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


>From BIGMTLIST

The following is an article written for VERDICT, a magazine for legal
professionals, by Marsha Monestersky.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 11 Jun 1999 21:46:05 EDT

VERDICT article
Black Mesa Crisis

The tribal governments value their short-term revenues from mining over the
long-term survival of their people. The output of the Black Mesa mine is
mixed with water and transported 273 miles through a slurry line to the
Mohave Generation Station in Laughlin, NV. Operation of the slurry line
requires pumping 1.4 billion gallons of precious ground water each year
from the N-aquifer, threatening water supplies for communities in the area.

The Dineh families in the mining area suffer many other effects of the
mining. The morning horizon is thick with dust from overnight operation of
drag lines that remove the top layers of earth to expose the coal. Blasting
is frequent and frightening. Surface water sources have been poisoned or
destroyed. Sites that were the sole source of sacred and medicinal plants
have been destroyed by the mine. -5-

Strip mining violates basic teachings of both the Hopi and Dineh
traditional religions in which the Earth is a living entity that is harmed
by mining: "[Mining] must not be allowed to continue for if it does, Mother
Nature will react in such a way that almost all men will suffer the end of
life as they now know it" [Thomas Banyacya, spokesperson for the
traditional Hopi]

"The things we respect are being destroyed by the mining. All the things
they dig out are part of the Earth. It is like with your body, if somebody
would take out your heart" [Alice Benally, traditional Dineh]

Black Mesa has special religious significance in both the Hopi and Dineh
religion, which compounds the desecration from the coal mines.

Relocation The forcible relocation of Dineh families living in areas
partitioned to the Hopi Tribal government was mandated by P.L. 93-531 in
1974. Over 12,000 people have already been relocated at a cost of over $350
million to the US government. The relocation program has been a tragic failure:

"The forcible relocation of over 10,000 Navajo people is a tragedy of
genocide and injustice that will be a blot on the conscience of this
country for many generations" [Leon Berger, who resigned as Executive
Director of the Navajo-Hopi Relocation Commission in 1982]

"I feel that in relocating these elderly people, we are as bad as the Nazis
that ran the concentration camps in World War II"  [Roger Lewis, one of
three federally appointed relocation commissioners, who resigned in 1982]

"The forced relocation of over 12,000 Native Americans is one of the worst
cases of involuntary community resettlement that I have studied throughout
the world over the past 40 years. Such a situation would never have arisen
in the US if the people involved had been Anglo-Americans. That alone
illustrates the extent to which the human rights of one of the poorest
minority groups in the US have been violated." [Dr. Thayer Scudder,
Professor of Anthropology at the California Institute of Technology, who
has studied resettlement issues in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East for
the UN and the World Bank.]

In mandating relocation, the US government overlooked alternative methods
for resolving the conflict between the tribal governments, such as
financial compensation as normally used in such cases. It further ignored
the impact of relocation upon people whose religion was intimately bound to
their ancestral homesites: At birth our children are made part of the Earth
by burial of their umbilical cords.  At death they are returned to the
Earth in a traditional way. Between those times Dineh pray at established
sites within their customary use area. The ceremonies-Puberty, Blessing
Way, Yei Bi Chei, and many others, which insure our health and place in
creation, are performed in this same region. Sacred springs and offering
points, as well as the location of ceremonial -6-

plants, are also contained here. Ours is a religion of Nature, based on
specific places, and guided by natural laws. Through the beauty of nature
we gain the beauty in our lives.  [Roberta Blackgoat]

Our religion tells us the land is our Church and the Hogan its Altar. We
wont be driven from our Church, or allow our Altar to be destroyed. To do
so would be to abandon our religion. Without our land and sacred ways we
lose the essence of what it is to be Dineh, and become fallen leaves
scattered by the winds. [Roberta Blackgoat]

"The word Relocation does not exist in the Navajo language. To be Relocated
is to disappear and never be seen again."  [Pauline Whitesinger]

Grazing Issues Grazing regulations threaten the ability of the Dineh on HPL
to pursue their traditional economy and way of life and is causing
confrontations between the Dineh and the authorities. Under the
Accommodation Agreement, the Dineh were granted 2,800 SUYL
(sheep-units-year-long), which is substantially less than the 5,000 SUYL
estimated as being needed for current herd sizes. The Dineh object to this
quota system because the number requires the reduction of current herds and
because the distribution of available permits among the Dineh unfairly
rewards a small number of families who have cooperated with the
authorities. The range management system also prohibits traditional methods
of range conservation which would enhance carrying capacity. The BIA
currently has jurisdiction over range management on HPL, but this authority
will be transferred to the Hopi Tribe on February 1, 2000. The range
management issue also reflects the discrimination affecting Dineh who would
remain on HPL under terms of the Accommodation Agreement.

