Tired Of Waiting, Native Americans Buy Back Their Old Land

TIMBERLY ROSS   12/27/09 01:42 PM ET   AP

Native American Land

OMAHA, Neb. — Native American tribes tired of waiting for the U.S. government to honor centuries-old treaties are buying back land where their ancestors lived and putting it in federal trust.

Native Americans say the purchases will help protect their culture and way of life by preserving burial grounds and areas where sacred rituals are held. They also provide land for farming, timber and other efforts to make the tribes self-sustaining.

Tribes put more than 840,000 acres – or roughly the equivalent of the state of Rhode Island – into trust from 1998 to 2007, according to information The Associated Press obtained from the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs under the Freedom of Information Act.

Those buying back land include the Winnebago, who have put more than 700 acres in eastern Nebraska in federal trust in the past five years, and the Pawnee, who have 1,600 acres of trust land in Oklahoma. Land held in federal trust is exempt from local and state laws and taxes, but subject to most federal laws.

Three tribes have bought land around Bear Butte in South Dakota's Black Hills to keep it from developers eager to cater to the bikers who roar into Sturgis every year for a raucous road rally. About 17 tribes from the Dakotas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Montana and Oklahoma still use the mountain for religious ceremonies.

Emily White Hat, a member of South Dakota's Rosebud Sioux, said the struggle to protect the land is about "preservation of our culture, our way of life and our traditions."

"All of it is connected," White Hat said. "With your land, you have that relationship to the culture."

Other members of the Rosebud Sioux, such as president Rodney Bordeaux, believe the tribes shouldn't have to buy the land back because it was illegally taken. But they also recognize that without such purchases, the land won't be protected.

No one knows how much land the federal government promised Native American tribes in treaties dating to the late 1700s, said Gary Garrison, a spokesman for the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs. The government changed the terms of the treaties over the centuries to make property available to settlers and give rights-of-way to railroads and telegraph companies.

President Barack Obama's administration has proposed spending $2 billion to buy back and consolidate tribal land broken up in previous generations. The program would pay individual members for land interests divided among their relatives and return the land to tribal control. But it would not buy land from people outside the tribes.

Today, 562 federally recognized tribes have more than 55 million acres held in trust, according to the bureau. Several states and local governments are fighting efforts to add to that number, saying the federal government doesn't have the authority to take land – and tax revenue – from states.

In New York, for example, the state and two counties filed a federal lawsuit in 2008 to block the U.S. Department of Interior from putting about 13,000 acres into trust for the Oneida Tribe. In September, a judge threw out their claims.

Putting land in trust creates a burden for local governments because they must still provide services such as sewer and water even though they can't collect taxes on the property, said Elaine Willman, a member of the Citizens Equal Rights Alliance and administrator for Hobart, a suburb of Green Bay, Wis. Hobart relies mostly on property taxes to pay for police, water and other services, but the village of about 5,900 lost about a third of its land to a trust set up for the state's Oneida Tribe, Willman said.

So far, Hobart has been able to control spending and avoid cuts in services or raising taxes, Willman said. Village leaders hope taxes on a planned 603-acre commercial development will eventually help make up for the lost money.

The nonprofit White Earth Land Recovery Project has bought back or been gifted hundreds of acres in northwestern Minnesota since it was created in the late 1980s. The White Earth tribe uses the land to harvest rice, farm and produce maple syrup. Members have hope of one day being self-sustaining again.

Winona LaDuke, who started the White Earth project, said buying property is expensive, but it's the quickest and easiest way for tribes to regain control of their land.

Tribal membership has been growing thanks to higher birth rates, longer life spans and more relaxed qualifications for membership, and that has created a greater need for land for housing, community services and economic development.

"If the tribes were to pursue return of the land in the courts it would be years before any action could result in more tribal land ... and the people simply cannot wait," said Cris Stainbrook, of the Little Canada, Minn.-based Indian Land Tenure Foundation.

Thirty to 40 tribes are making enough money from casinos to buy back land, but they also have to put money into social programs, education and health care for their members, said Robert J. Miller, a professor at the Lewis & Clark Law School in Portland, Ore., who specializes in tribal issues.

"Tribes just have so many things on their plate," he said.

Some tribes, such as the Pawnee, have benefited from gifts of land. Gaylord and Judy Mickelsen donated a storefront in Dannebrog, Neb., that had been in Judy Mickelsen's family for a century. The couple was retiring to Mesquite, Nev., in 2007, and Judy Mickelsen wanted to see the building preserved even though the town had seen better days.

The tribe has since set up a shop selling members' artwork in the building on Main Street.

"We were hoping the Pawnee could get a toehold here and get a new venture for the village of Dannebrog," Gaylord Mickelsen said.

