Hi Ed, Chris,

>From the Portland Oregonian 8/7/2000
"In 1854 alone, the federal government paid the state of California $1
million in expense claims stemming from hunts. Some county governments paid
bounties of $5 a head.    50 cents a scalp.   From  1850 to 1900, the
California Native American population plunged from 200.000 to 50,000."




Science News
Week of Jan. 8, 2000; Vol. 157, No. 2
Ishi's Long Road Home
Bruce Bower
A California Indian's preserved brain accentuates his tragic, mysterious
life
Inside a sealed tank in a Suitland, Md., warehouse rests a brain that, for
the past 83 years, has refused to die. The lump of preserved tissue doesn't
pulsate or glow like the gory centerpiece of some late-night monster movie.
Rather, it reaches out and grabs people because it's infused with the
symbolic power of a real-life horror story-the near-destruction of several
Native American tribes by white California settlers in the late 1800s.

This disembodied organ assumes even more vitality for having come from a man
who survived unspeakable tragedy with an uncommon courage and grace that
inspired a best-selling biography.

This is Ishi's brain. Officials at the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, D.C., where the brain was sent in 1917 by one of anthropology's
most eminent practitioners, hope to return it soon to the two surviving
Indian tribes most closely related to Ishi. Once legal and logistical
hurdles are cleared, the tribes will conduct a traditional burial uniting
Ishi's brain with his cremated body, now held in a California cemetery.

The reappearance of this long-forgotten brain, which surprised even some
Smithsonian scientists, has ignited fierce debate over the ethics of the
researchers who befriended and studied Ishi. It has also focused scientific
and public attention on the ongoing repatriation process, by which
anthropologists return skeletal and cultural remains to Native American
groups.

Moreover, the saga raises questions about how much can ever really be known
about Ishi, a man who has attained near-mythic status among anthropologists,
Native Americans, and others, especially in California.

"Ishi has become an icon of our guilt and regret about past mistreatment of
Native Americans," says Nancy Rockafellar, a medical historian at the
University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). "He's been admired for his
resilience and heroism, and now he's a symbol of the repatriation struggle.
There are many Ishis."

Only one

In August 1911, only one Ishi existed, and that just barely. Starving and
almost naked, he straggled into the northern California town of Oroville. In
a wicked irony, he took shelter in the local slaughterhouse. Most of the
approximately 400 members of the Yahi tribe to which he belonged had been
massacred by white vigilantes and bounty hunters.

The 1849 California gold rush had set off bloody attacks on Indian tribes in
mining areas, many occurring in the years just after Ishi's birth around
1860. From 1870 to 1911, Ishi and 5 to 20 Yahi hid in wooded areas not far
from Oroville. As apparently the last surviving member of that hardy band, a
desperate Ishi crossed into the white world. The sheriff turned him over to
University of California anthropologist Thomas T. Waterman, who on Sept. 4,
1911, took Ishi to live at his institution's anthropology museum, then
located in San Francisco.

Waterman and his colleagues, including anthropology department head Alfred
Kroeber, took an immediate liking to their outgoing, intelligent boarder. So
did the general public. In his first 6 months at the museum, 24,000 visitors
watched Ishi demonstrate arrow making and fire building. Kroeber referred to
him as the last Stone Age Indian in North America.

Ishi also spent much time demonstrating archery techniques to Saxton Pope,
the UCSF surgeon who became his personal physician. Famed linguist Edward
Sapir worked with Ishi to document the Yahi language.

Ishi, whose life story was first described in the popular book Ishi in Two
Worlds by Theodora Kroeber (1961, University of California Press), died of
tuberculosis on March 25, 1916. Theodora Kroeber, the wife of Alfred
Kroeber, notes in her book that Ishi's brain was removed during an autopsy,
although she makes no mention of what happened to it.

The issue drew little notice until 1997, when four Maidu Indian tribes in
northern California's Butte County formed a committee to campaign for the
return of Ishi's remains for reburial in the Yahi homelands. They knew that
his ashes were stored in a cemetery just south of San Francisco. Upon
learning that his brain had ended up elsewhere, they launched an effort to
find it.

Rockafellar and other UCSF officials joined the search after seeing a June
6, 1997 Los Angeles Times article suggesting that UCSF still held the brain.

The UCSF investigators eventually ran across clues that their quarry had
ended up at the Smithsonian. After getting a tip from an emeritus
anthropologist familiar with Ishi's story, Rockafellar telephoned JoAllyn
Archambault, director of the Smithsonian's American Indian Program.
Rockafellar quotes Archambault as saying that Ishi's missing brain "is old
folklore, and it doesn't exist."

Later in 1998, anthropologist Orin Starn of Duke University in Durham, N.C.,
combed through Alfred Kroeber's letters held at UC Berkeley. In a letter
dated Oct. 27, 1916, Kroeber offered to ship Ishi's brain to Ales Hrdlicka,
then the Smithsonian's physical anthropology curator, to include in his
studies of links between brain size, body weight, and race. Hrdlicka had
quickly sent back a letter of acceptance.

