa from all over the States and we deliver food and supplies to all
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the families here. We were heading to Big Mountain to meet up with all the
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people of the caravan to celebrate the successful conclusion of the food run
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with a feast prepared by a culinary magician. For us sheepherders the
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attraction was less the food, but that rarest of commodities here, human
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company that spoke english. We passed Paulines home, which is the only
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homesite on the road for many miles in both directions, and it began to
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snow. A couple of miles down the road we came upon a figure striding along.
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It was Pauline. Dressed in an indeterminate, though large, number of layers
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of clothing, topped off with an apron. On her head a scarf. Her face painted
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in Chee, the red clay worn to protect against sunburn, windburn, and
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coldburn. Slung over her shoulder she carried about 20 pounds of heavy link
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chain. She joined us in the cab of War Pony, 4 in a cab being standard here
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on the rez. I am not fluent in Navajo, but I know enough to be able to
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interject the appropriate exclamations at the right point to give the
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impression that I understand what I'm being told. Consequently Pauline
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believes I understand more than I do, so whenever we meet she chatters away
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continuously. Today was no exception. It turned out that she was on her way
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to her truck which had broken down. Paulines truck is also an "older model"
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pick-up, and if it runs for 3 months of the year then its been a good year.
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On reaching her truck we all got out, and, being guys, we had to twiddle
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around under the hood for a while until we reached the conclusion that
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Pauline already had, that it was broken. All the time Pauline was animatedly
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explaining and pointing to places in the engine where flames had issued.
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There is a twinkle in Paulines eye that ones sees quite often in the elders
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here. As she spoke she smiled constantly and found the whole situation
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humorous. As we came to the conclusion that nothing could be done for the
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truck now, the point of the chain became clear. It was to lock up the hood
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so that the Hopi rangers or BIA could not sabatoge the engine. I asked her
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if I could give her a ride home. NO, NO, she said vigorously shaking her
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head. She pointed out,.... her sheep were out there and some were having
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babies, so she needed to go find them. She strode off into the thickening
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snowstorm. Pauline is in her seventies. She lives alone, miles from
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anywhere. Her knee was bad. Her truck was broken. She had no sheepherder. (
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It was a meager year for sheepherders, I knew of only half a dozen of us
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spread over the whole Mesa.) And yet there was no complaint in her voice,
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only laughter. It is a privilege to be around such wisdom and strength. (As
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a footnote to this story I'd tell you that later that night, on my way home
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from the feast, War Pony broke down. The last 10 miles I had to walk. I
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chuckled)
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One of the many blessings that my life as a sheepherder has ( limitations
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of Hard disk space forbids me from listing them all, I only have a couple of
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Gigabytes) is that I get plenty of time to read. I recently came across a
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couple of snippets of information that I wish to pass on. They are from the
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book "The Kit Carson Campaign. The last great navajo war." by Clifford E.
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Trafzer and is about the round up of the Dineh last century and their
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herding to the concentration camp at Fort Sumner.
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pg 104 "Colonel Carson believed that a major reason for the failure of the
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expedition was that the Hopis were acting in concert with the Navajos, who
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were "continually advised of the movements of any body of troops operating
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in the vicinity of the Moquies (hopis)." To correct what Carson considered
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to be a problem, he told Carleton that there was a great "necessity of
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removing them (the Hopis) to some more hospitable section of the country....
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where they would be out of the power and influence of the Navajoes." He
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stated that "until they are removed I am satisfied that there will always be
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a barrier opposed to the removal of the Navajoes."
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pg 114 " Before Carson arrived at their villages, he "was credibly informed
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that the people of that village (Oraibi) had formed an alliance with the
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Navajoes,".....
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What!!,... how could this be? For years the U.S governement and the Hopi
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Tribal Council have been insisting that the Hopis and Navajos have always
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been enemies. Half a billion dollars of taxpayers money has been spent
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ostensibly to "solve" this ancient dispute. Why would they lie? All along
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the Dine and the traditional hopis have been saying that there was no land
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dispute and that it was an attempt by HTC and feds to gain control of the
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coal. Could they be right? A little later in the book some more evidence
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surfaces.
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pg 182 "Several ranking officials in New Mexico had wanted the Navajos
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removed in 1864, believing that Navajo land was "as rich if not richer in
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mineral wealth than California." Henry Connwlly, governor of the territory,
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as well as the New Mexican legislature, reported to Congress that "vast
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deposits of gold, silver, and other valuable minerals" could be found in the
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mountains of Navajo country. The reason that these mineral deposits had not
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been exploited by whites was because they were "in possession of the
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savages, who are living on the flocks and herds of our people." The Indians
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were not "developing" these natural resources, and many leaders and
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inhabitants of New Mexico favored their removal from the mountains and
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deserts as a means of stealing Navajo lands and establishing "legal" claim
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for the mineral wealth they fully expected to find."
