EDITORIAL
CONTACT: Ted Howard, 208-759-3100, ext.
243,
thoward4shopai@yahoo.com;
Mark LeBeau, 916-801-4422,
Mark.LeBeau@CRIHB.NET
NATIVE AMERICAN NAGPRA COALITION
CONTACTS:
Reno Franklin 707-591-0580 Ext 105; Lalo
Franco, 559-925-2831; Radley Davis
530-917-6064; James Hayward,
530-410-2875; Morning Star Gali
510-827-6719; Bennae Calac,
760-617-2872; Silvia Burley, California,
209-931-4567; Douglas Mullen,
530-284-7990.
NCAI, the
Nation’s Largest Indian Organization,
Condemns UC Berkeley on Ancestral
Remains, Supports Tribal Coalition’s
Position
National
Congress of American Indians Resolution
Rejects UCB’s Elimination of
Repatriation Unit, Subordination of
Native Religion to University Research
DENVER,
Colorado, Nov. 28, 2007 – The Native
American NAGPRA Coalition (NANC) today
strongly endorsed the National Congress
of American Indians’ (NCAI) resolution
protesting UC Berkeley’s decision to
eliminate its tribally approved NAGPRA
unit, diminish tribal participation and
influence in repatriation processes and
declare a huge portion of the Phoebe
Hearst Museum’s collection of ancestral
remains and funerary objects “to be
culturally unaffiliated and thus not
subject to tribal repatriation and
NAGPRA requirements.” The resolution,
which passed without dissent at the NCAI
Annual Convention in Denver, also states
that the “needs of scientists and
scientific values” at the Museum “must
be subordinate to the religious freedom
and human rights of American Indians...”
The Museum’s recent reorganization has
elevated research goals over Native
American entitlements under the Native
American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA).
The text of
the resolution is pasted below and the
signed resolution is attached to this
email.
Founded in
1944 in response to termination and
assimilation policies forced upon the
tribal governments by the United States,
NCAI now has over 250 member tribes
across the country. NCAI the largest and
most venerable Native American
organization in America, and is best
positioned to monitor federal laws,
policies and decisions that affect
tribal government interests. In this
capacity, the organization “strongly
recommends that appropriate authorities
immediately undertake a formal
investigation of the Phoebe Hearst
Museum…”
In August,
the Native American NAGPRA Coalition
asked UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert J.
Birgeneau to stop the Museum
reorganization and meet with NANC to
discuss the past and future of NAGPRA at
the Hearst Museum. NANC’s letter
protested the complete and deliberate
exclusion of tribal representatives from
the reorganization decision process, the
new organizational structure that
subordinates Native American religious
rights to the goals of science, and the
failure of the University to adequately
consult with tribes on the cultural
affiliation of ancestral remains and
sacred objects per the requirements of
NAGPRA. The Chancellor ignored the
Coalition’s request, dismissed the
protest as the agitation of a “few
disgruntled employees,” and referred all
tribal NAGPRA inquiries to subordinates.
In spite of a major and successful NANC-sponsored
demonstration on the Berkeley campus in
October, UC system chief Rory Hume
subsequently ignored similar requests
from the Coalition.
“Thus far,
the attitude of University officials
toward sovereign Indian tribes has been
dismissive, discriminatory and
paternalistic,” said Ted Howard,
Shoshone-Paiute, NANC representative and
member of the 30-tribe Great Basin
NAGPRA Coalition. “Their primary concern
has been to placate powerful scientists
who are extremely hostile to NAGPRA and
who want to keep our ancestors for the
purposes of research. If UC
administrators continue this policy and
ignore an organization of the stature of
the National Congress of American
Indians, they may destroy any prospect
of cooperative and positive
relationships with tribes in the future.
Native American ancestral remains belong
to Native Americans, and we will not
stop until our ancestors are repatriated
and returned to our mother earth.”
Indians
regard repatriation as a human rights
issue. The right to control ancestral
remains is a basic human entitlement
that has been extended to almost every
ethnic group in the United States except
Native Americans. Throughout American
history, scientists routinely pillaged
Native American burials and shipped
massive amounts of ancestral remains to
museums for scientific study. “It is
time to correct this fundamental
injustice,” said Howard.
