Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

August 28, 2015

Black Hills Unity Concert Aug. 28 -- 30, 2015

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Govinda of Earthcycles is at the concert and will broadcast on the
Crow Voices mobile radio bus!
Livestream
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Aug. 28 -- 30, 2015 UNITY CONCERT GOERS: 
Dear Relatives,
There are some elements of the concert we all want you to know:

1. There is ample camping space.
2. It will be nice and warm this year, so you will not get cold at night if you are camping.
3. Pack clothes for warm weather as the high will be 92 degrees on Sunday and Saturday.
4. We will have a water station available so no need to bring bottled water. Stay hydrated for better health.
5. There will be a central tipi reserved only for prayer. Someone will be praying in there 24/7 to facilitate the whole concert. You are welcome to take a shift in there if you want. Please honor this central place by honoring the way that lakota elders are running it.
6. Please plan on mainly feeding yourself. There will be a couple food vendors there to supplement what you bring.
7. Bring an umbrella and a lawn chair if you can.
8. The opening ceremony will start around 3:30 PM on Friday. It will be a time to pray for a good few days that will help and heal all our relations.
9. There will be discussions in the tipis from 9am-12:30pm on Sunday and Saturday, and music will start at 2pm.
10. On Sunday we are having the closing ceremony around 6PM and we are hoping to have everyone break camp and leave the premises at that point.
11. For those visiting from elsewhere, we are so, so happy you are coming. Thank you for standing in solidarity for what is right and what is beautiful. Please honor the home of the Lakota, by honoring the culture and customs of the Lakota. This means many things, but part of it is to dress conservatively and to be humble. Aside from that, it is things you already know: be kind to each other, bring your prayers, and take the time to listen and observe how people do things in the home you are visiting. The seven Lakota principles are: Wacante Oganake: Be generous Wowaunsila: Have Compassion Wowauonihan: Give Respect and Honor Wowacintanka: Have Patience and Tolerance Wowahwala: Be Humble Woohitike: Be Guided By Your Principles, Disciplined, Brave and Courageous Woksape: Cultivate Understanding and Wisdom
12. This is a drug and alcohol free event with a zero-tolerance policy. Thank you for understanding. smile emoticon
13. Directions to the site are as follows: from rapid city go north on I-90W for about 13 miles. Take Exit 46 onto Elk Creek Road. Go 1.6 miles and take a left at the SECOND entrance to Elk Creek Resort. From there signs will direct you to registration. (GPS doesn't always take you far enough down the road.
12. MOST OF ALL WE ARE INCREDIBLY EXCITED TO SEE YOU ALL AND WE HOPE YOU HAVE A VERY GOOD TIME HERE WITH US IN HE SAPA!!!!