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Well of course, we now know that the gold and silver wasn't there. To
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America the land once again became worthless, and the Navajo were allowed to
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return to it.
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Fast forward some years and the situation changes. Coal, oil, and uranium
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become valuable and the Navajo country is rich in all these mineral
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resources, but wheres Kit Carson when he's needed? Dead of course, and his
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methods are no longer politically expedient. Enter John Boyden, stage left.
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Back in the real world things are relatively quiet on the mesa right now.
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Just life to be getting on with. The Hopi Tribal Councils propaganda machine
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appears to have ground to a halt. Probably off licking their wounds
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somewhere,.. trying to figure out why no-one believes them. ( Hint, try
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telling the truth guys.) The BIA/Hopi Rangers are keeping a low profile.
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Probably all off on some training course in some new hi-tech toys they got
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with all that coal money. For us it means more time and energy can now be
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focussed on what needs doing to keep life going. Cornfields to hoe. Rugs to
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weave. Ceremonies to plan. Puts me in mind of a verse from what is reputed
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to be the oldest Chinese poem.
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Dig your well and drink its water;
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Plow your fields and eat your harvest;
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What has the Emperors might to do with me?
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But always we are waiting to see what game they are going to pull on us
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next. Its also a time when "interest" "out there" tends to slacken. But ,
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dear readers, you're still paying attention, right? It continues to
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rain...... just as the garden is drying out and I think I might need to haul
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some water for it, it rains again. In fact it is so wet here that I have
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heard some people from Seattle consider it safe enough to visit! The sheep
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are out long hours. This is the time of the year that sheepherding is at its
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easiest. Payback for the laborious spring. The flock are mellow. Lots of
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grass so they move slowly, stay together, and are fairly predictable. I am
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forced to spend many long hours sitting on a rock, watching the clouds and
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sun travel the sky. Watch the grass grow. Watch the boy sheep harass the
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girl sheep (Yes, its that time again, for the sheep at least, if not for the
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sheepherder). An abundance of solace. Plenty of time to ponder the
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wondrousness of this multiplex that is our planet. Plenty of time to reflect
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upon the huge amount of stuff that doesn't make any sense to me. Like why
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there are not thousands of people lining up, begging to come here and do
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what I'm doing, and live with these amazing people on this sacred land.
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But then, what the hell do I know,........ I'm just a sheepherder.
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"The limitation of tyrants is the endurance of those they oppose."
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Your prayers, support, and correspondence are invited.
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For all my relations
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Bo Peep
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reachable via unclejake74@hotmail.com
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P.S. To all those who have written to me, please be aware that owing to the
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pressing needs of the flock, the corn, and the Grandmas, the office is
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sometimes left unattended for weeks at a time. It may take as much as a moon
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between when you write, and when you hear back from me. Around here the
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information superhighway is a jeep trail. Please be patient, you will hear
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from me.
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If you have received this update as a forward, but want to sure of getting
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them in the future, please let me know and I will add you to the list. Also
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if there are any "back issues" you don't have, again, let me know.
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STOP PRESS
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This just in. News is flooding into the office that yesterday (July 18th)
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Hopi "Law Enforcement Agencies" paid a visit to Paulines cornfield and
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informed her helpers that they were going to have to leave. The background
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to this story is this: Its been a very wet year. This is good for the
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cornfield, but it also means that by the time the field is weeded, its time
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to start again. It also means there is going to be a bumper harvest. Pauline
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is an elder and needs some help with all this labor. Consequently a few
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women have pitched 2 tents by the side of the cornfield to do all the work
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(The cornfield is some distance from the homesite). There is a girl
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approximately 7 years of age. A woman in her twenties. A woman in her
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forties. A woman in her sixties. Pauline herself is in her seventies. How
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the HTC can feel threatened by 5 generations of women engaging in life
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sustaining activities such as hoeing and harvesting is beyond me. If you
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happen to be by a phone right now, and have a couple of minutes to spare you
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might like to call Wayne Taylor, The Hopi Tribal Chairman, and ask him
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(politely of course) why it is necessary to threaten Paulines winter food
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supply in this way. He can be reached on (520) 734 3000 . Please be polite,
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the point is not to harass him, just let him know that people are watching
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and are concerned. If he were to get some calls today it may cause the
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harassment to stop. I am also reliably informed that his email address is:
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jnahee@hopi.nsn.us.
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