Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon January 11, 2023 Page 5 Land Buy Back to create a Native home in Ohio A half-hour drive outside Columbus, Ohio, are 20 acres of forest and prairielands. The land- scape buzzes with the familiar sounds of cicadas and cardinals, and there is an occasional sighting of white-tailed deer. A trickling stream evokes a peaceful sigh from Ty Smith as he gazes at a territor y that was once the home of over 10 different autonomous Native tribes. Mr. Smith is a member of the C o n f e d e r a t e d Tr i b e s o f Wa r m Springs. He moved to Ohio some years ago from the Warm Springs R e s e r va t i o n . Ty a n d h i s w i f e, Masami, are on a mission to return this land to Native hands. The fate of the land Ohio was once the homeland of many tribes who were systemati- cally removed from the area. These include the Shawnee, Potawatomi, Delaware, Miami, Peoria, Seneca, Wyandot, Ottawa, and Kaskaskia. After centuries of displacement and genocide, Native people make up just 0.3 percent of the Ohio population. Those who now find themselves in the state have mainly migrated to Ohio from other parts of the continent following the be- ginning of the Bureau of Indian Affairs urban relocation program in the late 1950s. The program pro- vided incentives to Native people to move from reservations to cit- ies. Bereft of a tangible access point for community and culture for Native people in Ohio, ‘urban In- dian centers’ popped up in the state in the 1960s and ’70s. The last of those that remains today is the Native American In- dian Center of Central Ohio— NAICCO—which serves a state- wide intertribal Indigenous commu- nity. NAICCO has offered space to more than 100 different tribes— including Lakota, Navajo, and Alaska Natives—since its concep- tion in 1975. The group’s mem- bership has worked for a decade to bring their dream campaign into reality: Land Back NAICCO. Ty Smith is the NAICCO pro- gram director: “We know the atroci- Masami and Ty Smith, originally from Warm Springs, are now executive director, and program director of NAICCO. ties that our people faced,” he says. “Some of that has even played for- ward into today. It’s time we started to heal from the past. Connection to place is essential to our healing journey, and this is what we are seeking to accomplish here in Ohio.” The United States is built on sto- len land. Science reports that Na- tive peoples have lost 99 percent of their land. How can land be re- turned to its rightful stewards? For many Native communities grappling with this question, Land Back is a call to action. Land Back NAICCO NAICCO launched a Land Back campaign in 2022 after col- lective visioning sessions with its Native community members, dur- ing which images of Native land kept surfacing. This prompted a plan for the organization to purchase at least 20 acres of land of the highest qual- ity possible, “land worth building NAICCO has big plans for the home it wants to create. The organization intends to create a space to foster and deepen a connection to Native identity through cul- tural teachings. the future of our Native People upon.” It set a fundraising goal of $250,000. NAICCO has raised over $170,000 entirely through community support. According to Ty Smith, “The goal is that this land becomes a home for our Na- tive people in Ohio.” A home outside of NAICCO’s current space, that is. Its existing building is located on Columbus’s industrial south side, and Smith Veterans: Service officer always here to help (from page 4) Mission 22, Project 22, and 22 Warriors are all organizations that focus on reducing suicide among Veterans because it is understood that 22 Veterans Commit Suicide every day. Below are some re- sources for you to do some re- search or help your Service Mem- ber/ Veteran. People need people, and even though they were Soldiers, Marines, Sailors, Airmen and had duties, re- sponsibilities and experiences most people will never have (beyond understanding and comprehension), they are still our children, grand- children, brothers and sisters, still young enough not to have experi- enced certain emotions; forgiveness, acceptance, recovery, just to name a few. They are at the end of one life and in the beginning of another journey, and they haven’t had a break, time to breathe, a chance to rest or the place to do those things. They will need our help. I am al- ways an option to contact for help. I understand what we can go through after discharge. Okay... Whew! Switching gears... In the military we have our own vernacular. We speak in acronyms, abbreviations and Mil-speak. Now, I am not trying to give those ‘Sto- len-valor’ types some ammo to bol- ster their lies, I thought you might just like to know where some of your commonly heard phrase come from. ‘Balls to the wall’: This expression comes from pi- lots in military aviation. In most air- planes, control levers have a ball- shaped grip at the end. One of these is the throttle and to get maxi- mum power from your engine, you push it all the way forward towards the front of the cockpit, where the pilot is, to the firewall—it’s called this because it prevents an engine fire from coming inside the cock- pit. Another control is the joystick— pushing it forward sends a plane into a dive. So, literally, pushing the balls to the (fire)wall would put your fighter plane into a maximum-speed dive, and figuratively going balls to the wall is doing something all-out, with maximum effort. The phrase is essentially the aeronautical equivalent of the au- tomotive ‘pedal to the metal.’ Next time we will cover the phrase ‘Go- ing flat out.’ Community notes... The Warm Springs Point in Time Homeless Count will take place on Tuesday, January 24 from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Individuals and families ex- periencing homelessness should stop by to compete a survey, enjoy a meal and earn incentives for participating. If you living in transitional housing, have no home at all; if you live rough or if you couch surf, please stop by the Warm Springs Family Resource Cen- ter on Tuesday, January 24 for I know the frustration and confusion of military paperwork very well. Please bring in your DD-214. Don’t have it? I can help you get it. If you haven’t brought your DD-214 in for archiving, please do so. I would hate for you to have that ‘inked’ copy lost or de- stroyed without a backup copy... I can be that archive. Also, if you have your 2-A/2-1/201 file on disk, or other storage device, and want it in hard copy form? Too easy, bring it in. I hope these articles in our news- paper help you and your veteran(s). My contact information is below, feel free to call me with your ques- tions, Thank you! Rain Circle, CTWS-TVSO, 1144 Warm Springs St., Warm Springs, OR 97761. Cell: 541-460- 8971. Office: 541-553-2234. the Point in Time Count. Buffalo Skywalkers bas- ketball is during weekday af- ternoons at the Warm Springs Community Center. Tuesday practices are for fifth- through sixth-grades from 4-5 p.m. Wednesday practice is for kindergarten though sec- ond grades from 4-5 p.m.; and the third- through fourth grade team practices are from 5-6 p.m. Thursday practice is for fifth- through sixth grades from 4-5 p.m. Call 541-553-3243 if you have questions. wants to find land as close as pos- sible to their current center that also provides access to nature. “This building is home, but we need more than just a building and a small yard. We want to be able to spread our wings, have that con- nection with nature and one an- other, in a place that we can call ours.” Ty and Masami Smith entered NAICCO leadership after the or- ganization experienced a period of relative struggle. It is a small op- eration that, according to Smith, is run like a “mom-and-pop shop.” NAICCO is composed of two paid staff, a voluntary Board of Trust- ees, and individual members. NAICCO received a SAMHSA Circles of Care grant in 2011, which allowed the organization to engage in a three-year planning project to reimagine its program- ming, financial model, and long- term goals. After partnering with Ohio State University to implement a comprehensive needs assessment, NAICCO tasked itself with find- ing out what needs and concerns, for present and future generations, are most important to Native people in Ohio. After several rounds of focus groups, surveys, and interviews, three main pillars emerged that guide NAICCO today: Cultural preservation and restoration, com- munity development, and eco- nomic development and sustainability. NAICCO is unable to access administrative infrastructure avail- able in states with Native reserva- tion lands. For example, reserva- tion areas have greater access to federal agencies like the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service. Native peoples living on or near reservations also have more bar- gaining power to manage their own lands by working with government agencies that have large national landholdings, like the U.S. Forest Service. Without reservations to work with, NAICCO has to look out- side state governance structures to achieve its goals of owning prop- erty. While this may sometimes seem like a barrier, it also allows NAICCO to think outside a sys- tem that is ultimately failing Na- tive people across the continent. “As a small population,” Mr. Smith says, “in a state with little to no infrastructure in place for Na- tive Americans, we know that we are often thought of as invisible, which puts us in place of being out of sight and out of mind and, more so, misunderstood.” Programs at NAICCO are geared to the Native community and include cultural events, prac- tice of ancestral belief systems, ceremonies, and educational events facilitated and guided by champions from various parts of Indian Country. The organization also hosts hands-on programming like drum practice, which helps reconnect Native community members to their cultural identity. One of NAICCO’s longest-standing pro- grams focuses on Native youth de- velopment and outdoor engage- ment. A home to grow NAICCO has big plans for the home it wants to create. The orga- nization intends to create a space to foster and deepen a connection to Native identity through cultural teachings. In their roles as project and ex- ecutive directors, Ty and Masami Smith describe themselves as care- takers, positioned to positively pre- serve and restore balance to the lives of Native Americans in Ohio. Having a place of their own would allow this dedication to preserva- tion and restoration to grow. NAICCO is unique among Na- tive groups in that it is an inter- tribal nonprofit organizing without the backing of reservation land or enforceable treaties. “We don't know of any other urban effort, initiative, or campaign that is striking out in the fashion that we are, let alone in a state that has basically zero infrastructure in place for Native Americans,” Smith says. It represents a model that other groups may emulate or modify to meet their own community’s needs. For groups not knowing where to start, the NAICCO blueprint might provide useful guidance. For NAICCO, Land Back is about creating home. The organi- zation asks, “How do we move for- ward today and write a new chap- ter by way of our own hand—one built around success, around strengths, around forward think- ing, experiential knowledge, wis- dom—and one that is honoring the voice of our ancestors?” Outside Columbus, the hum of cicadas follows Smith across a ridge overlooking an Ohio valley. He and Masami share a last glance at the landscape, wondering aloud when the day will come that they can let the community know the good news. A new home is within reach, buzzing with life, waiting. This article appears courtesy of The Sierra Club Magazine. Stor y by Victoria Abou-Ghalioum; photo by Taylor Dorrell.