The event was one of many of its kind to draw attention to plans by
the Arizona Snowbowl Corporation to build a 14-mile pipeline from the
city of Flagstaff to the nearby San Francisco Peaks. They want to
expand a ski resort there, and make snow out of the wastewater.
These mountains are sacred to 13 different local tribes, but as usual,
this is not a problem for the corporation. The message here is not
lost on anyone. Once again, it is a case of the USA saying to Native
America: we shit on you. Your land, your religion, your people. The
500-year siege continues.
Klee is a member of a 3-piece band called Blackfire, along with his
sister and his brother. Their music is hard, dark, loud, punk-metal
kind of stuff, with lots of growling and power chords. Together with
their father, a Navajo medicine man named Jones, the four of them also
perform traditional song, dance and drumming together. Sometimes the
Benally Family opens for Blackfire, which is always a fascinating
exercise in contrasts. But usually Jones is in Flagstaff, employed as
a medicine man at a local hospital.
I was on one of Blackfires European tours, opening for them at a bunch
of shows in Germany and Prague. We were a day late getting into
Prague. We were traveling in an old but functional VW van. We had a
gig in a squat in Prague during the week of the World Bank/IMF meetings
there.
The Czech border police didnt know what to make of us. They were on
the lookout for black-clad anarchist youth from Spain and Italy. We
definitely didnt fit that description, but they knew there was
something about us. Im sure they had never seen a Navajo family
before, and they must have realized that Jones was far too old to be
throwing rocks at anybody.
After a while they decided we had to stay in Germany because there was
a small but fairly jagged dent near the back of the van. The said they
thought this could be dangerous, someone could cut themselves on it.
We spent the night at a friends place in Nuremberg and succeeded in
getting into Prague the next day by train.
Around that time, in 1999-2000 and thereabouts, I was spending a lot of
time in Germany, in a relationship with a woman from Hamburg, hanging
out with the radical farmers in the Wendlandt region, singing at
anti-nuclear protests and such.
Germany has a very active leftwing, especially when it comes to US
imperialism and nuclear power. For many German leftists, though, as
with their counterparts in the rest of Europe and the US, Native
America is a non-issue. When approached about getting involved with
Native struggles for self-determination in the US, some will tell you
that the issue is esoteric. In other words, basically, Native
Americans are a thing of history, irrelevant except for certain hippies
who like to make sweat lodges, live in tipis, and imagine what it might
have been like way back when.
Others in Germany know better, and there are probably more functional
groups working in solidarity with indigenous struggles there than
anywhere else in the industrialized world. They know that Native
America exists and it is under a constant state of siege. And they
know that resistance is widespread, and needs to be supported.
I spent Y2K in a trailer on a farm in the Wendlandt, figuring it might
be good to be near a source of food for when industrial society
collapsed. After the world failed to end I went back to Hamburg, and
along with a dozen other people from around Germany, I made my way to
Arizona. February 1st, 2000, was to be an important marker in the
struggle for Big Mountain, and this date would see the largest number
of outsiders coming to show solidarity with the people there for quite
some years.
Since long before Europeans began their savage conquest of the
Americas, Navajo and Hopi people have lived side by side in what we now
call the Southwest. Traditionally, Hopis are farmers and Navajos
herders, so there have at times been tensions between the two peoples,
as is the case anywhere in the world where these two ways of living
intersect. By most accounts, though, the Navajo-Hopi land dispute is
basically a creation of the US government, the state of Arizona, and
Peabody Western, a giant multinational energy corporation.
The Navajo and Hopi people, like most indigenous peoples in North
America, suffer from the very same affliction that keeps most people in
countries like Nigeria or Angola in grinding poverty that is, great
wealth, in the form of tremendous deposits of coal and uranium.
There was a brief renaissance for many indigenous peoples in the
west. This was in the early part of the twentieth century in the
brief span of time in between. In between the time when native people
were slaughtered en masse, forced onto reservations, and starved, and
the time when coal, uranium and oil were discovered on their lands.
