Post by blackcrowheart on Nov 25, 2006 11:46:11 GMT -5
BLACK MESA ELDERS TAKE DIRECT ACTION:
Black Mesa Elder Rena Babbitt-Lane (approx. 80 yrs old) is in the
hospital recovering from a minor heart attack and other injuries after an
incident of harrasment by BIA/Hopi Rangers earlier this week.
STATEMENT OF RENA BABBIT LANE:
"My sheep herder had left recently, so I was home alone and I took the sheep
out to a close area where they like to graze. This was Monday, November 3rd.
Three of the goats somehow ran through the partition fence and I could not
get them back across. I cut the fence and herded the sheep through and put them
all back together. Then they went to a nearby water hole on that side of the
fence and were drinking. I laid down under a tree
because I was exhausted. Three Rangers came up to me there. I think they
were all Hopi, but one of them spoke good enough Navajo that I could understand
him. They immediately began to threaten me. The ranger was saying, `You
broke the law! You´re gonna go to jail! You are not allowed to herd over here.´
They grabbed me by the shoulder and pushed me around. Pretty rough. I tried
to tell them that they should not be pushing around
an old lady like me, what kind of people are they? They took me back to my
house and were trying to search around. I was trying to stop them. One picked
up a stick and threatened me with it. They were heavily armed. I told them
that they were a bunch of bullies, bringing all those guns around my house and
being intimidating. They said, "We´re gonna come back tomorrow and either
impound all your sheep or else maybe we will put you
in jail and let the coyotes eat all of your sheep while you sit in there."
There were other things that they did to me too. I cannot remember all the
details very well. Then they wrote a ticket or something and left. I was feeling
very weak after that. I have no transportation so I walked 3 miles to the
neighbors´ house. They drove me down to my relatives closer to town. In the
course of retelling the story, I realized that I was having a pain in my chest.
They brought me to the hospital here and I have been here for
four days now. I am very sad about what´s happened here. I am not a bad
person, I am a kind person. Just herding sheep and they treat me this way..."
THIS IS NOT AN ISOLATED INCIDENT:
Last month, an elderly Navajo man from Cactus Valley had reported that some
sort of government official, possibly from the land management team came
right within a mile of his house and loaded up a pile of wood that he was
gathering. The elderly man followed the officials up the road and got them to stop.
There was a heated exchange-the man demanded that the
officials return the wood. They insisted that he was somehow in violation of
his wood hauling permit and that they were taking the wood back to Hopi.
They wrote him a ticket and gave him a court date. He went to court in Polacca,
50 miles away, on Oct.20. The charges were found to be false, and the judge
dismissed them outright. The firewood was not returned.
A BIG MOUNTAIN RESIDENT DEMANDS:
On behalf of my Dineh Relations at Big Mountain and throughout the
so-called, "HPL,"
I demand an immediate investigation into this federally-sponsored elder
abuse and harassment of an individual(s) who still have no understanding of the
modern American laws, and
I demand that the Navajo Nation make an inquiry to the BIA Hopi Agency and
its Land Management Office about their justification for this incident of
intimidation and physically shove or thrust a lone and fragile elder around, and
I further demand that the Navajo Nation immediately convene its council
members and the Office of the Navajo-Hopi Land Commission to facilitate the much
needed testimonies from the residents of the "Hopi Partitioned Lands" and
begin to address the escalating Human Rights violations within the
aforementioned region.
Let it be resolved that, the traditional Dineh families and their
elderly matriarchs and patriarchs are highly valuable for the future of the
Dineh Nation and that honor is due to them for their years of defiance
against the illegal mandates implemented upon their lives in the name of energy
exploitation. Furthermore, if the Dineh continue to dismiss the situations at
Big Mountain and throughout the "HPL," a geninue part of Dineh-Hopi prehistoric
experiences will be obliterated as their ancestral lands become the
wastelands of energy developments.
COME SUPPORT RENA AND THE ELDERS AT BLACK MESA:
Families are asking for help. Now is the time to come and stay
with a family. BMIS is willing to help you get to the land--please check our
website for specifics.
www.blackmesais.org/what_can_do.htm
Meanwhile, the Hopi and Navajo governments have been in secret
negotiations in Washington and Phoenix. Joe Shirley, the President of the
Navajo Nation, announced on the radio several days before the Nov. 7 election
that the Bennett Freeze has been lifted and that there will be no forced
relocation from the Freeze Area. Shirley was re-elected yesterday by a significant
margin.
Accord reached for sacred Hopi sites on Navajo land (from az daily sun)
www.senaawest.org/Dineh/compact_signed.html
Hopis, Navajos end 40-year battle (az rep)
www.senaawest.org/Dineh/land_dispute.html
President signs historic legislation (Gallup Independent)
www.senaawest.org/Dineh/Freeze_passed.html
More articles about the current policies and legislations
www.blackmesais.org/latest_indfo.htm
BMIS NEEDS YOUR HELP!
