And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

link provided by: Mary Meckel
http://www.journalstar.com/stories/nat/sto3


             American Indians ask Smithsonian to
             return historic brain 
             BY MICHELLE LOCKE The Associated Press


             COLMA, Calif. -- In a
             simple black jar set atop
             mottled stone, the ashes
             of a man believed to be
             the last of his tribe lie
             surrounded by the
             silence of the dead.

             Chiseled into the surface
             of the container are the
             words: "Ishi. The Last
             Yahi Indian. 1916." In
             another quiet room 3,000
             miles away, Ishi's brain
             floats in formaldehyde,
             part of the Smithsonian
             Institution's
             anthropological
             collection.

             American Indians want Ishi restored in whole to his tribal
             homeland.

             "I think we're breaking new ground due to the fact that, as far
             as history is written, there's no descendant to the Yahi tribe,"
             says Art Angle of the Butte County Native American Cultural
             Committee, which is requesting the return of Ishi based on a
             claim of cultural affinity.

             Smithsonian officials say they're willing to return the brain --
             but not until they have determined who has a legitimate claim,
             which is likely to be a complex task because the Yahi were
             long ago wiped out by settlers and disease. And while Ishi was
             long described as the last Yahi, other theories about his
             ancestry may complicate the repatriation.

             Today the California Legislature tackles the matter with a
             hearing exploring what became of the man known as "the last
             Wild Indian in North America." "The revelation that Ishi's
             brain was separated from his body prior to cremation and sent
             to the Smithsonian Institution is a continuing affront to Native
             Americans and ought to be an embarrassment to the state of
             California," says state Sen. Patrick Johnston, one of the
             conveners of the hearing. Ishi walked out of the past and into
             post-Gold Rush California early one August morning in 1911.
             He was found, emaciated and near starvation, crouching
             against a slaughterhouse fence near Oroville, in Butte County,
             and soon drew the attention of University of California
             anthropologists. One of them was Alfred Kroeber, a revered
             Berkeley figure whose name is emblazoned on the
             anthropology department building today.

             Ishi was soon installed at the university's anthropology
             museum in San Francisco. There, according to a 1961 book
             written by Kroeber's wife, Theodora, he settled into an odd but
             apparently congenial routine. He made friends with UC
             researchers, did light work as assistant to the head janitor and
             became a kind of living exhibit, making spears, bows and
             arrows as fascinated visitors watched.

             The middle-aged Ishi never told his name. Anthropologists
             came up with Ishi, which means "man" in a local Indian
             dialect.

             By all contemporary accounts, Ishi was happy in his life at the
             university.

             But civilization and alien germs proved too much for him. He
             died in 1916 of what doctors believed was tuberculosis.

             Researchers knew Ishi did not want to be autopsied. He had
             once wandered into a hospital dissection room and been
             horrified, believing bodies should quickly be burned to release
             the soul.

             Kroeber, who was in New York when Ishi died, wrote a letter
             ordering that Ishi's body should be cremated. "If there is any
             talk about the interests of science, say for me that science can
             go to hell," he declared.

             But others couldn't resist the chance. Ishi's body was
             autopsied, the brain removed. For years, the whereabouts of
             Ishi's brain was a mystery. In 1997 the Butte County
             committee began trying to locate Ishi's remains for proper
             burial in his tribal homeland near Mount Lassen.

             A separate investigation started by the UC-San Francisco
             discovered that Kroeber, despite written objections to an
             autopsy, had sent the brain to the Smithsonian.

             The findings, published in February, prompted some
             soul-searching.

             UC-Berkeley anthropology professors called the affair "a
             troubled chapter of our history" and acknowledged "our
             department's role in what happened to Ishi, a man who had
             already lost all that was dear to him." Set into a glassed-in
             niche, the pot holding Ishi's cremated remains is a rustic
             contrast to the ornate bronzed and engraved containers favored
             by most of the residents of the Olivet Memorial Park
             Columbarium.

             Whether Ishi's ashes stay here is unclear. Angle wants to
             reclaim Ishi's ashes as well as his brain, a venture Johnston is
             exploring.

             Johnston believes it's time California owned up to its past.

             "The romanticization of the Old West and the Gold Rush era
             ignores the brutal reality that Indians were forced from their
             homelands and often killed," he says.

             "For a cemetery, a university, a museum or a government to
             stand on Western protocol as a way to evade the rightful return
             of the heritage of Indians to their descendants is a wrong that
             should not be allowed to stand." 

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          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
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