Since then, things have continued to go from bad to worse.
Those of us coming from Germany to Arizona to support the struggle on
Big Mountain arrived by mid-January. Driving onto the Navajo
reservation, it became quickly apparent why some rental car companies
in the Southwest make you sign a contract saying you will not take
their cars to Mexico or to any Indian reservations. The area of Black
Mesa/Big Mountain is just the sort of place Hertz is afraid of.
The roads, if such a term can be used to describe what we were driving
on, were beyond anything Id seen anywhere in the world. It was beyond
the general neglect of the federal government and the corrupt tribal
councils.
The area around Black Mesa was subject to a US government-imposed
freeze on all construction, including road maintenance, which had been
going on for several decades. The roads, such as they were, consisted
of two humps, like little mountain ridges, with valleys in between them
that were often several feet deep. If you fell off the humps at the
wrong spot, whether you were in a pickup truck or an SUV, you could
seriously damage your vehicle. We managed to stay on the humps in my
old pickup truck.
We had long since passed the nearest town. After many more miles of
driving down a dirt road that had been maintained, we passed a little
school and a water tower. Soon after that, the road turned to humps
and we drove many more miles, slowly, constantly vigilant to avoid
falling into the ditches on either side of us.
We passed many ancient driveways that led to hogans that were no longer
there. Finally, we came upon one of the very few driveways left that
led to a hogan that was inhabited, by Louise Benally and her family.
We had brought a couple of big Army tents with us that we bought in
Flagstaff, and there on Louises land we set them up. Her homestead
there would come to be known as Camp Anna Mae, named after Anna Mae
Aquash, the Micmac woman who came from Canada to Pine Ridge, South
Dakota to support the struggle of the Lakota people there against the
mining of uranium on their land. Her death was one of several dozen
unsolved murders in South Dakota in the mid-70s. The FBI is widely
suspected.
I quickly realized one of the many things that made Louise Benally
special. Along with the tenacity of her spirit, her willingness to
stay on the land so long after the vast majority had been driven off,
was something else she spoke English. There we were, sitting around
a fire outside Louises hogan, with several elderly women in colorful
skirts, slowly cooking a hunk of a lamb they had recently slaughtered,
which was wrapped in foil and lay beneath hot coals. Louise was
several decades younger than the rest of the women, and the only one
who spoke a language in addition to Navajo.
These elderly women were the backbone of the struggle. Collectively
they were known by all as the grandmothers. Their bravery, their dark,
weathered faces, their short stature and their colorful skirts all
reminded me of the Mothers of the Disappeared I had seen standing
between us and the riot police in Buenos Aires. But they were several
thousand miles north of those Madres, and speaking Navajo instead of
Spanish.
At its peak, during a pipe ceremony on February 1st, there were 250
people who had come from outside to show their support. There were
people from all over Indian Country, including from as far away as the
Dakotas. There were the Germans. There was a French chef. There was
a sizeable delegation Japanese, many of them Buddhist monks. And most
of the rest were young white people from across the US and Canada.
But for some while before and after that date, at any given time there
were several dozen people, mostly young people from across the US,
living with the grandmothers, working with them, herding their sheep,
cutting firewood, and otherwise just being a presence, organized then
as now with the name Black Mesa Indigenous Support.
In contrast to the clean, colorful elders they were living with, these
youth were often dressed in anarchist chic dirty rags they had gotten
from dumpsters and stitched together themselves, covered in patches,
facial piercings, and dreadlocks. The grandmothers called them goat
heads because of their dreads.
Peabody Western runs North Americas biggest coal mine there in Navajo
country. For decades they had been using millions of gallons of water
from the aquifer below to slurry their coal 270 miles from there to Las
Vegas, where Las Vegas and other cities got most of their power. The
Mohave Generating Station is temporarily shut down and the coal slurry
is not running. Water is returning to the once-empty wells, and some
of the streams are slowly coming back to life.