August 27, 2015

MNN. 15 MINUTES OF FAME

15 MINUTES OF FAME

mnnlogo1
Please post & distribute. Nia:wen.
MNN. Aug. 27, 2015. There was no wall to wall coverage of over 150 million ongwehonweh babies, children, youth, women, men and elders being murdered, hacked, burned or worked to death, starved, even eaten, raped and tortured. The CROWN did this to us. The settlers were all in on it. Vester Flanagan is getting his 15 minutes of fame for murdering those two tv employees on camera.
Prime Minister Harper could have said this!
We are reminded through their constant military displays, that the Western Roman Empire is the republic of war that commits genocide on a daily basis with no remorse. Vesper Flanagan learned from them. We ongwe’hon:weh are seen as less than human beings and deliberately forgotten so they can continue to benefit from the genocide they are still committing. The scalp laws have never been repealed. Like all their corporate bylaws, they are brought up when they are needed, i.e. Toronto G20 Summit in 2010. Vesper Flanagan saw his victims as less than human. It was just like the Norridgewoc, Wounded Knee, Sand Creek and thousands of other massacres carried out on our people. The military told them, “Take whatever land you want and kill the INDIANS on it”. Their policy continues.
No tears for us.
No tears for us.
The blacks were released from slavery so they could form regiments called Buffalo Soldiers for the sole purpose of killing the INDIANS. Genocide is how they and their masters got everything they have. The people of the world will finally put an end to genocide when we deal with this issue on ono’ware”geh, Great Turtle Island.
The CROWN’S business plan rewrites history to cover their crime, so they can get away with genocide. The CROWN [Western Roman Empire] seek to commit genocide whenever they need to, but nobody else can. In Canada the Truth and Reconciliation Commission gathered evidence of the CROWN’S absolute guilt for committing “genocide” of our children.dekanawida rt to g.peace
Mainstream media is the ministry of propaganda. Their main job is to promote fear and anger throughout the population as directed by the corporate matrix we are all subjected to. Their secondary job is to rewrite history to cover the genocide committed on ono’ware:geh by the Western Roman Empire. They got away with it so far by never mentioning it in the media.fifteen mins fame
Vesper Flanagan worked in the news so long that he decided to become the news. Frank Zappa’s lyrics capture this story perfectly, which we post in its entirety. [More Trouble Every Day]
Well I’m about to get up sick
From watchin’ my TV
Been checkin’ out the news
Until my eyeballs fail to see
I mean to say that every day
Is just another rotten mess
And when it’s gonna change, my friend
Is anybody’s guess
So I’m watchin’ and I’m waitin’
Hopin’ for the best
Even think I’ll go to prayin’
Every time I hear ’em sayin’
That there’s no way to delay
That trouble comin’ every day
No way to delay
That trouble comin’ every day
Wednesday I watched the riot. ..
Seen the cops out on the street
Watched ’em throwin’ rocks and stuff
And chokin’ in the heat
Listened to reports
About the whisky passin’ ’round
Seen the smoke and fire
And the market burnin’ down
Watched while everybody
On his street would take a turn
To stomp and smash and bash and crash
And slash and bust and burn
And I’m watchin’ and I’m waitin’
Hopin’ for the best
Even think I’ll go to prayin’
Every time I hear ’em sayin’
That there’s no way to delay
That trouble comin’ every day
No way to delay
That trouble comin’ every day
Well, you can cool it,
You can heat it. ..
‘Cause, baby, I don’t need it. ..
Take your tv tube and eat it
‘n all that phony stuff on sports
‘n all the unconfirmed reports
You know I watched that rotten box
Until my head begin to hurt
From checkin’ out the way
The newsman say they get the dirt
Before the guys on channel so-and-so
And further they assert
That any show they’ll interrupt
To bring you news if it comes up
They say that if the place blows up
They will be the first to tell,
Because the boys they got downtown
Are workin’ hard and doin’ swell,
And if anybody gets the news
Before it hits the street,
They say that no one blabs it faster
Their coverage can’t be beat
And if another woman driver
Gets machine-gunned from her seat
They’ll send some joker with a Browning
And you’ll see it all complete
So I’m watchin’ and I’m waitin’
Hopin’ for the best
Even think I’ll go to prayin’
Every time I hear ’em sayin’
That there’s no way to delay
That trouble comin’ every day
No way to delay
That trouble comin’ every day
Hey, you know something people?
I’m not black
But there’s a whole lots a times
I wish I could say I’m not white
Well, I seen the fires burnin’
And the local people turnin’
On the merchants and the shops
Who used to sell their brooms and mops
And every other household item
Watched the mob just turn and bite ’em
And they say it served ’em right
Because a few of them are white,
And it’s the same across the nation
Black and white discrimination
Yellin’ “You can’t understand me!”
‘n all that other jazz they hand me
In the papers and tv and
All that mass stupidity
That seems to grow more every day
Each time you hear some nitwit say
He wants to go and do you in
Because the color of your skin
Just don’t appeal to him
(No matter if it’s black or white)
Because he’s out for blood tonight
You know we got to sit around at home
And watch this thing begin
But I bet there won’t be many live
To see it really end
‘Cause the fire in the street
Ain’t like the fire in the heart
And in the eyes of all these people
Don’t you know that this could start
On any street in any town
In any state if any clown
Decides that now’s the time to fight
For some ideal he thinks is right
And if a million more agree
There ain’t no Great Society
As it applies to you and me
Our country isn’t free
And the law refuses to see
If all that you can ever be
Is just a lousy janitor
Unless your uncle owns a store
You know that five in every four
Just won’t amount to nothin’ more
Gonna watch the rats go across the floor
And make up songs about being poor
Blow your harmonica, son!


