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Indigenous
peoples issues
Dineh
Updated
10/15/06
Visit our allies Black
Mesa Indigenous Support
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The Dineh (Navajo),
together with the Apache, constitute the southern branch of
the Athapascan linguistic family, living in New Mexico, Arizona,
western Texas, southeastern Colorado, Utah, and in northern
Mexico. The earliest recorded mention of the Dineh (Navajo)
is in 1629, when white settlers from Mexico moved among them.
A revolution in the Dineh economy occurred with the introduction
of sheep, raised for food, clothing, and commerce. Peace treaties
with the white man in 1846 and 1849 were not observed and Colonel
Kit Carson invaded Dine territory in 1863 to stop Dineh incursions.
He killed large numbers of their sheep and also captured the
greater part of the tribe as prisoners and sent them to Fort
Sumner and Redondo on the Rio Pecos in New Mexico. In 1867,
after the Civil War, the Dine nation was restored to its homeland.
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| 2006 Relocation Legislation
Senate Bill 1003: Follow the status, get updates, background,
facts, see the bill in full, watch the video & read the
transcripts of the testimony before the Senate Committee On
Indian Affairs: S.1003, The
Navajo Hopi Land Settlement Act of 1974 Amendments |
| "This land
is being taken away because they've got power in Washington.
We were put here with our Four Sacred Mountains ~ and
we were created to live here. We know the names of the
mountains and we know the names of the other sacred places.
That is our power. That is how we pray and this prayer
has never changed." ~Katherine Smith. |
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"Relocation
is a word that does not exist in the Navajo language. To be
relocated is to disappear and never be seen again." ~Pauline
Whitesinger
A BRIEF HISTORY OF RELOCATION ON BLACK MESA
In 1974 the U.S. Congress passed Public
Law 93-531 allegedly to settle a so-called land dispute between
the Dineh and their Hopi neighbors. This law required the
forced relocation of well over 14,000 Dineh and a hundred
plus Hopi from their ancestral homelands. > |
The "dispute" being settled by PL 93-531
was, in reality, fabricated by the US government as a way to obtain
easier access to strip-mine one of the largest coal reserves in
North America. The land known as Black Mesa is home to thousands
of traditional sheepherders, weavers, silversmiths and farmers.
For hundreds of years before Europeans came to the Americas the
Dineh and Hopi existed in balance with each other and with Mother
Earth.
The genocide on Black Mesa has been recognized
internationally. In the late 1980's the United Nations described
the case of the forced relocation as one of the most flagrant violations
of indigenous peoples' human rights in this hemisphere. More recently,
this is the first time the United Nations ever formally investigated
the United States for the violation of religious freedom.
On Black Mesa Peabody Coal Company mines over
three million gallons a day, and 1.4 billion gallons a year of pristine,
potable groundwater used to slurry coal. It's the only source of
drinking water for the Hopi and the western Navajo people. According
to data compiled by the Department of Interior, Peabody's operations
appear to be causing or contributing significantly to a range of
groundwater-related problems, with profound environmental, cultural,
and religious implications for the region's tribal communities.(source
National Resource Defense Council) Peabody Coal Company in the Black
Mesa region operates a 103-square mile mine. The largest privately-owned
coal mine in the world.
These native peoples, their cemeteries, their
burial & sacred sites, religious structures and Anasazi ruins
have been destroyed at Black Mesa to make way for coal mining. People
are not only restricted from access to sacred sites, but many religious
sites, burial grounds and homes stand threatened with destruction.
Many families on Black Mesa are now in their third
decade of resisting relocation, attempting to continue their traditional
lifestyles. As a result of their resistance the U.S. government
is waging a covert war against the people and the land. This includes
bulldozing homes and ceremonial structures, impounding sheep, horses,
and cattle, destroying water wells, restricting wood gathering,
disallowing the construction or renovation of homesites, restricting
ceremonies, restricting medicinal herb gathering, ongoing surveillance
and intimidation by police and federal agents, and harassment by
low flying military aircraft.
The Dineh believe that the rich coal reserves
underneath this sacred land is Mother Earths' liver and must not
be destroyed. However, these beliefs fall on deaf ears to Peabody
Coal Company, which sees the coal as simply a way in which to produce
large amounts of capital. For over a quarter of a century this extremely
powerful corporation has mined the 103 square miles around the mesa
area leaving behind a wake of devastation. A land that was once
so rich in natural beauty is now left barren and dead. The mine
has displaced thousands of traditional families and their homes,
destroyed an estimated 4,000 ancient ruins, burial sites, sacred
land formations, and prayer sites. In order to further the development
of the mine, Peabody bulldozes important plants and trees used by
the Native peoples for food and medicine.