The 2,800 SUYL allocated is less than a fair quota. The 1996 range
inventory used by the BIA establishes a carrying capacity of 12,547 SUYL on
HPL. In compensation for their allowing Dineh to remain on HPL for 75
years, the US government is giving the Hopi Tribe 500,000 additional acres
of additional land. The Hopi will also receive grazing fees from the Navajo
Tribe for the use by Dineh on HPL. Under these circumstances, restricting
the Dineh to 20% of available permits is not an appropriate share,
especially when this limit will require a substantial reduction in the
livestock of traditional subsistence herders.

Most Dineh on HPL refused to participate in the mediation process which led
to the Accommodation Agreement because it involved acceptance of the
validity of the 1974 law which stripped them of their land title and gave
jurisdiction over their territory to the Hopi Tribe. The few families who
chose to participate in the mediation process received a proportionally
higher number of permits. The families who refused to sign leases with the
Hopi Tribe under terms of the Accommodation Agreement are not eligible for
permits and face immediate confiscation of their entire herds by the BIA,
which they view as an attempt to starve them off of their land in
preparation for their eviction. Many of the families who did not
participate in the negotiations but later signed leases in order to avoid
eviction discovered that they received no permits, so that while they are
allowed to remain on the land, they are denied their means of survival. -7-

The Dineh also reject the BIA system of range management, which prevents
the use of separate summer/winter camps which were the key element to their
traditional method for conservation the range. The use of livestock
confiscation by the BIA as the primary mechanism of range management
imposes hardship upon subsistence herders whose options are different from
those of commercial ranchers, and typically results in the loss of
livestock without compensation. The Dineh lacking sufficient permits live
in constant fear, not knowing each day if they will be targeted by the
impoundment squadrons which will confiscate their primary means of
survival. Resistence to the confiscations is treated harshly, such as when
Rena Babbitt Lane was severely beaten during an impoundment.

Range management jurisdiction will be transferred to the Hopi Tribe on
February 1, 2000, and their proposed range regulations discriminate against
the Dineh. Dineh must apply for annual permits, while the Hopi receive
5-year permits. If an SUYL allocation is not used one year by the Dineh,
such as because of the death of an animal, the Dineh loses the right to the
allocation. When new allocations are required, such as for the birth of new
animals, the Dineh only receive permits if no Hopi ranchers request
permits. The natural fluctuation in herd sizes can be expected to erode the
2,800 SUYL available to the Dineh families over the 75 year period of the
leases.

Accommodation Agreement The cornerstone of current US policy on Black Mesa
is the Accommodation Agreement (AA) which was the basis for PL 104-301 in
1996 and which was worked out in negotiations triggered by the Manybeads
lawsuit. The Agreement was strongly opposed by most of the Dineh: for
example, it was rejected by a 155-1 vote when presented at a community
meeting in Rocky Ridge.

Only part of the Dineh currently living on HPL are eligible for leases
under the AA, so that many are still subject to eviction. In addition to
being ineligible to sign leases, these people are not eligible for
relocation benefits, so that they are subject to eviction with no place to
go. An informal census, where local residents counted people living in the
area, suggests that the eligible list may cover less than half the people
currently living there. The ineligible group includes people in many
different circumstances. Some people lost their eligibility when they
remained on the land or returned after a member of their family accepted
relocation benefits during the last twenty years. Others lost their
eligibility when the official head of household died and their right to
sign was not transferred. Others are part of extended families living in
eligible households, but would not be able to remain under the AA
guidelines limiting relatives who are allowed to remain under the leases.
Some people were never on the list, as they have avoided the government in
the hope that anonymity would protect them. The number of people affected
by relocation has always been understated by US officials. For example, in
1974, they testified before Congress in that less than 3,000 people would
require relocation, but over 12,000 have already been relocated and as many
as 3,000 still remain on the land. -8-

Those who are eligible to sign leases under the AA are faced with a choice
between relocation and living without civil rights under the rule of a
government that is openly hostile to them. The people who sign leases will
be subject to the rule of the Hopi Tribal government in which they are not
allowed to vote or participate. They have no mechanism to appeal any
actions by the government or its judicial and police system, as the
sovereign status granted the tribal governments precludes access to US
courts and they are not allowed to file suit in the tribal courts. These
institutions openly discriminate against the Dineh families, as already
shown in the grazing ordinance. Under the AA, the Dineh are required to
obtain permits for many activities essential to their survival and
religious practice, so that they are helplessly dependent on the whim of
the tribal government.