MNN Mohawk Nation News kahentinetha@mohawknationnews.com more news, books, workshops, to donate and sign up for MNN newsletters, go to www.mohawknationnews.com  More stories at MNN Archives.  Address:  Box 991, Kahnawake [Quebec, Canada]J0L 1B0 Thahoketoteh@mohawknationnews.com 
Navajo chase MCain.


http://mohawknationnews.com/blog/2015/08/27/15-minutes-of-fame/

What's at Stake: The Survival of the Great Plains - Fighting Uranium Mines




"This is the first time in 27 years that a uranium mining corporation and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission have been challenged about
'their right' to water.

"Protect SacredWater. While we still have some left to protect!!!!"
Wioweya Najin Win

 

An Update from the Crawford Uranium Mining Front Line

Owe Aku is a grassroots organization of Lakota people and our allies founded to promote the protection of sacred water and preservation of our territorial lands.  Our actions for environmental justice rely upon cultural revitalization as our major tool in achieving our goals.  The principle location from which are operations are based are on Lakota territory along Wounded Knee Creek on what is called the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation .  More information on our work can be found at www.oweakuinternational.org
"Wednesday August 26th was day three at the uranium hearings in Crawford, Nebraska:  Sacredwater vs Cameco, Inc.

"Today, Thursday, August 27th the Oglala Sioux Tribe historical and cultural experts Dennis YellowThunder and Mike Catches will take the stand and defend the Oglala Lakota, the Lakota Oyate (nation), Unci Maka (Mother Earth), and our ancient lands and culture.  They will be on the stand for Thursday and Friday and maybe even Saturday.

"The judges announced they may extend the hearing one more day.  See you there. Toksa."
Wioweya Najin Win 

Buffalo Bruce, a local activist and resident, added:  "The Federal Judges are sharp and drilling all attorneys and witnesses into the ground for the facts. With the new data showing the existence of many faults and fractures that didn't exist prior to the Uranium mine startup, the Judges are pointed and crisp with their questions to the mine staff and attorneys. Feeling OK!"
"Some hardcore lawyers, water protectors, hydrologists, geologists and biologists keeping Cameco and the NRC on the uranium hot seat in front of the atomic licensing board.

"Expert witnesses include hydrogeologists Wireman and Kreamer, stratiagrapher Dr. LaGarry and biochemist Linsey McLean.  Attorneys Andrew Reid, Thomas Ballanco, and David Frankel represent the intervenors who were unprecedentedly granted status before the NRC and include the Oglala Sioux Tribe, Debra White Plume, Joe American Horse Tiospaye, Tom and Loretta Cook Twice, Owe Aku (Bring Back the Way), and the Western Nebraska Resource Council."
Suree Towfighnia, Co-Director, Producer, Camera, Crying Earth Rise Up, and Owe Aku 
 
The website link for Crying Earth Rise Up has substantial information on uranium mining, the film and the hearing before the NRC.  Also see Owe Aku's website for more details on who we are and our fight to protect sacred water.  Also, if you're on Facebook, follow us at Owe Aku.
During a break in the proceedings in Crawford, NE, where Owe Aku and its many allies are defending Sacredwater from uranium mining for the benefit of future generations and a living Unci Maka, Wioweya Najin Win and Vic Camp (Owe Aku's spokesman known as the Eyapaha) toured some of the site where the hazardous uranium is forced from the Earth.  This struggle is nothing less than one of survival for the Lakota people who, for thousands of years, lived in this region of North America  and cared for the Earth.  It's not an accident that the only pristine places left on Earth are on Indigneous territories.  
It's because Indigenous peoples are willing to defend Mother Earth.  But this is not a Red Nations struggle, it is a human struggle and we need to all ally up.

