Tag Archives: native american issues

No brainer: Money belongs to The Navajo People

(cross-posted to Utah Legislature Watch)

This is a no-brainer folks.  The state of Utah needs to get its hands out of the affairs of the Navajo  people. It finally looks like steps are being made to allow them to manage their money from a 1933 trust fund that allegedly has been mismanaged by Utah.

The San Juan Record:

A long standing lawsuit has been settled which, if approved by the Utah State legislature and a host of other groups, will provide up to $33 million for the benefit of Navajos in San Juan County.

Why would the Utah State Legislature need to “approve” this?

The Pelt vs State of Utah lawsuit, alleging mismanagement of an oil royalty trust fund first created in 1937, has been brewing and simmering in the court system for decades. On January 4, federal judge William Canby helped broker a deal that resulted in the possible settlement of the matter.

The suit alleges that the mismanagement occurred over a long period of time before the State of Utah took over management of the trust fund in the 1990s. In more recent years, Utah abandoned its role as trustee. The new trustee has yet to be named and is the subject of legislation in the United States Congress.

First step:  Utah legislators need to “approve” and hand over the money that rightfully belongs to this nation.

Second step:  Let the people of this nation handle their own affairs, in this case managing their own money.

Sentaor Bob Bennett is sponsoring legislation in the US Senate that would turn over management of the trust fund from the state of Utah to the Utah Dineh Corporation, a group that includes representation from all of the Navajo Chapters in San Juan County.

It’s probably safe to bet that much more than $33 million was made (by white people) off of the Navajo Trust Fund than they are actually receiving back.

BIA recognizes new leadership of Goshutes

In today’s Salt Lake Tribune: Skull Valley: Former leader out as Goshutes elect a new slate: Leon Bear defeated, but his uncle is elected in mail ballot; results must still be verified

After years of controlling the tribal elections and able to remain as the tribal leader as a result, Leon Bear is now out after a recent election voted in new leadership.
Continue reading

Columbus Day no reason to celebrate

As Native Americans in this day and age, we are survivors, we have survived the genocide, the federal Policy to “kill the Indian, and save the man”, and all the other atrocities that are not covered in US history books.  I wish a beautiful victory song to all Native Americans today, we have survived and, for most of the tribes and bands, our cultures are intact, alive and well.  We have overcome the onslaught, we must however never forget, and strive to better our Native communities and homelands by educating ourselves and our people so that they can represent our people to preserve our land, our resources, our cultures, and our religions.
 
Steven Chischilly  
 
Columbus Day no reason to celebrate 
By Mary Annette Pember

 
In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue on a mission of plunder for Spain. When he arrived here, he commenced the virtual annihilation of the indigenous peoples of the Americas. A culture and nation founded on the murderous, exploitive
philosophy of this act has two choices: apologize and make reparations, or cunningly twist the facts and make it an opportunity
 for celebration.

The United States has chosen the latter.

In many ways, the whole Columbus Day debate is a big yawn for
native peoples, just another in the ongoing pinches in the rear that define being Native American in America. Mostly, we simply say, “Ouch,” and go on with the business of surviving the policies borne out of a ruling government’s mindset that sees Christopher Columbus as a national hero. At the time of European “discovery” in the 15th century, there
were more than 10 million native peoples in North America. But by the beginning of the 20th century, our numbers had dwindled to less the 230,000.

So we’re pretty ambivalent about the whole celebration idea surrounding our near-demise. The Columbus attitude has justified U.S-
Indian policy all the way from stolen lands and broken treaties to recent attacks on tribal sovereignty and the failure to make good on
 Indian trust funds.

 Currently, mainstream America has a “just get over it” attitude to native peoples, dismissing our grievances as political correctness
gone awry. But in the recent words of an elder, “If the shoe were on the other foot, Americans would carry laminated copies of their
ancestors’ treaties until they got their just dues.”

Asking the U.S. government to abandon Columbus Day in favor of Indigenous Peoples’ Day is akin to asking for a sea change in the
national psychology. It demands a soul-searching objectivity that is simply too threatening to the mainstream culture and economy.
The European “discovery” of America is a misnomer. This victor’s history is still very much at the heart of the American psyche. By
ignoring the fact that that the place was already inhabited by millions of indigenous peoples, the celebration of Columbus Day
exalts a criminal act.

 This philosophy has allowed the current Christopher Columbus reincarnation, George W. Bush, sufficient national support in his
efforts to bring democratic light to the darker regions of Iraq. As a native woman, experienced in the repercussions of American policy-making, I’m waiting for the president’s supporters to propose establishing a George W. Bush Day in Iraq, celebrating the civilizing
of that country.

I bet few Americans would see the irony.

 Mary Annette Pember, Red Cliff Ojibwe, is past president of the Native American Journalists Association. She currently lives and  works as an independent journalist in Cincinnati.

Image

Immigration-Deportation

Salt Lake Native Americans Protest

Last Friday local Native Americans held a demonstration to protest the Bush Administration’s proposed $33 billion cuts to services that would adversely impact Native Americans. In Salt Lake the Indian Walk-in Center is at risk for losing its funding and could close down.

Coverage of the demonstration
KUTV Channel 2
ABC 4
Deseret News