Smoke Signals Bringing our people home: NAGPRA Continued from front page cover our people and property from those who want to own them.:." said Suzan Shown Harjo of the Cheyenne and Hodulgee Muscogee Tribes. msii&as3E& 1 The belief that Indians were sub human was essential to upholding the processes of stealing land, re sources, dignity and life. It was nec essary for the dominant society to be lieve that the people they were sys tematically destroying were animals, to be dealt with as was most conve nient, lucrative and effective to their culture. Harjo continues, with dis cussion of the 1868 U.S. Army Sur geon General's directive to augment the collection of Indian crania. In an arrangement with the Smith sonian, the Army would receive os teological remains and the Smithson ian would be given burial and cul tural items. Harjo notes advertise ments for crania in old newspapers and other practices which led to the "decades long practice of decapitat ing Native people, weighing their brains and shipping them as freight to Washington, D.C. for more 'study.' For Native people such actions were and are unthinkable. To this day, Indian remains sit tumbled to gether and dusty in museum draw ers or in private collections as novel ties or precious scientific material. This is a testament to the continuing debt of disrespect and the crudity of ignorance. " ' The truth is, Indian people are nei ther a novelty, nor a scientific .curi osity. Indians are people with civil rights that have long been violated. NAGPRA, the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, acknowledges Indians' rights to grave protection and the return of previously stolen Indian relics. The lines are still being drawn as to what exactly this legislation means. Mending the Circle, the Native American Repatriation Guide from which the above Harjo and Echo Hawk quotations were taken, gives an in-depth look at these issues. The most current battle that came to the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde arose from the cumbersome inventories of human remains and associated objects. These inventories are a tangle of incomplete informa tion. For example, 80 of the hu man remains are not affiliated with a specific tribe. This means that whoever collected the bodies "forgot" to record where they came from. The Grand Ronde, with the help of Ryan and Adrienne Heavyhead, (Blackfeet) national NAGPRA ex perts, have established a game plan. After having waded through the in ventories, meeting with other tribes to identify primary areas of concern, creating a document of cultural in formation and objectives, the Grand Ronde Tribe has made its first re 'quests for repatriation. However, these steps are plagued at each foot fall by the congressional interpretation of NAGPRA. The dis covery three years ago of the Kenn ewick Man has tested the original intent of the law. The Umatilla Tribe, in collaboration with the other Co lumbia River Tribes, fought to have the bones of the Kennewick Man (in?, m&uwi&twtGfr turn mnmkMBG&jiEK'W ammm NWHtliJS' mil (liQt' fennflv (Ui(it8Dr reinterned without scientific testing. However, the federal district court ruled in favor of the scientists, on the 22nd of September. It is in the name of such atrocities to justice that the Grand Ronde Cul tural Resource Protection staff were called to a private home in Salem where a grave robber's collection caught the attention of the authori ties. The extensive collection, valued at $50,000, included not only bead work, knife cases, feathers, religious and ceremonial objects, but assorted Indian remains. The man had the arrogance to place the bones of a foot in a moccasin, which sat on his cof fee table. The skulls in his posses sion were most likely used as ash trays. Unfortunately this sort of practice is not rare. The reclaiming of these bones by Christine Contreras, Grand Ronde's Cultural Resources Site Monitor and tribal member, was a bittersweet vic tory for the Tribe. Contreras says, "For me there's a lot of anxiety of being in the pres ence of human remains. I have this inner struggle that tells me it is not okay for them to be out on display. As a sovereign nation I think we should have access to our ancestors' remains both from museums and pri vate collectors, to insure that they are not looked at like a trinket or a nick nack, and that someone can't talk over them socially. I think we should get every bone, every bead, every piece of our heritage back from these people so we can take care of it as we see fit." The human remains and associ ated burial objects (in Salem) were discovered because the grave robber was found dead in his house. Re portedly, he bled to death in his own home after being bitten by his pet parrot. While the unusual circum stances surrounding his death may cause others to pause, Native Ameri can people are not at all surprised. Grave robbers and profiteers need to be wary of the power of the dead. Currently, remains from 180 tribal ancestors from the University of Or egon and the Smithsonian are being returned to the Tribe. As the remains arrive home, there is great responsi bility bestowed upon the Tribe. The tribal NAGPRA committee was formed four