If you can help us please visit our website and make a small donation.  Wopila.  
Resident of the mining area around Crawford, NE, Iris, a sisterhood water watcher not afraid to stand up to Cameco in her small town.  Sadly, many in Crawford are too intimidated to stand up to a giant, multinational, corporation like Cameco, but there are a few brave people who fear undrinkable water more than foreign corporations!
Owe Aku
International Justice Project
Owe Aku
Bring Back the Way


Our mailing address is:
Owe Aku International Justice Project
7685 South Olive Circle
Centennial, CO 80112



 



Our mailing address is:
Owe Aku International Justice Project
7685 South Olive Circle
Centennial, CO 80112



 

August 25, 2015

Urgent Update from Big Mountain, Bahe's SheepDog Media with BMIS


Update from Big Mountain, Bahe's SheepDog Media

By NaBahii Keediniihii
Censored News

Date: Aug 25, 2015 2:28 PM
French translation by Christine Prat

U
 R  G  E  N  T     U  P  D  A  T  E
August 25, 2015
Excessive Laws to Livestock Confiscation at Big Mountain on Black Mesa
We all have to live with regulations whether we live in the urban or rural areas, and permits may apply as to how many pets we should have to how much livestock we can range. What the Hopi tribe is up to is also like any county/state authority that regulate ranching particularly involving horses and cattle. This current situation in Big Mountain involves, in part, the Hopi rangers doing their annual livestock assessment, however for the Dineh sheep and goat herders, it is unique because it involves culture and identity. It is also important to understand that because of this unique factor, Dineh (Navajos) are attempting to resist this 'range management' practices just as they have resisted the relocation program. The BIA Police and tribal rangers have reoriented their livestock confiscation approaches against these Dineh. There is now a standby alert system to agency-wide, Special Operation Services and this makes the enforcement more excessive.    
These Dineh resisters to a federal mandatory, relocation law have been subjected to livestock count and impoundments this past week and more are expected to continue, perhaps into next month. Livestock counts and impoundments are used also as a tool to harass, demoralize, terminate the economic and cultural backbone, monitor family home site activities, and to pressure all Dineh to vacate their ancestral homelands. 
Eventually this policy of force removal will not create new Hopi lands as the Law states, but it makes way for Peabody Coal Company to expand and exploit the remaining coal deposits. Peabody's role here is major as compared to all other natural resource extraction in Arizona, it is a long term multinational corporate investment that extends to 2055-60. The now 50 year old mining leases at Black Mesa has nearly exhausted its operation and Peabody hopes to expand new lease areas into the still, culturally-intact, Big Mountain region.   
After the specially targeted, excessive force used by the BIA - Hopi police during fall of 2015 animal confiscations, resident herders were not only left uneasy but some did not have the $1000 to $2000 to get their animals back. One traditional woman in her 90s lost her whole herd and was so dramatized that she asked the government to help her relocate. Her neighbor, a traditional man who intervened during that impoundment, was arrested, and he was finally acquitted this summer after an agonizing period of distance travels for court appearances, attorney and court fees, not having transportation, and never being provided a translator. Other traditional herders holding grazing permits lost about 85 percent of their herds, and were recently intimidated and told they are again over the limits. The rest of the herders are still uneasy and knowing they are listed for an invasion, a method of genocide: to exterminate the means of food, medicinal and material, economic and cultural resources. This is the reason why volunteer human rights observers are needed. 
There a few Dineh elders resisters that have withheld their sovereign and ancient obligations to their sacred Mountain Soil Bundle which is believed to represent the complete authority over animal husbandry, sustainable and eco-conscious live styles, farming, and rituals. The federal, both tribal and state, consider these particular resisters as 'extremist' and trespassers. These traditional resisters have refused to get 'legal' permits or temporary resident status. Pauline Whitesinger who passed away in 2014 was just one of those hardcore resister and leader. Rena Babbit Lane is still remaining strong as one of the last true sovereign Indian, and just this week she was told to be prepared for that BIA invasion to confiscate her animals. Her son, Jerry, is the one that was just acquitted. Grandma Rena is in her 90s, and it is unimaginable how a grandma this old, who withholds much wisdom, a soft spoken and kind individual be tortured further. Does this country, the U.S. and its fossil fuel addicted citizens, truly believe in destroying all earth based humans in order to control global real estates and the electrical power grids?  
A few voices from the land:
This recent attack happened on the 152nd anniversary of the start of the US Army's scorch the earth policy against the Dineh, in which a bounty was placed on all 'Navajo' livestock in an attempt to starve them into submission, and resulted in the massive forced relocation, known as the Long Walk. Big Mountain elder, John Katenay's story, "My great grandmother told us that she was just little (1863) when they hid in the thick woods because the army came upon them. They couldn't escape with the herd, but they could only listen as the soldiers cut open the bellies of live goats, goats wailed as soldiers laughed, and as her mother cried..."
"We are in a battleground, the endless battleground of the Partitioned Lands. This is the front of the line and when it comes, your family there is no yes or no, you have to stand up for your family and your relatives. This is what I was taught. The past was never really forgotten of the way the U.S. Government treated my people. It is still going on, it is still alive. We will fight- not with violence or armor, but with the old ways.  This is a stand for people to know who we are and how we live as Dineh."--Gerald Blackrock, October 2014.
"They came as before like having no mercy, they counted the sheep and goats. One of the police filled out sheets of paper and I was given a copy. Their interpreter simply told me 'your herd is over the limit again!' They did not say how much is over nor suggested to me anything about how to reduce it to the limit. They did not want any conversation and they all left. After that, I heard that one of my cousins, Ruby, got her sheep impounded but they were able to get most of them back. They probably had to pay a lot of money in order to get them back. The BIA Hopi land agency just want the money, and this is how we are force to give them monies every year!" –Etta Begay, August 20, 2015