But poke around briefly on the web and you can see that this is a very
temporary situation. Other energy corporations are making plans to
open new mines and new power plants, tacitly promising to maintain a
local cancer rate that is many times the national average.
In fact, as I write this, Alice Gilmore and a number of other elderly
Navajo women are blockading a road near their homes on the New Mexico
side of the reservation, where the Desert Rock Energy Company is
attempting to expand their mining operations.
Peabody has also been trying for decades to expand their massive mine.
The problem is, there are people living on top of the coal, and they
refuse to leave.
The government is just barely too tactful to forcibly remove thousands
of Indians from their land in the modern era, so they have employed
various other methods. Very much along the lines of the sanctions
imposed on Iraq during the 1990s. Starve them into submission. Make
their lives unliveable. Take away their water. Make sure they have to
drive dozens of miles down unmaintained roads in order to get water for
their sheep. Impound their sheep and make them pay to get them back.
Fine them for making repairs on the roofs of their hogans. Fine them
for collecting firewood.
Until 1974, the Black Mesa area was the home of one of the last
remaining intact communities of 20,000 or so people living
traditionally, speaking mainly Navajo, living as sheep herders, in
community, as they had for centuries. But then Peabody decided they
wanted to expand their mine and people like Senator John McCain wanted
to do their best to make sure this could happen. This meant moving
20,000 people off their land, some at a time, by making their lives
impossible if they tried to stay.
Most ultimately moved. Many were sent to live on land that was made
radioactive by the Church Rock uranium spill. Their sheep died from
drinking the water, and many of the people died soon thereafter.
After losing their community, living increasingly isolated lives made
miserable by constant harassment by the authorities, some 17 families
still refuse to leave their dusty land.
Rena Babbit Lane is one of them. Last month her supporter left the
land, and then the Hopi Rangers, working for those who seek to expand
coal mining operations, took the occasion to visit Rena, who is
approximately 80 years old, and push her around, yell at her, threaten
her, and cause her to have a heart attack. And now shes back from the
hospital, back in her hogan, once again refusing to leave the land.
As in Palestine or Colombia, the mostly white supporters are able to be
useful largely just because theyre white. The corrupt tribal
authorities know who butters their bread, just as Israel or the
government of Colombia do.
Just being there and being white doesnt stop the general trends, but
it can effectively prevent the authorities from harassing the
grandmothers for another day. Also, the fundamental racism of the
reservation system is such that the tribal authorities are not allowed
to arrest non-native people the most they can do is escort them off
of the reservation.
When I first got to Black Mesa I didnt know if Id know anybody who
was there. That was a silly thought. I remember when I was a young
man living in Berkeley I kept running into people I knew at various
leftwing events. I said to my friend David Said, its a small
world. No, he said to me, chuckling haplessly, its a small left.
Sure enough, there were all my friends from the IMF/World Bank
protests. There were folks from the struggles to save the old-growth
forests on the west coast. Julia Butterfly was one of them, visiting
Big Mountain scant weeks after she came down from the old redwood she
had been living in for two years.
My friend Wes from Philadelphia was telling me how illuminating it was
for the grandmothers when the Seattle WTO protests happened. The
grandmothers had noticed that there was a week or two when most of
their supporters had left the reservation.
Only 18% of the Navajo reservation has electricity, and virtually no
one in the Black Mesa area have it. But those who had televisions
quickly spread the word young people with dreadlocks looking
suspiciously like our supporters had shut down the city of Seattle.
The protests were over, then the supporters returned.
Many of the supporters had come from Minnesota, I think about thirty of
them at the high point. They were veterans of a struggle there known
as the Minnehaha Free State.
In Minnesota a lot of place names begin with minne because that means
water in the Mendota language. Haha means, you guessed it,
laughing. Minnehaha park was nearby part of the Free States
encampment, and also part of it. By the end, all of the Free State
would be in the park.