For
additional information on the UCB NAGPRA
issue, visit
http://nagpra-ucb-faq.blogspot.com
and
http://nagpra-ucb.blogspot.com.
###
N A T I O
N A L C O N G R E S S O F A M E R I C A
N I N D I A N S
The
National Congress of American Indians
Resolution #DEN-07-033
TITLE:
Support for NAGPRA at the University of
California - Berkeley
WHEREAS,
we, the members of the National Congress
of American Indians of the United
States, invoking the divine blessing of
the Creator upon our efforts and
purposes, in order to preserve for
ourselves and our descendants the
inherent sovereign rights of our Indian
nations, rights secured under Indian
treaties and agreements with the United
States, and all other rights and
benefits to which we are entitled under
the laws and Constitution of the United
States, to enlighten the publictoward a
better understanding of the Indian
people, to preserve Indian cultural
values,and otherwise promote the health,
safety and welfare of the Indian people,
do herebyestablish and submit the
following resolution; and
WHEREAS,
the National Congress of American
Indians (NCAI) wasestablished in 1944
and is the oldest and largest national
organization of AmericanIndian and
Alaska Native tribal governments; and
WHEREAS,
the Chancellor of the University of
California at Berkeley has,without
properly consulting with appropriate
American Indian tribes, decided
todiscontinue the tribally approved
NAGPRA unit dedicated to discharging
Universityresponsibilities to tribes
under federal NAGPRA laws and
regulations and has movedto place the
NAGPRA program within other activities
of the Phoebe Hearst Museumof
Anthropology, thereby diminishing tribal
participation and influence in the
existingNAGPRA unit; and
WHEREAS,
the needs of scientists and the
scientific values of the PhoebeHearst
Museum of Anthropology’s collection of
skeletal material and other
sacredobjects must be subordinate to the
religious freedom and human rights of
AmericanIndians whose ancestors and
sacred cultural properties are housed in
said collections; and
WHEREAS,
The Great Basin Intertribal NAGPRA
Coalition (30 tribes) andother tribes
have vigorously opposed this action by
the University of California atBerkeley;
and
WHEREAS,
as much as fifty percent (minimum of
5,675 biologicalindividuals (50%) and
69,028 Associated Funerary Objects) of
the Phoebe HearstMuseum of
Anthropology’s collections have been
incorrectly declared to be
culturallyunaffiliated and thus not
subject to tribal repatriation and
NAGPRA requirements; and
WHEREAS,
the decision by the Chancellor of the
University of California atBerkeley
places sacred American Indian skeletal
remains and artifacts into the handsof
University employees who are
inadequately trained in the care and
preservation ofsuch sacred items
according to tribal customs and
traditions; and
WHEREAS,
the NCAI quotes Section C of NAGPRA;
Museum means any institution, including
institutions of higher learning –
colleges, universities etc. or state or
local government agencies that possess
or has control over Native American
collections (human remains or cultural
items) and receives funds through grant,
loan, contract or other arrangement by
which Federal money or assistance is
given to a museum for any purpose, are
bound by the stipulations of NAGPRA; and
WHEREAS,
Section 5 of NAGPRA says, “In general”
each Federal agency and each museum
which has possession or control over
holdings or collections of Native
American human remains and associated
funerary objects shall compile an
inventory of such items and, to the
extent possible based on information
possessed by such museum or federal
agency, identify the geographical and
cultural affiliation of such item.
Requirements (1) the inventories and
identification required under subsection
(a) shall be (A) competed in
consultation with tribal governments and
Native Hawaiian organization officials
and traditional religious leaders.
NOW
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that
the NCAI does hereby strongly recommend
that appropriate authorities immediately
undertake a formal investigation of the
Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology of
the University of California at
Berkeley, to determine what provisions
of NAGPRA and related federal
requirements have been overlooked by the
actions and inactions of the Phoebe
Hearst Museum and the University of
California, Berkeley.
BE IT
FURTHER RESOLVED, that this
resolution shall be the policy of NCAI
until it is withdrawn or modified by
subsequent resolution.
CERTIFICATION
The
foregoing resolution was adopted by the
General Assembly at the 2007 Annual
Session of the National Congress of
American Indians, held at the Hyatt
Regency Denver at the Colorado
Convention Center in Denver, Colorado on
November 11-16, 2007, with a quorum
present.