Dineh residents in resistance however are made to be voiceless and nonexistent, and are again asking world citizens to demand an immediate halt to this forced, herd reductions and that the relocation law be repealed so that, they be recognized as true determined group of peoples and to be allowed to remain with any cultural content that are retrievable including the said ancestral lands.  Please, call the numbers below to demand a moratorium on the impoundments of Dineh livestock and the nullification of P.L. 93-531, a law too expensive for taxpayers and that was created under debunked circumstances. Also email blackmesais@gmail.com to find out more about the human rights observation and the volunteer home-stay sheepherding program.


--writers: Tree with Black Mesa Indigenous Support, and Kat with SheepDogNation Media, August 2015.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 
Call to Action:
-      -  Participate in community organizing geared toward sustainability, Peace, stopping militarization, Indigenous sovereign rights and protecting sacred sites, then join vigils or marches at federal buildings by showing your support for Dineh elders: "U.S. Peabody Out of Big Mountain!"
-       - Donate funds here, to Black Mesa Indigenous Support which facilitates networks and on land support. So, come out to herd sheep and monitor human rights violations (email blackmesais@gmail.com)


-       - Support Native Resistance and the endangered indigenous ways. ***Share, forward this request far and wide! 
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Call:
•   The BIA superintendent Wendel Honanie at (928-738-2228),
•   Hopi Chairman Herman G. Honanie,  Email: hehonanie@hopi.nsn.us, Phone: (928) 734-3102
•   The Hopi Rangers Clayton Honyumptewa at (928-734-3601),
•   The Department of Interior at  (602-379-6600)


