Resistance Report: The fight against the Dakota Access pipeline came to 
Washington with the Native Nations Rise march 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/resistance-report-the-fight-against-the-dakota-access-pipeline-came-to-washington-with-the-native-nations-rise-march-203550276.html
 

 Garance Franke-Ruta https://www.yahoo.com/author/garance-franke-ruta Senior 
Politics Editor

 Yahoo News https://www.yahoo.com/news/ March 11, 2017


 
 https://www.yahoo.com/news/tagged/resistance-report
 https://www.yahoo.com/news/tagged/resistance-report WASHINGTON — They came 
from across the United States, and from as far away as Mexico and Canada.
 Comanche, Apache, Navajo, Pueblo, and Sioux; Cree, Ojibwe, Chippewa, Aztec and 
California tribal nations were all represented.
 Miss Standing Rock H.S., in braces and pale blue beaded moccasins, led the 
march along with other Standing Rock Sioux youth who had been a critical part 
of the movement against the Dakota Access pipeline. They started outside the 
D.C. offices of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which announced on Feb. 8  
https://daplpipelinefacts.com/energy-transfer-announces-receipt-easement-army-corps-engineers-land-adjacent-lake-oahe/that
 with President Trump’s executive order smoothing the way, it will grant an 
easement to Energy Transfer Partners to build the final leg of the Dakota 
Access pipeline. The 1,172-mile crude oil pipeline will run underground half a 
mile from the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, passing under Army Corps-owned 
land around the narrowest part of Lake Oahe in North Dakota, a dam-created 
reservoir of the Missouri River.
 Numbering thousands strong, many protesters had been part of the Oceti Sakowin 
Camp of “water protectors” at Standing Rock before the camp was forcibly 
disbanded in February. Some had been involved with the fight since last April; 
others were newer to the movement. There was a substantial Pueblo Indian 
presence, a reflection of the February declaration 
https://nmlegis.gov/Sessions/17%20Regular/memorials/senate/SJM020.pdf by all 23 
registered tribes in New Mexico 
http://nmindepth.com/2017/02/03/new-mexico-tribes-descend-on-state-legislature-to-oppose-dakota-access-pipeline/
 that they stand in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux in opposing the 
project. New Mexico has the second-highest percentage of Native American 
residents 
https://www.indexmundi.com/facts/united-states/quick-facts/all-states/american-indian-and-alaskan-native-population-percentage#map
 of any state after Alaska, and tribes in New Mexico are gearing up to fight 
the Bureau of Land Management’s decision in January 
http://www.hcn.org/articles/land-near-chaco-canyon-leased-for-oil-and-gas-development
 to allow fracking near Chaco Canyon’s fragile archeological sites and 
1,000-year-old Pueblo ruins.
 They chanted, “We can’t drink oil — Water is life!” and “Honor the treaties! 
Water is life!” and “Day by day, block by block, we will stand with Standing 
Rock!” They ululated and drummed and sang. A group of men brought tepee poles 
and erected a structure with swift, sure movements outside the Trump Hotel on 
Pennsylvania Avenue, where women in long skirts sewn at the encampment did a 
round dance about its circumference while a blond woman looked down from a 
hotel window. A cardboard cutout of Trump was tossed to the ground, and men and 
women thrust their beribboned poles onto it, smudging the cardboard surface. An 
Apache woman sported a giant, red Make America Great Again cap, with two mock 
arrows piercing it.
 “Standing Rock, this monument, marks the turning point of history. It’s not 
only for our tribe, but for all tribes, and for America as well. Because the 
heart of our movement is now the heart of the resistance,” Dave Archambault II, 
chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux, said at Lafayette Park after the marchers 
reached the White House.
 
 The Native Nations Rise march began outside the Army Corps of Engineers 
offices in Washington, D.C., on March 10. (Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
More
 “You know, we face a lot of obstacles and we face a lot of setbacks,” 
Archambault said. “But we’re not defeated. We’re not defeated. And we’re not 
going to be the victims. An obstacle is also an opportunity. Together, all of 
us, we can confront these obstacles. And we can look at these opportunities and 
embrace them. So together we can rise.”
 “Many communities are now experiencing what we have experienced for 
centuries,” he added, tying the Standing Rock fight to the Trump 
administration’s treatment of minorities and immigrants. “Instead of striving 
for mutual beneficial outcomes through understanding, the new administration 
dictates. Instead of expanding human rights, the new administration limits 
human rights. Instead of inspiring, the new administration manipulates. 
Treaties are signed with Native American tribes, but when these treaties become 
inconvenient, these treaties are ignored and they’re broken. Laws that provide 
freedom and equal rights were also put in place for all Americans. Yet each 
week we see more basic human rights threatened by a distant and disengaged 
administration. For all American citizens today, both Native American and 
non-Native America, ask the question, ‘Why?’ What can possibly justify the 
dismissal of basic human respect?”
 
