PRESORTED STANDARD MAIL U.S. POSTAGE PAID PORTLAND, OR PERMIT NO. 700 Employees honored for years of service — pg. 8 may 1, 2021 13 active COVID-19 cases closed government Table Rocks reflections Tribal member Joseph Ham honored for poem By Danielle Harrison By Danielle Harrison Smoke Signals staff writer Smoke Signals staff writer s a child, Tribal member Joseph Ham recalls hearing his mother tell a tragic family story that had been passed down through the genera- tions: A 6-year-old uncle of his great-grandmother, Ila Dowd, was lynched in Jack- sonville, Ore., at the onset of the final Rogue River War in the fall of 1855. At the time, Ham, 29, thought it was family lore and not quite believable. But time and perspective often have a way of imparting lessons. “When I was researching the Lupton massacre I found an old article of the event depicting what she had told my mom and I kept thinking about how he has been eternally 6 years old this whole time,” Ham says. “And I was mad at myself for not want- ing to believe that story growing up, like a part of me only put stock into it after I read it in a book. I think that must be part of the decolonization process.” He put his thoughts into song and performed it in 2020 to ac- company a photography exhibit called “The Land Remembers” by Rich Bergeman. The exhibit was a series of black-and-white photographs depicting the Rogue River War battle sites. Ham wrote the song after rep- resentatives from the Chehalem Cultural Center asked Tribal T hirteen active COVID-19 cases, likely brought on by spring break activities and Easter family gatherings, closed the Tribal governmental campus for three weeks through at least Friday, May 7. “There’s been an uptick in pos- itive cases recently,” Health Ser- vices Executive Director Kelly Rowe said during a Wednesday, April 21, Facebook Live event. “We were at zero for a period of time. These cases have come after spring break and Easter. It becomes a game of telephone where it gets wider and wider. We are here to help treat you, but we absolutely support vaccination.” The Facebook Live event was the 17th held since the Tribal government shut down in March 2020 because of the pandemic. Ap- proximately 120 people logged on to watch the event, which included Rowe, Tribal Council Chairwoman Cheryle A. Kennedy and Spirit Mountain Casino General Man- ager Stan Dillon. Tribal Council Secretary Jon A. George and Tribal Council member Steve Bobb Sr. also attended. The Tribe was not the only entity affected by increasing COVID-19 cases in the West Valley. The Wil- lamina School District returned to a virtual learning platform after four students tested positive for See COVID-19 continued on page 11 A Photo by Timothy J. Gonzalez Tribal member Joseph Ham’s poem was selected by The Nature Conservancy for display on the hiking trails at Table Rocks in southern Oregon near Medford. Cultural Resources Department Manager David Harrelson if he knew of a descendant of the war who could add an element of Indig- enous representation to the photo exhibit. Harrelson contacted Ham again when he learned of a poetry contest, Signs of Spring at Table Rocks, sponsored by The Nature Conser- vancy and Bureau of Land Man- agement. Winning entries would be displayed along the Table Rocks hiking trail in southern Oregon, in conjuction with information on geology, wildflowers, pollinators and other subjects associated with the area. The subject of the contest, “What do the Table Rocks mean to you?” See TABLE ROCKS continued on page 10 Contributed photo by Tabitha Olson, BLM recreation specialist An unidentified hiker stops to read Grand Ronde Tribal member Joseph Ham’s poetry at Table Rocks. Grand Ronde Restoration figure Elizabeth Furse walks on By Dean Rhodes Smoke Signals editor E lizabeth Furse, who played an important role in helping the Grand Ronde Tribe accomplish Restoration in 1983 and the return of land in 1988, walked on Sunday, April 18, at the age of 84. Furse also represented Oregon in Congress for three terms in the 1990s. She died peacefully at Smoke Signals file photo her home from complications related to a fall. In the early 1980s, Furse joined with Don Wharton, founding director of Oregon Legal Service’s Native American Program, to help the Grand Ronde Tribe regain federal recognition, which was taken away in 1954 by the Western See FURSE continued on page 5 Former Oregon congresswoman Elizabeth Furse, photographed in 2008 for the Tribe’s 25th Restoration special edition, walked on Sunday, April 18, at the age of 84. In the early 1980s, she was instrumental in helping the Grand Ronde Tribe regain federal recognition.