___

On the Net:

Federal Bureau of Indian Affairs: http://www.bia.gov

White Earth Land Recovery Project: http://nativeharvest.com/

Indian Land Tenure Foundation: http://www.indianlandtenure.org/

Citizens Equal Rights Alliance: http://www.citizensalliance.org/

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01:27 PM on 12/28/2009
I support the tribes, their attempt to hold on to their traditions, culture and land. Who wouldn't? Native Americans deserve the utmost respect for what their people have been through.
12:53 PM on 12/28/2009
Z-Liberator approves of this actions, therefore it must be good.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CR46
spay/neuter and adopt
12:34 PM on 12/28/2009
slightodds
Your racist posts are really telling on who you really are.
I would swear at you in my naitive tongue, but unlike the white mans language, mine has no swears--so who is the more developed and intelligent culture?!
12:25 PM on 12/28/2009
I'm afaraid KKojei has gotten lost in the late 19th century. In the beginning of the 21st century Africa is being overrun by the Chinese. They are buying up all the arable land and resources, hiring native workers for a song, and reserving the good paying jobs for the Chinese imported workers. Chinese management lives apart from the indigenous population, in their own compounds with greater comforts and nutrition. Sound like the British in India? Sure does.
To a larger degree than you care to admit, many African countries hold the keys to its own success in their own hands. Yes, many are being taken advantage of. But governments like in the Sudan, Zaire, and the Congo have no one to blame but themselves for their people's miserable conditions.
Sorry KKojei; you're stuck in ideological molasses and not trying to get free.
12:24 PM on 12/28/2009
ATTENTION AMERICA!

This is the poorest county in the United States!

Crow Creek Chairman Brandon Sazue is protesting the sale of tribal owned land by the IRS on the reservation by praying and fasting while camping on the land.

Sazue says an assistant to BIA Secretary Larry EchoHawk has told him the BIA will try to determine in January if the IRS has legal authority to sell the Crow Creek land to settle $3.1 million in federal back taxes, and the tribe has filed a lawsuit over the same issue, which is straining tribal resources, Sazue said.

There will be no attempt to transfer the property until the lawsuit is resolved.

Tribal police and first responders have been checking on his well being, and tribal members have joined him from time to time in solidarity with his protest.

"I remember what I was elected for," Sazue said. "I was elected to serve the people, by the people. I will not sit in a warm house ... while this is going on."... "this sets precedent for all tribes. If they can do it to us, they can do it to them also."

"My intention is not to do an uprising," he says. "I want to show what is going on with indigenous people as a whole and stand up for them."
Reach Peter Harriman at 575-3615.
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Harvee Wallbanger
Republicans... I got no use for you.
12:15 PM on 12/28/2009
Sometimes you have to out white man the white man to get what you need.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
12:14 PM on 12/28/2009
If they can afford it, that's a pretty good idea.

I wonder if, after they buy the land back, if they can actually win in court to get their treaties enforced and recoup the purchase cost from the government?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CR46
spay/neuter and adopt
12:31 PM on 12/28/2009
Our treaties have not been honored in centuries, I doubt very much the courts will ever do more to honor them.
12:08 PM on 12/28/2009
I bet that once they purchase the property they will have to fight tooth and nail to regain the ALLODIAL title. Of course most of you don't know what I'm talking about since this word is being removed from most dictionaries.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:52 AM on 12/28/2009
It took them 500 years to come with the word Green when most if not all indigenous peoples respected their surroundings and nature, now they care about the environment. ...Right?

You can't change a people that was trapped in ice for thousands of years overnight. They are object orientated.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tonedef
Tragically, my micro-bio remains empty, soulless,
11:38 AM on 12/28/2009
There's no reason the native tribes of this continent should have to buy back any of the land stolen from them. but since the U.S. is not in any hurry to make things (relatively) right, I suppose it's better that the U.S. owes the tribes money as opposed to owing them their native land. Money reparations (for the money the tribes shouldn't have to spend now, but do) can be made later, but the land is obviously needed now.
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11:56 AM on 12/28/2009
Is there any reason why Arabs should have to buy back land stolen from them?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TinaF
11:14 AM on 12/28/2009
Thankfully, they can count on Lou Dobbs will use his bully pulpit to condemn the white man for encroaching on the Native Americans' soil in the first place. Hello? Lou?
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Harvee Wallbanger
Republicans... I got no use for you.
12:29 PM on 12/28/2009
Lou who?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ishmael1
Step aside, Shallow Water, & Let the Deep Sea Roll
11:04 AM on 12/28/2009
That's what the Northern Cheyenne Tribe had to do with the Sand Creek Massacre site in southeastern Colorado. My wife and I visited the site in 1995 when it was still owned by the Dawson Family. They sold it to the Northern Cheyenne who turned it over to the National Park Service for administration.

http://www.nps.gov/sand/index.htm

In 1999, archaeological teams confirmed the site from discovery of artifacts there. Of course, my wife and I already knew where it was from the last time we had walked that land...in 1864. There's something about getting the deja vu feeling when you recognize where you pitched your lodge in the Arapaho camp.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vya5aFki_xk
11:02 AM on 12/28/2009
Not waiting for the US govt. to honor their treaties is probably a good idea. New Black Panther party take note.
11:01 AM on 12/28/2009
At this moment the Federal government you Trust so much is giving away your timber and minerals for pennies on the dollar and getting huge kickbacks from the Corporations. And the taxpayer is being ripped off.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
moonflowerjewelry
Buy American made, no excuses.
10:53 AM on 12/28/2009
i hope the tribes in so cal that reap big profits from greedy, addicted gamblers are helping fuel this. it is ironic and beautiful. i hope they buy up a whole lot more.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marye13
11:59 AM on 12/28/2009
ditto.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CR46
spay/neuter and adopt
12:17 PM on 12/28/2009
My tribe has built a 4 year college off the gamblers :)