Armed with these documents, Starn met with anthropologist Thomas Killion,
director of the Smithsonian's Repatriation Office, on Jan. 27, 1999. At that
meeting, Killion confirmed that Ishi's brain was stored in a Smithsonian
facility.

With the search over, the repatriation process began. Killion and his
colleagues worked with the Butte County committee to identify, as required
by law, the closest living relatives to whom the Smithsonian could return
Ishi's brain. On May 7, 1999, Smithsonian officials announced that they
would return the preserved tissue to the Redding Rancheria and Pit River
tribes in Butte County. These groups contain descendants of a larger Yana
culture to which Ishi's Yahi belonged, as well as the Maidu.

The two tribes still await final legal approval from the state of California
to retrieve Ishi's cremated remains from the cemetery. Tribal deliberations
continue on where to hold the burial and how to conduct it. After resolving
those matters, representatives of the tribes will retrieve the brain from
the Smithsonian.

"Things are going slowly, but that's how we want to handle it," says Mickey
Gemmill, spokesman for the two tribes. "The way we see it, [Ishi's burial]
will happen when it's supposed to happen."

Quick action

Although Native American groups were heartened by the Smithsonian's quick
action on their repatriation request, they're upset that it took so long to
locate Ishi's brain, Gemmill notes. For her part, Rockafellar wonders why
Archambault at first denied the brain's existence and why Smithsonian
officials who knew the location of the brain did not seek out the Butte
County committee once its well-publicized search began.

Killion and anthropologist Stuart Speaker, who works in the Smithsonian's
Repatriation Office, say that repatriation workers knew the whereabouts of
Ishi's brain all along, even if anthropologists in other Smithsonian
departments didn't. After decades during which Ishi's brain attracted
virtually no attention and underwent a couple of location changes, its
official documentation had become muddled.

In fact, when the Smithsonian distributed an inventory of remains for
possible repatriation to California Indian tribes in 1998, Ishi's brain
wasn't on the list. "That was an unfortunate oversight that we corrected
after meeting with Starn," Speaker says.

He adds that he doesn't know why Archambault denied the brain's existence to
Rockafellar. Archambault doesn't recall talking to the UCSF historian.
However, she says that because she had no knowledge of its presence at the
Smithsonian, she told several callers who inquired on separate occasions
around that time that Ishi's brain had never been sent there.

"This is a big place and people [from different departments] don't talk to
each other much," Archambault says. "I found out that Ishi's brain was here
when the story came out in the press [in early 1999]."

Diservice done

That's when the Berkeley anthropology faculty found out, too. The news led
some to feel that their discipline and their founding department head had
done a disservice to Ishi.

In the April 1999 Anthropology Newsletter, published by the American
Anthropological Association, Berkeley anthropologist Jonathan Marks
expressed puzzlement at what motivated Kroeber to "objectify a friend" and
allow Hrdlicka "to add a pickled Indian brain to his macabre collections."
Marks notes, however, that Ishi died while Kroeber was in Europe. Upon
learning of the loss, Kroeber immediately sent a letter to an associate
declaring that no autopsy should occur. The letter arrived too late.

Marks also scolds the Smithsonian for hesitating "longer than the blink of
an eye" to repatriate Ishi's brain.

His views echo those of a statement issued by the Berkeley anthropology
department on March 29, 1999, and published in the May 1999 Anthropology
Newsletter. The statement described relations between Ishi and the
researchers as "complex and contradictory." It concludes that Kroeber
"inexplicably arranged" to send Ishi's brain to the Smithsonian.

Some Berkeley anthropologists, such as George M. Foster, staunchly objected
to the department's statement. Foster, who has conducted field research
since 1937 and was a student and colleague of Kroeber's, defends the actions
of the late anthropologist in the October 1999 Anthropology Newsletter.


Ishi had comfortable, permanent living quarters at the San Francisco museum,
where he enjoyed a longer and healthier life than he would have if he had
been sent to an Indian reservation, Foster contends. The Yahi survivor was a
source of information for researchers, but he probably didn't feel exploited
by them, Foster adds. He suspects that Ishi, like Native Americans Foster
has worked with, was pleased to record his language and culture.

Foster also describes Kroeber as having had "genuine affection" for Ishi.
Kroeber's reasons for sending Ishi's brain across the country are unclear,
Foster holds. Kroeber apparently spent months pondering what to do with the
unexpected "bottled brain of a close friend in his office," Foster says.
Hrdlicka, who had a large collection of primate brains, may have presented
an acceptable solution to Kroeber's predicament with a bonus of what
appeared to be a scientific payoff. Nonetheless, Hrdlicka never published
any measurements of Ishi's brain or included it in any studies.

In a letter accompanying Foster's written comments, Kroeber's son Karl, a
humanities professor at Columbia University, says that the Berkeley
departmental statement ignores the mutual respect and friendship that
developed between Ishi and those with whom he worked at the museum.