months ago to deal with the issues of reinternment, and has accepted the gravity of the work. . : Committee member Janell Haller says, "My belief is that everyone de serves respect. We were raised to know you don't eat in the cemetery or you get a crooked mouth. It's respect, re spect of the cemetery, of where you walk, of where you come from." Committee member Marce Norwest has been appointed to receive the bones that arrive from the museum. Meanwhile, June Olson, Lindy Trolan, Lisa Watt and the Heavy heads have been in transit between different museums, researching other collections. The Heavy heads, renowned for their compre- ; hensive data base and expert ma- neuvering through NAGPRA poli cies, have brought the Grand Ronde a great gift. However, the proposed NAGPRA amendment, if passed, may have a severe impact on their work. , ' "r-v i i . -V 'l ' 127 " . -WW- Currently pending in the House of Representatives is a bill, which is backlash from the Kennewick Man case. The bill is "to amend the NAGPRA to provide for appropriate study and repatriation of remains for which a cultural affiliation is not readily ascertainable." This means that those 80 of hu man remains which were not prop erly identified when they were sto len, will be free ground, once again, for the scientific community to play with. As Bob McElderry, NAGPRA com mittee member, says, "It's an attempt by the government to renege on the original intent of the law. It doesn't matter what tribe those remains be long to, as much as it matters that someone says the right thing over them and lays them to rest." Haller, shaking her head says, "it's just another form of a broken treaty." Speaking of the proposed amend ment, Contreras concurs, "I think it's crazy to think anyone can look at a group of bones and determine its their great, great grandfather or look at that moccasin and say it belonged to my family. How can we recognize these things that were stolen from us before we were born? I think that before people start digging up some thing and handling remains and the items they were buried with, they should consider how it would feel if : this was their own grandparents or children. Would they want their family on display or used for scien tific research? I don't blame the con gress and the people now for things that happened in the past, but I will hold them accountable for the cur rent practices which continue to dis respect our people." Through the years of disease and forced acculturation, the years of ter mination, a great deal of the conti- nuity to the past has been lost. How ever, enough roots have survived for the tree to flourish and rejuvenate. From ethnographic texts and a handful of Elders who know the old ways, our generation still has access to enough information to know and understand the ways of our ances tors. As Louis LaChance has said, "Our ancestors laid it down for us. JtejAAAiiiiSi)iiii Wn i mm -miitMwm.t The staff must determine if artifacts they inventory, such as these baskets, have sacred significance to the Grand Ronde people. Photo by Lindy Trolan We have only to pick it up; Some times the old knowledge seems hard to find, but it is there. We only need to look for it." Over the years, the various tribes and bands now affiliated at Grand Ronde buried their people in a vari ety of ways. All these varied beliefs and customs are represented in the ancestry of Grand Ronde. One chal lenge of the NAGPRA committee and of the tribal community will be to meld traditions and honor the bones. . - Margo Mercier, NAGPRA commit tee member, says, "Our goal is to re inter the remains in a good way, to build a memorial for those who came before us. We want to build a visual memorial of those who were unjustly incarcerated in museums, a memo rial that says we belong to these people, they are our ancestors. The proposed NAGPRA amendment is another slap in the face. The injus tice that has been done is horrific enough, but to point fingers and say you must prove affiliation is worse. Knowing these kind of grave robbers . are in our community makes me sick to my stomach. Unless you are re ally well protected spiritually, it can really harm you to handle remains. When I had first started out on this committee four months ago, I had no idea what it all entailed. Each day I learn more and hurt more deeply for our ancestors. So, we work together .to bring this all together in a good way. The needs of the living and the needs of the dead must be balanced together and it is really important to feed the spirit." Despite continued opposition, Na tive America is reconnecting to its ancestors. Said Christine Contreras, "It is important for people to know there are still people out there who collect Native American relics. The Tribe needs to have some conversa tions about how they feel about these things that are property of our an cestors, so that we present ourselves as a tribe and relearn customs. I think people, even though we were stripped of our language and cus toms, still have a connection to tribal ancestors. I believe it is a link to a better way of treating your commu nity and living your life." June Olson and Tracy Dugan con tributed to this story.