Indigenous
Vow: We'll Be 'Dead Or In Prison Before We Allow' Keystone Pipeline
Indigenous
Vow: We'll Be 'Dead Or In Prison Before We Allow' Keystone Pipeline
14
March, 2014
Lakota
and American Indian Movement activists joined in a four-directions
walk to commemorate Liberation Day, an event to mark the 1890
massacre at Wounded Knee. As they do each year, four groups gather to
the north, south, east and west and then walk eight miles until
converging on top of Wounded Knee, where they honor the fallen
warriors and the tribe’s rich history of resistance.
“It
is an acknowledgement of the resiliency of who we are as a people,”
explains Andrew Iron Shell, an organizer and activist of the Sicangu
Lakota Nation. “It gives permission and courage for our
up-and-coming generations to face the challenges of their time.”
The
history of the occupation began with a massacre more than 100 years
ago. On a cold day in December 1890, the United States army killed
300 Lakota men, women and children in a massive shoot out after a
member of the First Nations refused to give up his arms. It marked
the first bloodshed on Wounded Knee – although there had been many
massacres of First Nations people by the colonialists before it. The
event was also considered the end of the Indian Wars.
Eighty-three
years later, on Feb. 27, 1973, about 200 Lakota members took siege of
the town of Wounded Knee. Reclaiming a location that was written in
the history books as a place of defeat, the Lakota stood their
ground. They were there in protest of a failed attempt at impeaching
the tribal president at the time, Richard Wilson, who was known to be
corrupt and abusive. Initially a protest against the tribal
government, the occupation took a turn when U.S. police forces
arrived. The protestors switched the occupation’s focus to the
United States’ frequent violation of treaties.
The
armed warriors maintained control over the town for 71 days while the
FBI encircled them. At the final standoff, two warriors were killed,
about 12 people were wounded and over 400 were arrested. The Oglala
were able to harness national attention through their occupation,
using the spotlight to question the United States’ treatment of
First Nations people.
As
history passed, later generations rarely heard about the occupation
of Wounded Knee — or about first nation people at all. This skewed
national memory should be unsurprising: When you have a society and a
nation built upon the subjugation of people of color, you can expect
nothing more than the constant erasing of certain histories.
Ongoing
genocide
I
recently visited Prisoner of War Camp 344, also known as the Pine
Ridge Indian Reservation. It wasn’t my first time in the sovereign
Oglala Sioux Nation, but it was my first time joining in the
ceremonies celebrating the 41st annual Liberation Day to remember the
1890 reoccupation of Wounded Knee.
The
vibrant American Indian Movement flags waving in the harsh South
Dakota winter wind reminded me of the old black and white photos I
used to see in my history books. The Lakota would not disappear
without a fight, regardless of what the United States’ intentions
were. Children walked alongside elders who had taken part in the
occupation, showing clearly the group’s intergenerational wisdom.
These are children who are stripped of learning their people’s
history in schools, but instead learn it through stories and dances.
They are children who live in a sovereign nation that contains two of
the poorest counties in the United States and who recognize the
threats their families face every day.
One
of these threats come from the so-called town of White Clay, Neb.,
where visitors can witness the way violence against the First Nations
people has changed — but not disappeared — over the generations.
Consisting of only 12 people and four liquor stores, White Clay was
once part of a 50-square-mile buffer that prevented alcohol from
entering the reservation. In 1904, President Roosevelt signed an
executive order that removed 49 of those square miles. Since then,
the town’s economy has been driven by the $4 million in alcohol
sales to the people of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. There is no
legal place to drink in or around White Clay: Alcohol containers
can’t be opened on the property of the distributor, it’s
prohibited to drink in the street, and the reservation is dry
territory. Yet, somehow, the town of 12 people manages to keep four
liquor stores open. Barely two miles from the reservation’s
epicenter, and less than 200 feet from the dry reservation line, the
town perpetrates a type of violence that is, on the reservation,
known as liquid genocide.
The
reason for this name becomes apparent when one examines the teenage
suicide rate on the reservation, which is 150 percent higher than the
U.S. national average for this age group. Many attribute this death
rate to the sale of alcohol to minors, which White Clay store owners
are known to do. The liquor stores also break the law by selling to
intoxicated people, and by trading alcohol for pornography, sexual
favors — including from minors — and welfare checks. The effects
of free-flowing alcohol are devastating: On the reservation, 90
percent of all court cases are related to alcohol use.
Kate,
a Tokala warrior, believes that alcoholism is part of a larger
problem of the disappearance of indigenous culture. For her, the only
way to live in the geographical region of Pine Ridge is the
indigenous way. “We are the ones on the back roads, still chopping
wood. We are living the way we used to live,” she said. “It’s
not hardship; it’s the way it’s supposed to be.”
Kate
and many others know that alcohol was introduced to her people as a
means to steal from them. Living deeply connected to the history of
their nation, they believe that if they shake free of the colonized
mindset, alcohol wouldn’t even be an issue.
Threats
to the land
In
addition to trying to close down White Clay, the Oglala Lakota Nation
is actively fighting the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline.
This 1,700-mile pipeline, which would carry 830,000 barrels of crude
oil each day from western Canada through South Dakota en route to
Texas. At two points it would even intersect with a pipeline that
serves as a main water source for the Sioux Nation, affecting all of
the Pine Ridge reservation as well as the nearby Rosebud reservation.
Advocates
for the pipeline argue the pipeline is the safest way to transport
crude oil. TransCanada, the company in charge of the pipeline,
predicted that the first Keystone pipeline, which runs from Alberta
to Illinois, would spill once every seven years. During its first
year in operation, it spilled 12 times. The Lakota, along with other
First Nations, have vowed to use direct action to stop construction
of the pipeline.
For
a nation whose land and sovereignty has been threatened for hundreds
of years by U.S. politics, the Keystone XL pipeline is part of a long
history of threats to the Lakota Nation – and to the earth itself.
“They
want to get rid of the Lakota, the protectors of the earth,” said
Olowan Martinez, an organizer in the Lakota community. “But what
they don’t know is when they get rid of the Lakota, the earth isn’t
too far behind. Our people believe the Lakota is the earth.”
President
Obama is scheduled to be make a final decision on the pipeline by the
middle of 2014. While the Lakota are hoping he will not approve the
project, they are also getting ready to stand up and fight. During
the Liberation Day celebrations, the Lakota’s dances and stories
relayed messages about sacred water and Mother Earth. The tribe has
also united with other First Nations to organize a three-day direct
action training called Moccasins on the Ground, which was designed to
prepare people to act if the pipeline is approved.
“Dead
or in prison before we allow the Keystone XL pipeline to pass,” the
Lakota warriors, many mounted atop horses, repeated during the
Liberation Day celebration. Their words carried the weight of 521
years, and counting, of lived resistance.
Camila
Ibanez is an organizer in New York City focusing on migrant rights,
environmental justice and sexual liberation.
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