 Yahoo News spoke with some of the attendees at the march about why they were 
there and what it meant for the indigenous rights movement that has gained 
strength through the fight over the Dakota Access pipeline.
 
 Dakota Sky (L) and Jody Gaskin at the Native Nations Rise march in Washington, 
D.C. on March 10. (Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
More
 “It’s about more than [the Dakota Access pipeline]. It’s about indigenous 
rights,” said Jody Gaskin, an Ojibwe from Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., who was 
marching with his son, Dakota Sky. “It’s about protecting the earth for our 
grandkids. Pipelines are just one part of it. But it’s a big part of it, you 
know. But it’s the pipeline that brought us together. It’s pretty cool, I 
think. Brought us all together like this. It’s pretty awesome.”
 What happens next, then?
 “We go home. Be active, take this energy back to our families,” he said. “Keep 
talking about it. So they’ll pick up the torch when we put it down or it’s time 
for us to move on. Just keeping it alive, keeping the movement alive. And it’s 
not even a Native thing, it’s a human thing. It’s about all of our children. 
What are you going to do when your grandkids come and say why didn’t you do 
something, you knew they were polluting the water? Why didn’t you do something, 
you know. So today is a chance for us to do something.”
 
 Lorraine Shooter and Leann Eastman at the Native Nations Rise march in 
Washington, D.C., on March 10. (Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
More
 Lorraine Shooter, 39, from Standing Rock, S.D., and Leann Eastman, from 
Sisseton on the Lake Traverse Reservation in S.D., wore skirts with ribbons on 
them, a style also worn by many of the other marchers. They are “Dakota water 
dresses,” Eastman explained. “For every ribbon, there’s a prayer.” The dresses, 
designed by her, were made at Standing Rock Camp.
 
 Kristina Elote (Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
More
 Kristina Elote, 26, from Dulce, N.M., and the Jicarilla Apache Nation, wore a 
Trump-branded prop hat. She helped start the International Indigenous Youth 
Council at the Oceti Sakowin Camp at Standing Rock.
 
 Marcos Aguilar at the Native Nations Rise march in Washington, D.C., on March 
10. (Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
More
 When I asked Marcos Aguilar, with an Aztec dance group from Los Angeles by way 
of Mexico City, if the coming together of tribes seen in the march was unusual, 
he raised an important point about the relationship between indigenous people’s 
lack of control over land in the Americas and the current immigration issues in 
the United States.
 “Unusual? Yes,” he said. “It’s not often that indigenous peoples have to 
suffer water cannons, 800 arrests, militarized evacuations, in order to call 
attention to basic human rights in the United States. Things that should have 
been taken for granted can no longer be taken for granted. So yes, it’s unusual 
for tens of thousands of native people to have to gather to call upon this 
country to live by its treaty rights, its treaty obligations, and also to 
respect the rights of indigenous people across the continent, which through its 
policies, economic and political, have been forced into patterns of migration 
or refugee status from Central America and South America now living in the 
United States.
 “And this is all connected. Everything that happened in Standing Rock has 
happened in Mexico. Over and over. It’s happened in Guatemala. Over and over. 
It’s happened in El Salvador. Over and over. It’s happened in South America. 
The same moneyed interest, the same capital interests, behind those powers. So 
we’re calling for an end, but more than that we’re calling on ourselves for the 
self-recognition of our autonomy and our own sovereignty. We need to stand on 
our own two feet.”
 
 Michaela Alire at the Native Nations Rise march in Washington, D.C., on March 
10. (Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
More
 “We’re out to support all the indigenous tribes. I didn’t believe there was 
going to be this many people here,” said Michaela Alire, 51, from Towaoc on the 
Ute Reservation in Southwest Colorado. “It’s good to see people come from all 
over, all different types of people. Not just indigenous people.”
 
 Leroy (L) and Eddie at the Native Nations Rise march in Washington, D.C., on 
March 10. (Garance Franke-Ruta/Yahoo News)
More
 Not everyone wanted to be known. “It’s a representation of who I am, me and 
myself, wearing my colors. Proud to be red. Red Power. It’s who I am,” said 
Leroy, 33, from California, of the red bandana he wore. He and his friend 
Eddie, 45, both declined to give last names.


 

 

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