MISE A JOUR URGENTE DE LA SITUATION A BIG MOUNTAIN, DE BAHE’S SHEEPDOG MEDIA ET BLACK MESA INDIGENOUS SUPPORT
Par NaBahii Keediniihii
Publié sur Censored News (in English)
25 août 2015
Traduction Christine Prat
MISE A JOUR URGENTE
25 août 2015
Lois excessives sur la Confiscation du bétail à Big Mountain sur Black Mesa
Nous devons tous vivre avec des règles, que nous soyons en milieu urbain ou rural, et les permis peuvent aller du nombre d’animaux de compagnie que nous pouvons avoir à la quantité de bétail que nous pouvons faire paître. Ce que fait la Tribu Hopi est semblable à ce que fait n’importe quelle autorité de comté/état, qui établit des règles sur l’élevage, particulièrement celui des chevaux et du bétail. La situation actuelle à Big Mountain concerne, en partie, le fait que les Rangers Hopi effectuent leur évaluation annuelle du bétail, alors que cependant, pour bergers et chevriers Diné, c’est exceptionnel parce que çà concerne la culture et l’identité. Il est aussi important de comprendre qu’à cause de ce facteur unique, les Diné essaient de résister à ces pratiques de ‘gestion des pâturages’ tout comme ils ont résisté au programme de déportation.
La Police du Bureau des Affaires Indiennes (BIA) et les rangers tribaux ont réorienté leur politique de confiscation de bétail contre ces Diné. Il y a maintenant un système d’alerte relié aux Services d’Opérations Spéciales de toute l’administration et çà rend l’application des règles plus excessive.
Ces Diné qui ont résisté à une loi de déportation fédérale et sans appel, ont été soumis la semaine dernière à un comptage du bétail et des saisies et on s’attend à ce que çà continue, peut-être jusqu’au mois prochain. Le comptage du bétail et les saisies sont aussi utilisés comme moyen de harceler, démoraliser, détruire la base économique et culturelle, surveiller les activités effectuées dans les maisons familiales, et mettre la pression sur tous les Diné pour les pousser à quitter leurs terres ancestrales.
Au final, cette politique de déportation forcée ne créera pas de nouvelles terres Hopi comme le dit la Loi, mais çà fera de la place pour que la firme Peabody Coal puisse s’étendre et exploiter les derniers restes de charbon. Ici, le rôle de Peabody est essentiel, comparé à toutes les autres exploitations minières en Arizona, c’est un investissement multinational à long terme, jusqu’aux années 2055-60. Les vieux contrats miniers d’il y a 50 ans sur Black Mesa ont maintenant presque épuisé leurs ressources et Peabody espère étendre géographiquement de nouveaux contrats dans la région culturellement intacte de Big Mountain.
Après les attaques ciblées et la force exagérée utilisée pour la confiscation d’animaux par le BIA et la police Hopi à l’automne 2014, les bergers résidents ont non seulement été laissés dans la gêne, mais certains n’avaient pas les 1000 ou 2000 dollars exigés pour la restitution de leurs animaux. Une femme traditionnelle, âgée de plus de 90 ans, a perdu tout son troupeau et s’est retrouvée dans une situation tellement dramatique qu’elle a demandé au gouvernement de l’aider à déménager. Son voisin, une homme traditionnel qui était intervenu pendant la saisie, a été arrêté et finalement acquitté cet été, après toute une période angoissante de longs voyages pour comparaitre au tribunal, de frais d’avocat et de justice, alors qu’il n’avait pas de moyen de transport et n’a jamais été assisté par un interprète. D’autres bergers traditionnels qui avaient des permis de pâturage, ont perdu 85% de leurs troupeaux, et ont été récemment victimes d’intimidations et appris qu’ils étaient à nouveau au-dessus du quota. Le reste des bergers se sentent mal à l’aise, sachant qu’une invasion contre eux est prévue, une sorte de génocide : exterminer ce qui constitue les moyens de se nourrir, et les ressources médicinales et matérielles, économiques et culturelles. C’est la raison pour laquelle nous avons besoin d’observateurs des droits de l’homme bénévoles.
Il y a quelques résistants Diné âgés qui ont maintenu leurs obligations souveraines et anciennes vis-à-vis de leur Sac de Terre de la Montagne qui selon la croyance représente leur autorité complète sur les soins aux animaux, des styles de vie durables et conscients de l’écologie, l’agriculture et les rites. Les autorités fédérales, tribales ou de l’état, considèrent ces résistants comme des ‘extrémistes’ et des ‘contrevenants’. Ces résistants traditionnels ont refusé d’obtenir des permis ‘légaux’ ou le statut de résident temporaire. Pauline Whitesinger, décédée en 2014, était une de ces résistants et leaders du noyau dur. Rena Babbit Lane est toujours ferme en tant que l’une des derniers vrai Indiens souverains, et cette semaine, elle a été prévenue qu’elle devait se préparer pour une invasion du BIA visant à confisquer ses animaux. Son fils, Jerry, fait partie de ceux qui viennent d’être acquittés. La grand-mère Rena a passé 90 ans, et c’est inimaginable qu’une grand-mère de cet âge, avec tant de sagesse, tant de gentillesse, puisse continuer à être torturée. Est-ce que ce pays, les Etats-Unis et ses citoyens accros au carburant fossile, croient vraiment en la destruction de tous les humains attachés à la terre, afin de contrôler la propriété privée globale et les réseaux d’électricité ?