One of the things that always disturbed me about the heroic struggle of
the people of Big Mountain was how ignored it was by most of the
non-Native community in the region, including most of the activist
community.
The sinister brilliance of the reservation system is how the people are
out of sight and out of mind to other people in the region. There were
and are people doing important work trying to raise awareness of and
struggle for all kinds of good things in places like Flagstaff,
Phoenix, Tucson and Prescott. But for most people there, the Navajo
reservation is about as nearby as Iraq, and Iraq is much more in the
news. This was not the case with Minnehaha, which was right there in
the Twin Cities metropolitan area.
I first read about the Minnehaha Free State in the Earth First!
Journal, and visited it many times during the course of its tumultuous
16 months in the late 90s. It was a case of mutual interests coming
together in often beautiful ways.
The Minnesota Department of Transportation had plans to build a highway
through a residential neighborhood in Minneapolis and through the park
next to the Mississippi River, in order to better facilitate a speedy
drive from downtown Minneapolis to the massive Mall of America outside
of town. The completing of the highway would shave a good three
minutes off of the trip.
Local residents wanted to keep their neighborhood intact. Local
environmentalists wanted to prevent the building of yet another
highway. The Mendota people wanted to save land that was sacred to
them. Residents of the neighborhood and environmental activists all
lived together in the Twin Cities, as did many Mendota people, who had
never been given a reservation by the federal government.
It was a powerful collaboration that captured the imagination of many
people in the region and beyond. Though the encampment was ultimately
destroyed by MDOT and other government agencies, it spawned a new
generation of activists, friends, community. In the beginning, the
Free Staters were occupying several houses that were slated for
demolition, with the blessings of the former residents forced out by
the state of Minnesota.
When 800 police were sent to evict everybody and burn down the houses,
the Free State moved downhill, into what was then still part of the
park. Someone made a brilliant, conical-shaped structure that could
sleep 18, in cubby holes on two floors made of pallettes and other
found materials, with a firepit in the middle, to keep everybody warm
through the long, cold Minnesota winter.
I used to tour mostly by van. Once or twice a year Id make a big loop
around the US, dipping into Canada here and there if they let me across
the border. Either before or after visiting Minnesota, Id pass
through one of the Dakotas.
Several years ago I was driving from Missoula, in western Montana, to
Rapid City, South Dakota. I had left myself two days to do the drive,
preferring to amble along at a more leisurely pace when possible. I
was making better time than I thought, though, and was coming into
Rapid City the night before my gig there.
Charles Ray was organizing my show there. Hes a local activist and
punk rock musician, files stories for both Free Speech Radio News and
South Dakota Public Radio. I called him to ask if I could stay at his
place an extra night, and he said great, glad youll be here, you can
come in the morning with me to Pine Ridge for a church-burning. Like
in Mississippi
? No, an entirely different king of thing. A healing
ceremony.
Fifty miles from Rapid City is the Pine Ridge reservation, where there
are intensely beautiful, huge, colorful, crumbling rock formations, and
lots of uranium mines and Lakota people. Theres only one FM radio
station that comes in around there, and much of the time its in the
Lakota language. It was here that Anna Mae Aquash and so many others
were killed by the FBIs death squads in the 1970s.
We pulled in to a tiny little town just outside of Pine Ridge. It had
17 residents, nine white and eight Lakota. A few decades earlier,
though, it had been somewhat bigger, a white town with a racist
history. The bar was covered in buffalo skulls and had a big sign that
said no Indians allowed. The no had been crossed out, so now the
sign read ominously, Indians allowed. One might draw the conclusion
from this sight that they were not necessarily welcome, but were at
least allowed.
A hundred feet from the bar stood a dilapidated Catholic church that
was no longer used, but had once been the center of the white community
there, along with the bar. It was also a place with connections to the
boarding schools where the white settlers, their churches and their
government, tried to Christianize the natives with the sorts of
barbaric practices typical of European civilization.
