Understanding the Native world
I mentioned my recent spree of talking about the book Literary Industries that my great-great-grandfather, historian and book collector Hubert Howe Bancroft, wrote in 1890 (and was just re-issued by Heyday; check out this link). One of the book talks occurred in conjunction with Earth Day at the Mendocino County Museum where a large exhibit called Woven Worlds presents the life and times of the Native people in this region, both historically and today.
I mentioned my recent spree of talking about the book Literary Industries that my great-great-grandfather, historian and book collector Hubert Howe Bancroft, wrote in 1890 (and was just re-issued by Heyday; check out this link). One of the book talks occurred in conjunction with Earth Day at the Mendocino County Museum where a large exhibit called Woven Worlds presents the life and times of the Native people in this region, both historically and today.
Collecting material for Native Pomo basket, on display at the Mendocino County Museum |
As in all
things H.H. Bancroft, I said, I found him contradictory. On the one hand,
Victorian gentleman that he was, he admitted being somewhat “disgusted” by the
primitive nature of many “savages.” And yet he decried the brutality of the
white “Indian butchers” bent wholly on Native annihilation. I also saw the
contradiction in my ancestor’s relationship to nature. He described his great
dependence on nature as a source of respite, yet he also found it desirable to
cut down hundreds of “venerable” oak trees to make way for the pear farm he
created in Walnut Creek, pears being more profitable to modern Europeans than
acorns were to the Indians, now forcibly removed.
Adapting to
such contradictions is often inherent in the game of life for any of us who
engage with the complexities of history and change. These very topics are
always at the top of my mind in Little Lake Valley where we continue to see
history in battle with change.
This valley was once fertile with deer, elk, and huge runs of salmon in the six creeks that created the Little Lake. The sedge and other grasses supplied the material for the gorgeous baskets that the Pomo people wove.
Over the last year and a half, many of us opposed to the construction of a cement river ripping through the valley have seen the implacable power of Caltrans, especially when fortified by money and arms. Regardless of the opposition, they have laid down the six miles of a dirt foundation for their future bypass.
This valley was once fertile with deer, elk, and huge runs of salmon in the six creeks that created the Little Lake. The sedge and other grasses supplied the material for the gorgeous baskets that the Pomo people wove.
Over the last year and a half, many of us opposed to the construction of a cement river ripping through the valley have seen the implacable power of Caltrans, especially when fortified by money and arms. Regardless of the opposition, they have laid down the six miles of a dirt foundation for their future bypass.
However, one change we continue to insist on (and that I’ve blogged about before; see earlier posts) is to reduce the humongous 4-lane northern
interchange to a 2-lane roundabout, given the relatively little traffic that
passes through Willits on an average basis (8000 cars, compared to the 40,000
that such a huge interchange is built for). Also, this downsized would reduce
the impact on the precious wetlands from 40 acres to 10 acres, not to mention
the many subsequent benefits to water and vehicle use of reducing construction,
among many others.
So far, Caltrans remains, well,
stupid in the face of reducing costs of all kinds. It simply seems illogical,
as well as irresponsible.
The Water Board
Surrenders, the U.S. Army Corps Stands Strong
Speaking of Caltrans’
irresponsibility, a KGO television report on June 11th came out about the Northwestern
Regional Water Board’s analysis of the lack of proper protection to vital
streams and creeks in the path of the Willits wetlands. The Water Board is
about to impose $10,000 a day fines on Caltrans for their destruction of vital
habitat to spawning salmon and other creatures. The news clip gives some excellent visual footage for seeing how poorly Caltrans has coped with the sensitive hillsides and creeks involved.
Still, the Water Board just caved
in to Caltrans’ presentation of their “mea culpas,” so reported The Willits News Friday, June 20th. Having promised to clean up
their act, literally, Caltrans somehow convinced yet another state agency that
they will do a better job henceforth. Given that all of these state agencies
are essentially living together under the same state-corporate roof and feeding
out of the same state funds, it’s not a surprise that a smaller agency can be
“convinced,” one way or another, that the transportation-industrial complex is
in the right.
In the roller coaster ride of our Caltrans dilemma, we just received a KGO report later on Friday, June 20th, that Caltrans was ordered to stop work by the Army Corps of Engineers for an indefinite time because Caltrans failed to meet the conditions of their mitigation plan for protecting the water and other impacts on the earth.
In the roller coaster ride of our Caltrans dilemma, we just received a KGO report later on Friday, June 20th, that Caltrans was ordered to stop work by the Army Corps of Engineers for an indefinite time because Caltrans failed to meet the conditions of their mitigation plan for protecting the water and other impacts on the earth.
Native Peoples Speak
Out
Pile of dirt for freeway overpass covering Pomo ancestral site |
Process to the wetlands for a ceremony of blessing (Photo by Steve Eberhard) |
Members of the American Indian Movement led a group of nearly 100 people onto the former wetlands for a sacred ceremony to bless the earth, to remember those who had lived there, and to give strength and courage in the continued struggle to find justice for the Native people and the wetlands.
The Willits News reported on this event; click here to see their full report. I was the MC for part of it.
Passing of my friend
Darryl Wilson
This
collaboration between the environmental activists of Willits and the
descendants of Little Lake Valley’s Native peoples was reminiscent for me of
the loss of a gentle Native spirit, Darryl “Babe” Wilson, whose memoir I helped
edit many years ago. In his book, The Morning the Sun Went Down, Babe told the
story of what it was like growing up among the Pit River Indian people near Mt.
Shasta (he was Achumawe and Atsugewi), including the legends and lifeways that
he had inherited. A tremendous tragedy struck his family when his mother and baby
brother were killed in a car accident that involved a lumber truck. His father,
crushed in spirit, could no longer raise the remaining small children after
Babe’s mother died, and so Babe and his siblings were farmed out to relatives
and to white foster families that were often insensitive to his cultural way of
life.
Babe Wilson and me, with "Dr. Cho," as Babe fondly called Cholo, 2010 |
Yet Babe
persevered, especially when an English teacher coxed his stories out of him and
taught Babe the power of capturing on paper the mystery, passion, and politics
of his Native world. Babe went on to gain his Ph.D. in anthropology and to
write a variety of pieces, as well as teach and become a valuable voice for
protecting Native rights and traditions. His writing for News from Native California became a staple of that magazine. Babe’s
anger never abated about lands taken from Native peoples through specious white
laws and treaties.
Thirteen
years ago, Babe was struck by another tragedy, a stroke that left him fairly
disabled and dependent on his two then teenage sons, Theo and Seterro, who did
their best to stick with their father and help him along, though he could walk
very little. But his brain never faltered. With his one good hand, he sure
could type, and he continued writing pieces for the journal, as well as a
sequel to his memoir, and the plans for a grand pageant of dancers from all
over the world, led by indigenous peoples, that would take over the Champs
Elysee and other major thoroughfares of great cities.
Babe passed
away on May 7, 2014. He will be deeply missed by the many who knew and loved
his wit, his stories, his wisdom—as I did. He explained in writing once what he would often say upon saying good-bye to a
friend in his language:
“ Ina'lum'qtmi (if you are leaving): "I must go but I leave my heart with you." (If you are staying and someone is leaving: "You must go but you must take my heart with you."
“