Quelques voix de la région:
Cette récente attaque a eu lieu pour le 152ème anniversaire de début de la stratégie de la terre brûlée de l’armée américaine contre les Diné, au cours de laquelle tout le bétail ‘Navajo’ a été mis à prix, dans une tentative de les forcer à se soumettre par la famine, et qui a résulté dans une déportation de masse connue comme ‘La Longue Marche’. L’histoire d’un Ancien de Big Mountain, John Katenay : « Mon arrière grand-mère nous a raconté qu’elle était toute petite (1863) quand ils ont dû se cacher derrière des buissons épais parce que l’armée arrivait. Ils n’ont pas pu s’échapper avec le troupeau, ils ne pouvaient qu’écouter les soldats qui éventraient les chèvres, les chèvres qui gémissaient alors que les soldats riaient, et que sa mère pleurait… »
« Nous sommes sur un champs de bataille, le champs de bataille infini des Terres Divisées. C’est la ligne de front et quand çà arrive, il n’y a pas de choix, vous devez être pour votre famille et vos parents. C’est ce qu’on m’a appris. Le passé n’a jamais été vraiment oublié, jamais oubliée la façon dont le Gouvernement des Etats-Unis a traité mon peuple. Çà continue, c’est toujours vivant. Nous nous battrons – pas avec de la violence ou des armes, mais selon les vieilles méthodes. C’est une position pour faire savoir aux gens qui nous sommes et comment nous vivons en tant que Diné. » – Gerald Blackrock, octobre 2014.
« Ils sont venus comme avant, impitoyables, ils ont compté les moutons et les chèvres. Un des policiers a rempli des pages et m’en a donné une copie. Leur interprète m’a dit simplement ‘votre troupeau est encore au dessus des limites !’ Ils n’ont pas dit de combien ni suggéré quoique ce soit pour le réduire dans les limites. Ils ne voulaient pas discuter et sont tous partis. Après, j’ai entendu dire qu’une de mes cousines, Ruby, avait eu ses moutons confisqués, mais qu’elle avait pu en récupérer la plupart. Ils ont probablement dû payer beaucoup d’argent pour les récupérer. Le BIA et l’administration territoriale Hopi ne veulent que de l’argent, et c’est comme çà que nous sommes forcés de leur donner de l’argent tous les ans ! » – Etta Begay, 20 août 2015
Les habitants Diné sont cependant réduits au silence et à la non-existence, et demandent à nouveau aux citoyens du monde d’exiger un arrêt immédiat de ces réductions de troupeaux forcées et l’annulation de la loi sur la déportation, afin d’être reconnus comme un authentique groupe de gens déterminés et d’être autorisés à conserver tout le contenu culturel encore récupérable, entre autres les terres ancestrales. Nous vous prions d’appeler les numéros ci-dessous pour demander un moratoire sur les saisies de bétail Diné et l’annulation de la loi PL 93-531, une loi qui coûte trop aux contribuables et qui a été créée dans des circonstances anormales [la fameuse loi PL 93-531, qui chassait des milliers de Navajo de chez eux, a été discutée au Congrès durant l’été 1974, en plein scandale du Watergate, les Sénateurs n’assistaient jamais aux discussions sur Big Mountain, venaient voter quand la cloche sonnait et demandaient à leurs assistants comment voter et surtout comment votaient les vedettes des partis : à l’époque, la vedette du parti Républicain était Barry Goldwater… – NdT]. Envoyez aussi des emails à blackmesais@gmail.com pour avoir plus d’informations sur l’observation des droits de l’homme et le programme de bénévoles pour garder les troupeaux de moutons.
– auteurs : Tree de Black Mesa Indigenous Support, et Kat de SheepDogNation Media, août 2015
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Que faire ?
– Envoyer des fonds Ã  Black Mesa Indigenous Support, se présenter comme bénévole pour garder des moutons ou contrôler les violations des droits de l’homme : blackmesais@gmail.com
– Soutenir la Résistance Autochtone et les modes de vies menacés en partageant, transmettant ce message le plus largement et le plus loin possible
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Contacts (pour protester)
Superintendant du BIA Wendel Honanie (00 1) 928 738 2228
Président Hopi Herman G. Honanie, hehonanie@hopi.nsn.us , tel. (00 1) 928 734 3102
Clayton Honyumptewa des Hopi Rangers 00 1 928 734 3601
Le Ministère de l’Intérieur (00 1) 602 379 6600