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NARRATED BY RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN © 2001. Okihei Enterprise, Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Tribute to Richard Chamberlain |
| Richard Chamberlain’s gentle creative spirit
shines as he recites some consciousness raising excerpts from a work by
Joseph Campbell.
He also includes an address to the President of the United States by Native Americans reminding us of our obligation as protectors and wardens of the earth. |
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| "...a mythology is a control system, on the
one hand framing its community to accord with an intuited order of nature
and, on the other hand, by means of its symbolic pedagogic rites, conducting
individuals through the ineluctable psychophysiological stages of transformation
of a human lifetime - birth, childhood and adolescence, age, old age, and
the release of death - in unbroken accord simultaneously with the requirements
of this world and the rapture of participation in a manner of being beyond
time."
Joseph Campbell |
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| Other information about this issue:
Essay on Native American Environmental Issues. by David R. Lewis Edited by Mary B. Davis and published in 1994
by Garland Publishers of New York. The encyclopedia includes additional
essays on mining, natural resource management, hunting and fishing rights,
and economic development. It's a highly recommended resource. Reprinted
without permission for educational purposes.
Essay on Native American Environmental Issues.
The pace of change in Indian environments increased dramatically with Euroamerican contact. Old World pathogens and epidemic diseases, domesticated plants and livestock, the disappearance of native flora and fauna, and changing resource use patterns altered the physical and cultural landscape of the New World. Nineteenth-century removal and reservation policies reduced the continental scope of Indian lands to mere islands in the stream of American settlement. Reservations themselves were largely unwanted or remote environments of little perceived economic value. Indian peoples lost even that land as the General Allotment Act of 1887 divided reservations into individual holdings. By 1930, this policy contributed to the alienation of over 80 percent of Indian lands—a diminishment of land, resources, and biotic diversity that relegated Indians to the periphery of American society. By the beginning of the twentieth century,
Native Americans controlled mere remnants of their former estates, most
in the trans- Mississippi West. Relatively valueless by nineteenth-century
standards, their lands contained unseen resources of immense worth. This
single fact informs nearly all Native American environmental issues in
the twentieth century. Land, its loss, location, and resource wealth or
poverty, the exploitation and development of that land, and changing Indian
needs and religious attitudes all define the modern environmental debates.
Overcropping marginal lands, drought, the Dust Bowl, the Great Depression, isolation, and the vagaries of the American market economy led to the wide-scale abandonment of Indian agriculture after World War II. Likewise, the adoption of domestic animals radically changed the landscape and biotic diversity of reservations, In the 1930s, the government instituted drastic livestock reduction and reseeding programs on southwestern reservations. Range scientists introduced new plant and animal species into fragile ecosystems, but were unable to solve problems of overgrazing on the drought-ravaged Navajo and Papago reservations. On a cultural level, the programs backfired by ignoring Native explanations and ecological methods, resulting in increased Indian economic dependence. Since then, tribes have had to deal with overgrazing and erosion, invasive noxious plants, reclamation, and improper land use. Given past experience, tribes are beginning
to weigh the relative utility of leasing lands to non-Indians against developing
their own operations which might be more sensitive to sustainable agricultural
alternatives.
In the Black Hills of South Dakota and near Taos Pueblo's sacred Blue Lake, lumbering operations in national forests threatened sacred sites. The process continues today as the Bureau of Land Management chain-clears pinon-juniper forests in Nevada to improve the grazing potential of the land for white permit holders, destroying traditional Western Shoshone resources and gathering areas without Indian consent. Modern hunting, gathering, and fishing rights based on nineteenth- century treaties have created a number of problems between Indians, sportsmen, and state and federal governments. In the early twentieth century, under pressure from commercial and sports fishermen, state and federal officials limited Indian off-reservation hunting and fishing. These regulations hit Native fishermen in the Northwest particularly hard. They were competing with a growing number of commercial operations and losing Native fishing sites to dams. In the 1960s, Indian activists staged "fish-ins" to publicize the situation, and tribes took their case to court. In United States v. State of Washington (1974), Judge George Boldt reaffirmed the rights of Northwest tribes to harvest fish under provisions of the 1854 Treaty of Medicine Creek, without interference by the State of Washington. The Boldt Decision restored a measure of Indian control over their environment and natural resource use. Today, these tribes have built a world-class fishery management system, allowing them a sizable subsistence and small commercial catch. Likewise, the Mescalero Apaches, Pyramid Lake Paiutes, Wind River Shoshones, and Arapahos have developed scientific and culturally sensitive programs for managing their faunal resources. Across the country, hunting and fishing rights
continue to stir public debate.
The acts have safeguarded and allowed Indian
access to sacred non-reservation areas and resources, and injected a level
of legal tolerance to Native religious practices that revolve around resource
use.
