Danns Awarded A lte rn a tiv e Nobel Prize Michelle 5yverson Mary and Carrie Dann of the western bhosnnne Nation received the 1993 Right Livelihood Award in Sweden on December 9th. for their courage and perseverance in asserting the rights of indigenous people to their land The $^00,000 award was shared by five women, or women- led movements, who have ‘ made outstanding positive contributions in situations of c ris is or c o n flic t' The Awards were presented in the Swedish Parliament on December 9th, the day before the Nobel Prize presentations (The Awards are often referred to as the Alternative Nobel P riz e ", Although Mary- was unable to attend the event. Carrie and ner niece flew to Sweden on a western Shoshone passport They were forced to fly and return via Canada because the U 5 does not recognize Native American Passports (A il other countries in the world accept the Western »shone passport) After tne Award ceremony in Stockholm, Carrie spoke at a number of events in Germany, and addressed the European Parliament ,n Strasbourg Many of us are aware of tne Dann sisters struggle to protect their land because we were fortunate enouqn to nave Carrie Dann v is it Cannon Beach on two separate occasions in 1993 In March she spoke at a fund raiser for the western Shoshone Nation, and in September she was a quest speaker at a major cultural event celebrating the year of indigenous peoples Both events were held at the Chamber of Commerce in Cannon Beach and attended by hundreds of residents and tourists For more than twenty years, the Dann sisters have been at the forefront of their peoples struggle against the attempted exporpriation of their land by the U 5 Government and its degradation of the land by mining and nuclear testing nary and Carrie Dan, age 70 and 50 respectively, are traditional Western Shoshone women and the major leaders ,n their peoples p o litica l and legal battle to retain tneir ancestral lands Since 1972, the Dann sisters have been waging a battle w ith the US Government through litig a tio n and c iv il disobedience To understand the signif iganc* of their struggle, the follow ing is a brief history of the Western Shoshone Nation The Western Shoshone Nations te rrito ry, as defined in the Treaty of Puby Valley in I860, includes tw o -th ird s of the State of Nevada and small portions of California, Idaho, and Utah This treaty was not a treaty of cession, but of peace and friendship, granting the citizens of the United States sat** passage through Shoshone T erritory and perm itting a small amount of mining and ran< hing in specif ic ar^as The Treaty of Puby Valley, like other treaties between tne United States Government and Indian Nations, has been abrogated and undermined by US domestic law For example, the General Allotment Act of 1887 was designed to break up Indian te rrito rie s that were used in common, by allotm g between 80 and 160 acres to individual ownership, all remaining land autom atically became U 5 property In the 19th century, the US Supreme Court successfully developed the theory of trusteeship, giving the trustee, (U S A ), unlim ited power over Indian land and property The Indian Nations became wards of the US Government and the Bureau of Indian A ffa irs (Bi A) The new administer mg body was implemented to “take care' of Indian Nations and their property Through different legislative acts, almost 90X of western Shoshone land and resources gradually came under control of the US Department of Interior and its branches, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Department of Energy In 1951. the Nevada Test Site was established, where the U S and Great Br it tan conducted more than 100 atmospheric tests - more than have been conducted anywhere else in the world In all, 950 nuclear bombs have been detonted on Shoshone land since ,951. the most recent in April. 1990 In 1946, the Indians Cl n m s Act was ra tifie d in order to resolve Indian claims to lands taken by the U 5 The Indian Claims Commission (ICC> was founded to handle these c laims The western Shoshone were compensated against their w ill, for land they allegedly lost in ,072 Their ef for ts to stop the pro« eedings and f ire their wash ngton attorney were denied Prior to 1969 Indian Nations had no fre** choice of legal representation all contracts were arranged and controlled by the Bi A m 1979, th e C««urt of Claims awarded $26 m illio n dollars in compensation for tak mg 2*4 m illio n acres of Western Shoshone land Put more th in 80'’? of th* western Shoshone people, despite their poverty, voted against accepting the money Instead, the ,w ard was placed in in interest-bearing jecount at the Department of ntenor. md now totals w ell over $60 m illio n Since the Western ,n< «shone did not sell or cede their land, they simply requested that the United States observe the Treaty of Ruby Valley in De« ember 1991, the 9tn C ircuit Cour t ruled that the claims iward. which the Shosone never accepted, extinguished subsistence rights