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Collection: Directories and Documents > Tanis Thorne Native Californian & Nisenan Collection

Mount Shasta - A Question of Power (4 pages)

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boundaries or remove a property from the National Register; (2) to oppose rejection of a nominated site; or (3) to oppose rejection of a listing for a specific site. It appears that the appeal process has not been tried before, therefore, it is possible that this dispute could go on for quite some time. [Editor's note: The decision to include the entire mountain in the National Register was reversed. At present, only the Mount Shasta Wilderness and the area around Panther Meadows will be included.] No matter what the result, Herger is considering legislation that would limit historical designation to sites that have been used for specific, traditional and cultural practices, or sites of specific historical events. Apparently, by his definition, Indian ceremonies that have been practiced for generations are not specific historical events. Herger stated, “[t]he idea of being art as cde “they. killed many deers: That made the gap. sides of the gap. This gap is now called Blood Gap: "This day everybody killed lots of deer but Adder. Now it mad Adder very angry. Adder is thinking now. what to do to get even: with them: : s “Now . know what . will do to get even with them,” Adder says. ~ ne Up to thelr housés, warmed themselves and até ther then Went up to drive the game. They drove gamé able to look at a site, form a cultural tie to it and then somehow draw a line around it, is a practice that could get out of hand.” (Mount Shasta Herald, August 1994) The irony is that Indian people are not the ones who are drawing lines around particular sites, it is the dominant society and the government who have begun this process. To most native cultures, everything is sacred; the earth, the trees, plants, and animals are all worthy of protection because we are all connected. Even in today’s “modern” world, we are dependent upon one another for survival. The dominant view of sacred places, as being unique places separate from everything else in the world, doesn’t fit into the world view of native people. , Obviously, we as Indian people have a great deal of work to do in educating the general public and our elected officials as eee: g. and hol keep. :e4 ‘ se the forést fire is somi ing very.tow mountain, Fox.could.y i ye ding Squirrel travel Siac of Bohem Puyuik (Mount Shasta): There he stopped ; -. fered but he heard no answer. So he says.to himself, “Thi a . (il leave this flint fiere and call this: Flint mountain. And also . Will leave'a guardian just litde.to southwest near foot of to the true history of this state and the entire nation. This kind of angry opposition to native rights is running rampant across the country in regards to issues such as these, our sacred sites, as well as with Indian gaming and environmental regulation. Although it might occasionally seem that progress is made, we must always be thinking ahead and educating ourselves so that when the time comes, we are prepared to protect our inherent rights. Unfortunately, I don’t think a resolution will be coming any time soon. Michelle Alvarez is Pit River (Hammawi) and Cahuilla (Cabazon Band). She is currently taking a year off from her studies at Boalt Hall School of Law, UC Berkeley, and is now the Program Public Relations and Grant Writer for the Center for Indian Community Development in Arcata. wtp as % and travel and final to himself. “I will go down south and set a big forest fire ‘and burn. . them all up.” So that night Adder sneak off quietly. Being very fast traveler he was gone far south already. One thing he forgot to take along was his flints. He left it behind. Meantime there was band of human people living down by the river (Sacramento River) on flat on east side of river. They were called Tu’k. Next morning the animal inhabitants got up early as usual but they miss Adder, their leader. “Where had he gone?” they says to Bohem-Puyuik, a woman called Tho-uk (worm)."" All that was left behind all burn up, including human people. Right at present time there is form resembling like human laying all toward up hill. And the ground squirrel—he has a black mark on his back to this day where flint dirt has rubbed on him. This finish story so . quit. From A Bag of Bones: Legends of the Wintu Indians of Northern California, told to Marcelle Masson by Grant Towendolly, Naturegraph, 1966. WINTER 1994/95 AIP 7 cave a gene!