Unfortunately we are unable to update our website at this time due to the
loss of the critical laptop of our web designer. Members of Black Mesa
Indigenous Support are all volunteers as we use our own funds and tools to do much of
what we do. So, we are asking our friends and allies for help to front a new
laptop until we can pay you back with our own money. Thank you!
www.blackmesais.org
Black Mesa Elder Rena Babbitt-Lane (approx. 80 yrs old) is in the
hospital recovering from a minor heart attack and other injuries after an
incident of harrasment by BIA/Hopi Rangers earlier this week.
STATEMENT OF RENA BABBIT LANE:
"My sheep herder had left recently, so I was home alone and I took the sheep
out to a close area where they like to graze. This was Monday, November 3rd.
Three of the goats somehow ran through the partition fence and I could not
get them back across. I cut the fence and herded the sheep through and put them
all back together. Then they went to a nearby water hole on that side of the
fence and were drinking. I laid down under a tree
because I was exhausted. Three Rangers came up to me there. I think they
were all Hopi, but one of them spoke good enough Navajo that I could understand
him. They immediately began to threaten me. The ranger was saying, `You
broke the law! You´re gonna go to jail! You are not allowed to herd over here.´
They grabbed me by the shoulder and pushed me around. Pretty rough. I tried
to tell them that they should not be pushing around
an old lady like me, what kind of people are they? They took me back to my
house and were trying to search around. I was trying to stop them. One picked
up a stick and threatened me with it. They were heavily armed. I told them
that they were a bunch of bullies, bringing all those guns around my house and
being intimidating. They said, "We´re gonna come back tomorrow and either
impound all your sheep or else maybe we will put you
in jail and let the coyotes eat all of your sheep while you sit in there."
There were other things that they did to me too. I cannot remember all the
details very well. Then they wrote a ticket or something and left. I was feeling
very weak after that. I have no transportation so I walked 3 miles to the
neighbors´ house. They drove me down to my relatives closer to town. In the
course of retelling the story, I realized that I was having a pain in my chest.
They brought me to the hospital here and I have been here for
four days now. I am very sad about what´s happened here. I am not a bad
person, I am a kind person. Just herding sheep and they treat me this way..."
THIS IS NOT AN ISOLATED INCIDENT:
Last month, an elderly Navajo man from Cactus Valley had reported that some
sort of government official, possibly from the land management team came
right within a mile of his house and loaded up a pile of wood that he was
gathering. The elderly man followed the officials up the road and got them to stop.
There was a heated exchange-the man demanded that the
officials return the wood. They insisted that he was somehow in violation of
his wood hauling permit and that they were taking the wood back to Hopi.
They wrote him a ticket and gave him a court date. He went to court in Polacca,
50 miles away, on Oct.20. The charges were found to be false, and the judge
dismissed them outright. The firewood was not returned.
A BIG MOUNTAIN RESIDENT DEMANDS:
On behalf of my Dineh Relations at Big Mountain and throughout the
so-called, "HPL,"
I demand an immediate investigation into this federally-sponsored elder
abuse and harassment of an individual(s) who still have no understanding of the
modern American laws, and
I demand that the Navajo Nation make an inquiry to the BIA Hopi Agency and
its Land Management Office about their justification for this incident of
intimidation and physically shove or thrust a lone and fragile elder around, and
I further demand that the Navajo Nation immediately convene its council
members and the Office of the Navajo-Hopi Land Commission to facilitate the much
needed testimonies from the residents of the "Hopi Partitioned Lands" and
begin to address the escalating Human Rights violations within the
aforementioned region.
Let it be resolved that, the traditional Dineh families and their
elderly matriarchs and patriarchs are highly valuable for the future of the
Dineh Nation and that honor is due to them for their years of defiance
against the illegal mandates implemented upon their lives in the name of energy
exploitation. Furthermore, if the Dineh continue to dismiss the situations at
Big Mountain and throughout the "HPL," a geninue part of Dineh-Hopi prehistoric
experiences will be obliterated as their ancestral lands become the
wastelands of energy developments.
COME SUPPORT RENA AND THE ELDERS AT BLACK MESA:
Families are asking for help. Now is the time to come and stay
with a family. BMIS is willing to help you get to the land--please check our
website for specifics.
www.blackmesais.org/what_can_do.htm
Meanwhile, the Hopi and Navajo governments have been in secret
negotiations in Washington and Phoenix. Joe Shirley, the President of the
Navajo Nation, announced on the radio several days before the Nov. 7 election
that the Bennett Freeze has been lifted and that there will be no forced
relocation from the Freeze Area. Shirley was re-elected yesterday by a significant
margin.
Accord reached for sacred Hopi sites on Navajo land (from az daily sun)
www.senaawest.org/Dineh/compact_signed.html
Hopis, Navajos end 40-year battle (az rep)
www.senaawest.org/Dineh/land_dispute.html
President signs historic legislation (Gallup Independent)
www.senaawest.org/Dineh/Freeze_passed.html
More articles about the current policies and legislations
www.blackmesais.org/latest_indfo.htm
BMIS NEEDS YOUR HELP!
Unfortunately we are unable to update our website at this time due to the
loss of the critical laptop of our web designer. Members of Black Mesa
Indigenous Support are all volunteers as we use our own funds and tools to do much of
what we do. So, we are asking our friends and allies for help to front a new
laptop until we can pay you back with our own money. Thank you!
www.blackmesais.org