Encouraged by the Winters decision, the Indian
Bureau used Indian funds to construct elaborate irrigation systems to protect
Indian water and improve the agricultural potential of tribal and allotted
holdings. Irrigation promised to chage the landscape and increase Indian
self-sufficiency, but the systems suffered from poor construction, improper
use and maintenance, and often ended up in the hands of white settlers
who bought up the best Indian lands.
During the New Deal, the Civilian Conservation Corps and Indian Emergency Conservation Works program completed numerous, if not always successful, water and erosion control projects on western reservations. Since the 1930s, dams on the Columbia River and its tributaries have impeded the migration of salmon and other anadromous species, flooded sacred sites and Indian fisheries like Celilo Falls, and ruined upstream spawning grounds. On the Missouri River, the Pick-Sloan Plan for damming and flood control proved disastrous for Indians of the Standing Rock, Cheyenne River, Crow Creek, and Fort Berthold reservations. They watched the waters cover rich agricultural lands, villages, and sacred sites in the name of progress. Similar things happened in the 1960s and 1970s with Senecas and the Kinzua Dam, and Eastern Cherokees and the Tellico Dam. Today, these dams raise important environmental issues of water flow through places like the Hualapai and Havasupai reservations in the Grand Canyon, of aquatic species preservation and Indian fishing rights, and the ownership and sale of water. While the Winters Doctrine assured Indian water rights, it never quantified those rights. The issue of how much water tribes can legitimately use and sell has become critical in the arid West, especially for tribes in states member to the Colorado River Compact. The pending completion of the Central Utah and Central Arizona projects promises a massive redistribution of water in the arid West and a test of Indian water rights. Future water marketing by Shoshones, Utes, Paiutes, Navajos, Tohono O'odhams, and other groups raises critical economic and environmental issues for Indian peoples and the entire region. In addition to water, the mineral wealth of some modern western Indian reservations has proved both a blessing and a curse. Beginning as early as 1900 with the discovery of oil on Osage land, non-renewable resource development to ease reservation economic dependency has unleashed the most environmentally destructive forms of exploitation, threatening tribal land, water, air, and health. Government mismanagement has compounded these problems. Coal and uranium mining on the Navajo reservation has destroyed large areas of land, polluted water and air, and caused untold long-term health problems. The 273-mile-long Black Mesa coal-slurry pipeline sucks 1.4 billion gallons of water every year out of the arid region, lowering the water table and literally undermining Hopi water sources. Coal from Black Mesa fires the Navajo Generating Station near Page, Arizona, casting a haze over the Grand Canyon and Four Corners region. Despite the efforts of the Council of Energy
Resource Tribes to balance use and protection of natural resources, mining,
oil, and gas exploration scars thousands of acres of Indian land. In Alaska,
the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (1971) and the subsequent North
Slope energy boom with its drilling sites, pipelines, and access roads
has transformed the landscape, threatening migratory mammals and waterfowl
and contributing to changes in Native Alaskan land use and ownership patterns.
Recently, governments and industries are looking at reservations as potential disposal sites for solid, hazardous, and nuclear wastes. In 1990 the Pine Ridge Sioux rejected proposals by subsidiaries of O&G Industries to build a landfill, but the neighboring Rosebud Sioux council approved a 5,700 acre facility, "big enough to take care of all the waste in the United States." Under the proposal, they would receive one dollar per ton of trash, an economic bonanza for the depressed reservation unless, as some Sioux and environmental critics warn, the dump becomes a toxic nightmare. The pressure for some type of economic development and employment on underdeveloped and resource-poor reservations has led the Campo of California to agree to a 600-acre landfill, and the Kaibab-Paiutes of Arizona and the Kaw of Oklahoma to accept hazardous waste incinerators. Presently, the Mescalero Apaches, Skull Valley Goshutes, and others are debating the location of nuclear waste storage facilities on their lands. Their decisions may pose long-term environmental problems that could outweigh the short-term benefits. In recent years, tribal development and land use has put some Indians at odds with environmentalists. This fascinating turn of events emerges as modern Indians begin placing needs over older cultural regulatory patterns, shattering white stereotypes of Indians as "the original conservationists." Early environmentalists found inspiration in Native American actions and attitudes. Those who followed perpetuated many of the grosser stereotypes of Indians as beings who left no mark on the land, essentially denying them their humanity, culture, history, and modernity. In the 1960s and 1970s, Indians became symbols for the counterculture and conservation movements—Iron Eyes Cody shedding a tear in television ads as he looked over a polluted landscape; an apocryphal speech attributed to Chief Seattle became the litany of true believers. The issue continues to be hotly debated. Indians were never ecologists—something that refers to a highly abstract and systematic science—but they were careful students of their functional environments, bound by material and cultural needs and constraints, striving for maximum sustained yield, not maximum production. They possessed an elaborate land ethic based on use, reciprocity, and balance. Those attitudes persist today and contribute to the debate within and between Indian communities, corporations, environmentalists, and governments about the future of Indian peoples and environments. |