I remember a couple different folks talking about their experiences
with these brutal schools. Of the school Jones Benally was forcibly
sent to when he was already in his twenties, many years ago, he would
only say, I learned to say yes and no.
My friend Chris Interpreter talked to me a bit more about the Baptist
school he was sent to. Chris got his last name because his
grandfathers grandfather was interned in the starvation camp that the
Army drove the Navajos to, and he was one of the few who was able to
speak English, and so was used as an interpreter between his people and
the occupying army.
When Chris was a young teenager on the Navajo reservation in the
1980s, a Baptist revival came through and set up camp. His
grandmother was a woman who actively practiced her traditional religion
and lived with her sheep on what was left of her land with what was
left of her people. Perhaps feeling that the old ways werent working
out and she should try something new, she converted to Christianity.
When given the opportunity, she and Chriss parents sent him to a
school for Indians that the Baptists ran. The government-run Indian
boarding schools had finally been stopped a decade earlier, but there
were still private ones.
Chris didnt want to go. Though he felt betrayed when she converted to
Christianity, Chris loved his grandmother and wanted to stay. At the
school he was beaten and humiliated for doing the daily rituals his
grandmother had taught him, and for the crime of speaking his language.
After a few months he ran away from the school, and made his way a
hundred miles or so back to his grandmothers hogan. When she and his
parents heard about how he had been treated they told him he didnt
have to go back. When the representatives of the school came to bring
him back, his mother told them to go away.
Its impossible to over-emphasize the destructive impact these schools
had on communities, and on the minds and spirits of the people sent to
them. I remember once being in a little Hopi town nearby Black Mesa.
There was one general store in the town. An elderly Navajo man was
looking at the shelf full of aspirin, cough syrup and such.
He was elegantly dressed in classic Western garb, like he had just
gotten off his horse. He spoke no English, but wanted to know from me,
the only white person in the store, what pills he could take that would
help is ailing heart. I dont know much about pharmaceutical drugs,
and also had no idea whether he was suffering from heartburn, irregular
heartbeats or something else, so I apologized and said I didnt know.
Anyway, there by Pine Ridge, South Dakota in front of the old church
stood Big Jim. An aptly-named, tall, buff Lakota man in his 30s or
40s, Big Jim had bought the property the church was on and planned to
build something new there. He had decided that rather than bulldozing
the old building, he would publically, ritually burn it in a healing
ceremony, for all his people, all the commuities ruined by the
Christian invaders with their murderous armies, and their armies of
miners, thieves, schools and churches.
A small group of Lakota men and women had gathered for the occasion.
The event had been announced on public radio in Rapid City, thanks to
Charles, and also gathered was one elderly white Catholic couple who
had been married in the church.
One local, older white man in a pickup truck pulled up momentarily and
said, good-naturedly, the Indians are burning the church down! Big
Jim smiled.
For the old Catholic couple it was a solemn occasion. For the Lakotas
present it was a bit of a celebration, and out of respect for the
elderly couple, they quietly walked around the corner of the church, to
watch from a different vantage point and give the old couple some
space. When the fire was lit the dry old wood caught quickly, and soon
it was a massive conflagration.
After interviewing Big Jim about the occasion, Charles had set up a
video camera fifty feet from the church. That was the closest I could
stand to be, the fire was so hot, the hottest fire I had ever
experienced.
Around the corner from the old Catholic couple, Lakota men could be
heard uttering phrases such as, man, that altars really cooking!
The cross on top stayed standing long after most of the walls
surrounding it had collapsed. Eventually, though, the flames that had
engulfed it brought it crashing to the ground, too, and all that was
left was a smouldering pile of rubble. It was a brief moment of hope
in the midst of the death and destruction that characterizes the
ongoing conquest of Native America. A brief respite in the 500-year
siege.
Feel free to repost and distribute. You can also find this and
other essays by following the Songwriter's Notebook link at the top of
www.davidrovics.com, or directly by going to
www.songwritersnotebook.blogspot.com.