Contact: Merle Pete
(520) 871-6352
merlepete@visto.com
PRESS STATEMENT
STATEMENT BY PRESIDENT BEGAYE ON THE BULLDOZING OF HPL SUNDANCE
CEREMONY SITE BY THE HOPI TRIBE
Window Rock, Navajo Nation (Arizona)
The Hopi governments decision to bulldoze the Sundance ceremony site at
Big Mountain is deplorable. In the strongest terms, I object to such a violent
action against the Navajo families who reside on Big Mountain and who participate,
as a part of their spiritual beliefs, in the Sundance ceremony. The Hopi government
appears to be persecuting these families for their religious beliefs, as well
as for their heartfelt desire to stay on their ancestral lands and to continue
their traditional ways.
The Sundance ceremony has been performed at Big Mountain for a number of years
at the request of the Big Mountain Navajo families. It has become an important
part of their spiritual lives. Like all peoples,including the Hopis, the Navajo
families on Big Mountain should have the freedom to practice their non-violent
beliefs without governmental interference.
Native peoples have, all too often, seen their sacred places damaged or destroyed
by non-Natives. It is shocking to see one Native government do the same to another
Native community. The Hopi governments action seemed to have been intended
to intimidate, by a show of force, all the Navajo families who continue to reside
on Navajo ancestral lands within the Hopi Partitioned Lands. Let me remind the
Hopi government that the Israeli military uses a similar tactic of bulldozing
homes in Palestinian villages. The outcome of that strategy has not brought
peace to the Middle-East.
I understand that the Hopi government is frustrated. The Land Dispute has taken
its toll on everybody just ask those Navajo families who live on the HPL
and have sought spiritual strength through the Sundance ceremony. They feel
the Land Disputes harshness more than anyone else. I also understand that
the Hopi government claims legal jurisdiction over the Sundance. But I question
whether that jurisdiction gives the Hopi government the moral right to act as
violently as they have.
I raise my objections directly with the Hopi leadership. The politics of destruction
can start a terrible downward spiral that we must stop now. At this point, the
first step is to secure the release of any Navajos who were detained by the
Hopi police. Then I would ask that the Hopi government apologize. In return,
I will commit to working with the Hopi government to address its reasonable
concerns. We must build bridges of trust, not walls of fear and intimidation.
We must relay on reason and diplomacy, and the law, not acts of force, to resolve
our disputes.
The actions of the Hopi government have cast a long shadow over all the Navajos
who reside on the HPL, as well as put chilling effect on the relationship of
our two nations. Nonetheless, our two people are here, together, as neighbors
this is the Creators will. We should honor that will with good hearts,
good intentions and good actions.
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Black
Mesa Indigenous Support
P.O.
Box 23501, Flagstaff, Arizona 86002
Message Voice Mail: 928.773.8086 Email: blackmesais@yahoo.com |