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Interior Sec. Deb Haaland vows to continue to investigate U.S. Indian boarding schools and support healing efforts for tribal communities impacted by intergenerational trauma caused by the schools.
Many students faced physical, mental, spiritual and sexual abuse. And, many students did not make it back home.
Sec. Haaland testified Wednesday before the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs on the findings of her federal Indian boarding school initiative, which she announced last June.
A report released in May found there were 408 schools across the U.S. from 1819 to 1969, and about 53 marked or unmarked burial sites identified.
Boarding school policies focused on cultural assimilation, and the forced removal and relocation of Native children.
Sec. Haaland says as the investigation continues, the next step is to gather testimony, find support for healing, and resources for language and culture initiatives.
“I recently announced we will embark on the road to healing, a tour to hear directly from survivors and descendants. A necessary part of this journey will be to connect survivors and their families with mental health support, create a permanent collection of oral histories. We know this won’t be easy, but this is a history we must learn from if we are to heal from this tragic era in our country.”
The hearing also focused on Indian boarding school legislation (S. 2907) to create a commission to help locate and analyze records, and hold culturally appropriate hearings.
Sandra White Hawk, board president of the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition, was among a panel of Native leaders to testify in support of the legislation.
“It will open up wounds, but in order for us to heal we need to air out those wounds and replace them with the medicines that we have within our ceremonies, our songs along with our mental health professionals that can help us as well. Most importantly, what was taken from us our songs, our lifeways that will bring the healing when our wounds are open from that. There was an elder that was one of my teachers and he said we are people that are well acquainted with grief. And, I’ve watched and seen that as we’ve gone into communities and listened to experiences and watched healing take place.”
Senators on the Indian Affairs Committee, including chair Brian Schatz (D-HI), vowed to continue to push the boarding school legislation forward and to help find appropriations.
Click here to read the testimonies or watch the hearing
Leaders of an Indigenous community in Sonora, Mexico have banned outside tour operators from bringing visitors to their territory. Instead, they are asking tourists to arrange visits directly with members of the community. From the Fronteras Desk, KJZZ’s Kendal Blust reports.
The Comcaac New Year, the community’s most important celebration, is coming up at the end of this month. And ahead of what is often a popular tourist event, leaders are asking visitors to directly contract boat rides, lodging and other services with members of the community.
Alberto Mellado, who represents the tribe with the municipal government, says the request comes after years of abuse by outside tour operators that increases the marginalization of his community.
He says businesses charge tourists significant sums of money to bring them to Comcaac territory, but little if any of that money goes to members of the community.
He says the Comcaac nation wants tourists to visit, but is opposed to the benefits of those visits disproportionately going to outsiders – who take advantage of the beautiful land- and sea-scape that Comcaac people have protected for millennia.
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