Rockafellar and Starn coauthored a comment on this matter in the
August-October 1999 Current Anthropology. Kroeber and his fellow researchers
truly cared for Ishi, "but he was an object to them as well as a friend,"
they state. They argue that Ishi's dual status encouraged Kroeber to send
the preserved brain off for scientific analysis rather than add it to the
rest of the deceased Yahi's ashes.

Final outcome

Whatever Kroeber's motivation for forwarding Ishi's brain to Hrdlicka,
Smithsonian officials say that the final outcome of the case demonstrates
that the repatriation process is working. It took only about 2 months to
respond to the formal request to repatriate Ishi's brain and offer the
remains to the appropriate tribes, Killion says.

Since 1991, he adds, the Smithsonian's Repatriation Office has returned more
than 4,000 sets of remains to more than 40 Native American groups. An
additional 30 repatriation requests are pending.

The Repatriation Office's intensive investigation of Ishi's roots put to
rest the notion that he was "the last Yahi," Speaker says. It also found
evidence that Ishi and his Yahi comrades did not lead an isolated, Stone Age
existence. For instance, Ishi liked to make arrowheads from glass obtained
from bottles gathered at white towns and camps.

Yet for all that has been written and said about him, Ishi remains a
puzzling figure. Even the arrowheads he fashioned to such acclaim while in
San Francisco leave questions unanswered.
Ishi's arrowheads most closely resemble those of the Wintu tribe, a neighbor
of the Yahi, according to Berkeley archaeologist M. Steven Shackley. In his
youth, Ishi may have learned to make arrowheads from a Wintu relative or
might even have lived among the Wintu, Shackley suggests.
Killion doubts those scenarios. Ishi and other Yahi, however, probably
interacted with other Native American groups to a greater extent than has
been appreciated, he says.

"A lot of what we think is known about Ishi's life is rather fragmentary,"
Speaker asserts. Ishi made it clear to Waterman, Kroeber, and others from
the beginning that he didn't want to talk about his family or his feelings
about what had happened to them. In fact, he didn't even divulge his real
name, probably due to a Native American belief that it's disrespectful and
potentially dangerous to reveal one's name to strangers, Speaker says.

Consequently, he was dubbed Ishi, the Yana word for man.

"Ishi's story is one of the most slippery that I've ever encountered,"
Rockafellar remarks. "We have his complete medical records at UCSF, but he's
still a mystery. Science couldn't penetrate Ishi."


Letters:
I remember reading about Ishi back in the 1970s when I was a teenager, and I
was saddened anew by the story of the repatriation of his preserved brain. I
hope that Alfred and Theodora Kroeber's child, novelist Ursula K. LeGuin,
will at some point take up the intriguing question posed in your story. How
is it possible to regard someone as both a friend and an object?

Lila F. Ralston
Athens, Ga.
References and Sources
References:
Rockafellar, N., and O. Starn. 1999. Ishi's brain. Current Anthropology
40(August-October):413-415. Available at
http://ca-www.aas.duke.edu/pdfs/starn1.pdf.
Further Readings:
Speaker, S. 1999. The human remains of Ishi, a Yahi-Yana Indian, in the
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. Available at
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/anthro/repatriation/ishirep.htm.

Sources:
George M. Foster
University of California, Berkeley
Department of Anthropology
Berkeley, CA 94720
Thomas Killion
Smithsonian Institution
National Museum of Natural History
Repatriation Office
Washington, DC 20560
Karl Kroeber
Columbia University
Philosophy Hall
New York, NY 10027
Nancy Rockafellar
University of California, San Francisco
Campus Oral History Project
San Francisco, CA 94143
Stuart Speaker
Smithsonian Institution
National Museum of Natural History
Repatriation Office
Washington, DC 20560
Orin Starn
Duke University
Department of Cultural Anthropology
Durham, NC 27708
http://www.sciencenews.org/20000108/bob8.asp



Ray Evans Harrell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]






----- Original Message -----
From: "Ed Weick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Ray Evans Harrell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Christoph Reuss" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, January 19, 2003 2:59 PM
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Re: Mad Cow and Free Trade


>
>
> > That's true Chris,
> >
> > That kind of denial is what made it OK for the US to give away "free"
> > blankets to the Blackfoot Indians, who had kept the settlers and army
out
> of
> > their nation.    The blankets were from smallpox hospitals and destroyed
> the
> > old nation which the Blackfoot responded to by raiding children from
wagon
> > trains.    Today the Blackfoot are a very strong caucasian mix but 100%
> > Blackfoot even though the government lists them with a very low blood
> > quantum.
> >
> > REH
>
> I've often wondered about the truth of the "small-pox blanket" story.
It's
> appeared in several places and has acquired somewhat the same status as an
> urban legend.  For example, it was supposed to be one way in which
> gold-seekers and colonists got rid of troublesome Native people on the
coast
> of British Columbia.
>
> Ed Weick
> 577 Melbourne Ave.
> Ottawa, ON, K2A 1W7
> Canada
> Phone (613) 728 4630
> Fax     (613)  728 9382
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Futurework mailing list
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