Many people believe that today much of the mine
operates illegally and without regulation. This mine uses a coal
slurry pipeline to transport its coal over 200 miles to the Mojave
Generating Station in Laughlin, Nevada. There, it is converted into
electricity for the use of Nevada, California, and central Arizona,
while many of the Dineh who live at Black Mesa and in most areas
of the reservation have no electricity. The coal slurry pipeline
uses billions of gallons of water to move the coal. Water is pumped
from the precious desert aquifer under Black Mesa, used solely for
mining purposes, while only a few miles from the mine families have
to haul water for themselves and their livestock, from up to 20
miles away to survive. Countless springs and wells have gone dry,
grazing land has been dried up and depleted, and crops have begun
to fail. Peabody makes billions of dollars annually from the mine,
while the traditional peoples living on the land being mined, or
who have been relocated because of it never see a cent of the profits
made from the land.
What happens to the people when they relocate?
The federal government has relocated many of the Dineh to the "New
Lands" at Sanders, AZ. This land is contaminated by the worst
radioactive waste spill in North America. (It is downstream from
the disaster at Church Rock, New Mexico, 1979) Some people living
there have died from cancer or are dying from it now. The birth
defect rate is outstanding. And many of the traditional ways are
gone. People live in tiny trailers side by side, hundreds of miles
away from their families, with no sheep, no sacred sites, no cornfields,
no ceremonies. Many people who relocate find themselves with nothing
to live for, their sacred way stolen from them. The suicide rate
is outstanding as well. A special report concerning Navajo relocation
issued from the Navajo-Hopi Land Commission Office over ten years
ago testifies that they've "seen hundreds of Navajo families
become practically homeless. They left their ancestral homes on
the Hopi-Partitioned Land in order to comply with the federal governments'
directive. These families, the so-called Navajo "refugees",
have drifted from place to place for many years. Some live in shacks,
some live in vehicles, while the lucky ones squeeze in with other
family members." Others found themselves having to pay for
water, heat, food, electricity, taxes, things they never had to
deal with before. Many of the elders speak little or no English
- people who had no experience with a cash economy have been moved
to border towns. These Navajos were warehoused in substandard housing.
They received little or no counseling to help them make the radical
changes that federal law required. And while the relocation law
required the federal government to provide community facilities
and services and to minimize the adverse social, cultural, and economic
effects of relocation, that promise remains unfulfilled almost two
decades later. Many find it impossible to get jobs, and they are
forced into homelessness. The genocide is complete.
Support is requested
There are still Dineh families on Black Mesa who
are resisting relocation and do not wish to sign an Accommodation
Agreement. There are many families struggling to keep their livestock.
Despite years of lawsuits against the federal government to repeal
the relocation law, the United States continues to deny the Dineh
the right to live on their homeland and preserve their traditional
way of life. The resisters of Black Mesa have requested outside
support in their struggle. Most of the relocation resisters are
elders, many of whose children have been relocated or otherwise
forced to leave their homeland. As a result many elders live alone
and it is difficult for them to continue their daily lifestyles
while also going to court and dealing with the everyday harassment
from U.S. and tribal governments.
February 18th,
2006
STOP
FORCED RELOCATION ON BIG MOUNTAIN, BLACK MESA, AZ
Targeted Navajo Communities say that NOW is the time to take action!
Big Mountain: The
Black Mesa Syndrome: Indian Lands, Black Gold

- Roberta Blackgoat
has passed over
- Anna
Mae Sundance 2001
- BIA destroyed
Anna Mae Sundance arbor
- January 16, 2002,
the Dine'h women arrested at the Sun Dance -The court granted
a continuance to an unspecified date to allow time to file
a reply brief in support of his motion to dismiss based on
religious freedom.
-
The Navajo Nation
is footing the bill for ALL legal expenses related to the
trial of the five Dine'h women arrestees; and the Navajo
Nation is also footing the bill for Arrick Crittendon's
appeal, if the case is not dismissed or decided in Arrick's
favor.
- Five Dine Elders
Arrested At Anna Mae Sundance
-
Audio
statements by the elders , Dine and witnesses to the
arrests and events at Big Mountain Sundance featuring :Agnes
Patak, Louise Benally, Leonard Benally, Roberta Blackgoat,
Ruth Benally, Elvira Horseherder & Bonnie Whitesinger.
mp3 & real media
- Livestock impoundment
threat deadline is October , 2001
- October 2000
the NRDC study assesses the growing controversy over an aquifer
under the Black Mesa plateau in Arizona and concludes that the
aquifer
is showing signs of serious decline after years of pumping by
the Peabody Western Coal Company, which drains more than a
billion gallons of water from the reservoir each year to transport
coal. NRDC also considers the role of the federal government in
resolving the problem, and recommends actions that would help
conserve Black Mesa's water supply.
- Film Explores Navajo
Family's Story
- Energy chief promises
a new
deal for Indians
-
Radiation still haunts N.M. homes
- Manybeads Suit Dismissed!
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