The AA does not provide a long-term solution allowing Dineh to remain on
HPL. The grazing allocation of 2800 SUYL is insufficient for current herds,
so that many families will lack a means of survival if they choose to
remain on the land. The long-term leases can be revoked for many reasons,
such as being found guilty of minor infractions three  times by Hopi courts
within a 15 year period, or for non-payment of various fees by the Navajo
tribal government.

Most of the Dineh reject the AA on more fundamental grounds. They do not
recognize the right of the US government or the tribal governments that it
created to turn them into tenants on lands their families have occupied for
hundreds of years. The Dineh religion holds the people responsible for
protection of the land. As the people receive small (3 acre) plots, control
over the land is transferred by the AA to agencies committed to destructive
use of the land, such as strip mining, fencing, and commercial grazing.

Current Status PL 104-301 provides that after February 1, 2000, the Hopi
Tribe may evict Dineh who are eligible for leases but have not signed them.
On the same date, jurisdiction over grazing and other issues will be
transferred from the BIA to the Hopi Tribe. Some actions to enforce terms
of the AA have already begun. Several families who are not eligible to sign
leases have already received exclusion orders which evict them from HPL.
The BIA has also begun enforcement of the grazing permit quotas established
under the AA, and some families have already lost livestock as a result of
confiscations. Enforcement of the grazing quotas and the eviction of
ineligible families is expected to accelerate over the next few months.

The Manybeads plaintiffs are now petitioning the 9th Circuit to revisit the
merits of their claims, alleging the failure of mediation. In addition, the
Dineh have sought help from the U.N. Human Rights Committee and Commission,
the White House, the BIA, the Department of State, and other agencies. -9-

Despite the approach of the February 1, 2000 deadline for relocation, the
Dineh maintain their strength and commitment to protect their sacred land,
as expressed by Roberta Blackgoat, the founder of the community
organization Sovereign Dineh Nation: "We who are unalterably opposed to
Relocation gain our strength by maintaining our traditional religion.  We
wish harm to no one and don't understand why weve been made to suffer so
much for so long. We remember our honored friend and Traditional Hopi
Elder, Grandfather David Monongye.  He often told why many Traditional Hopi
knew it was the Creators idea for Dineh to live here. He was taught the
Dineh were brought to surround the Mesas by the Holy Ones so as to provide
a protective buffer from the forces of greed and destruction.  If, and
when, the Traditional Dineh are removed from these lands, his people would
fail in turn, and the Earth would be destroyed.  He knew from ancient
teachings that Dineh and Hopi were physically and spiritually bound
together.  He realized, as do the current Resisters to relocation, that if
the Dinehs Church and Altar can be destroyed, so could everyone elses."
__________________________________________________________________ 
Box 1: Request for Assistance

A legal team is currently being formed to assist the Dineh families in a
wide range of issues and actions. Expertise is needed in many legal areas:
the protection of constitutional rights under US law, application of
international law, grazing rights under federal and tribal law, protection
of burial and sacred sites under NAGPRA and federal law, protection of
environmental rights under SMCRA, interface with Congress and the Executive
branch, and civil actions for damages resulting from mining and other
activities. Assistance is also needed in many specific geographic areas -
in Washington DC for government relations, in Arizona for local actions,
and in New York and Geneva for interface with international bodies.
Assistance would be appreciated on many levels - in consultation and
development of strategies, help in the preparation of briefs and research,
as well as representation in various legal actions. 
People wishing to contribute services on a pro bono basis can contact the 
Action Resource Center 
PO Box 2104 Venice, CA 90294 
phone: 310-396-3254 
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
_________________________________________________________________ 
Insert Box 2: Video & More Information

Vanishing Prayer is a powerful 16 minute mini-documentary that summarizes
the political history of the Dineh and their current crisis of relocation.
For information on the video, see: http://www.solcommunications.com/tapes.html

Two web sites that provide excellent background information and updates on
events on Black Mesa as well as links to other sites include: 
http://www.solcommunications.com/dineh.html
http://www.theofficenet.com/~redorman/pagea~1.html 


Reprinted under the fair use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
doctrine of international copyright law.
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