guaranteed in the Treaty of Ruby Valley These subsistence rights are the right to hunt, f ish and gather and are epar ate rights t their « wn natural resources Mary and Carrie Dann s ranch is in Crescent Valley, in the heart of Western Shoshone te rrito ry In 1973 they w e re approached by i BLM ranger who demanded to see their gr izmg permit Tn^y ar g«jed that their cattle were grazing on Western Shoshone ferr itory. but they were nonetheless sued for trespassing in 197 4 in June ,991. as a result of the denial of W estern Shoshone la n d n g h ts . the Feder at D istrict Court of Nevada authorized the BLM to reduce the Dann livestock because they were "overgrazing" According to Citizen Alert, the majnr environmental organization in Nevada the Danns do not overgraze On March 26. 1992, in r esponse to the f irst round up conducted by th e D IM , th e w e s te r n Shoshone National Council nationalized the livestock of the Danns The BLM ignored the change o f o w n e rs h ip and a tte m p te d m o th e r livestock reduction' on April 9th which fa ile d because of the non-violent resistance of Western Shoshone and non-Indian supporters In November. 1992, the BLM conduc ted another round-up of 269 unauthorized horses grazing on public land w ith helicopters, a rm e d sher Iffs and federal agents Mary and Carrie s brother. C liffo rd Dann. tried to prevent the conf iscation When he was unsuccesful, he threatened to ignite him self, but federal off ite rs wrestled him to the ground After treatment in a hospital he was arrested OnMarchTrd. 1993, he was convicted of assaulting federal o ffice rs and incarcerated at the federal prison in Lornpoc. C alifornia Last month he was released and is back home helping at the ranch The Dann sisters have requested that President Clinton pardon him of his "crime" The Danri sisters have recently discovered that Kennecot. a subsidiary of B ritis h Rio Tinto Zinc, plan to start another major mining operation on the Shoshone land The Western Shoshone have never received compensation for damage by mining, or royalties for their resources Kennecot s new mine "Placer Dome" w ill cover 1,700 acres, plus tailings covering 650 acres, directly affecting tne health of the Dann fam ily and the environment of the land and all its inhabitants This open p it mine operation w ill affect springs and poison the mam fresh water source of Crescent Valley The other Right Livelihood recipients. all women of courage ire Arna Met Kham ts te tnd the e g jm zation Care and I e a rn in g wh he founded r lei in «Occupied Palestine» for passionate commitment to the defer e tnd education «.»f »he children o* Palestine victim ized by m ilita ry occupation Re- ent events o f f e r hope that h e r w«»ri« m ay s e rv e is t model conti ibut ion to i re ii recot ill it ion between the P ilest ini in md Israeli peoples V a n d a n a ‘ » h iv a advocate arid researcher, for her pioneering insights into the social md environment il • ost of dominant development process, and her a b ility 'o work w ith and for loi il people and communities in the artu u,at ion and impliment it ion of a lte rn a tiv e Shiva has done much to p l y e women an i e> doqy it the he n t of modern development dis« urse I he O rg a n iz a tio n of R ural Assoc la t ions fo r P rogress (ORAP) ir ■ -«hihwe, o founded by Sithembiso Nyom, for mot ivatmg Its m illio n members to choose fbeir own development path accordmq to their ■ u ’ ure and trad ition s and for its effe ctive response to tne most lengthy drought in Southern Africa I he Right L ivelihood Awards wet e started in ,900 by Jakob von Ue»kull. a Swedish-German philatelic expert who sold his valuable postage stamps to provide the original endowment von Uexkull fe lt that the Nobel Prizes had becom e too narrow and pe i ilized and ignored mu h work m l knowledge v if 31 tor the survival of hurnank md Re< ipients of the Right I ivelihood Award are chosen annually Py an international jury in such fields as environmental protection, peate and disarmament, md economic and human developement The Right I ivelihood Award cash pr izes are designated for the support of ongoing proje< U that addres* «. ru« ial problems fa< mg humanity today (Michelle Syverson is F»eeutive Direc tor of Environmental New Network andrepresent the Right I ivelihood ird s in North Amer ic a For more inform it ion contar f her at PO Box 680. Manzanita, Or 97 ,3 0 ) at the Edge are pleased to announce that this is the fir s t of an ongoing series of a rticle s Michelle w ill be wr it,ng for the Edgn , (W h \ I Because I asemm m a lie , it m condemned to lite r a r y s te r ility And when It la post. It w ill have no h isto ry, except the bloody history of murder Ernest Itemtnqway OREGON COAST SUPPORT CROUP » o »0« »o CAM MON I I M H O » IIO H »MIO J O J -4 1 4 -1 4 J O JOJ 4 ) * - * ' J ] 7 nadnr3hip is action, not position 0 H McOannon American Indian Association of Portland 1827 NE 44th Suite 226 Portland, OR 97213 » UPPLR LLfI ID&E JftKIlflM IW 3