Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
The Sioux have never accepted the validity of the US confiscation of Paha Sapa, the Black Hills. Mount Rushmore is controversial among Native Americans because it is located in the Black Hills. Members of the American Indian Movement led occupations of the monument be-ginning in 1971. Return of the Black Hills was the major Sioux demand in the 1973 occupation of Wounded Knee.
Due to a decade of intense protests and
occupations by Lakotas and allies, on July 23, 1980, in United States v. Sioux
Nation of Indians, the US Supreme Court ruled that the Black Hills had been
taken illegally and that remuneration equal to the initial offering price plus
interest—nearly $106 million—be paid. The Sioux refused the award and continued
to demand return of the Black Hills.
The money remained in an interest-bearing account, which by 2010, amounted to
more than $757 million. The Sioux believe that accepting the money would
validate the US theft of their most sacred land. The Sioux Nation’s
determination to repatriate the Black Hills attracted renewed media attention
in 2011. A segment of the PBS NewsHour titled “For Great Sioux Nation, Black
Hills Can’t Be Bought for $1.3 Billion” aired on August 24.
The reporter described a Sioux reservation as one of the most difficult places
in which to live in the United States: "Few people in the Western
Hemisphere have shorter life ex- pectancies. Males, on average, live to just 48
years old.
Almost half of all people above the age of 40 have diabetes. And the economic realities are even worse. Unemployment rates are consistently above 80 percent. In Shannon County, inside the Pine Ridge Reservation, half the children live in poverty, and the average income is $8,000 a year. But there are funds available, a federal pot now worth more than a billion dollars. That sits here in the U.S. Treasury Department waiting to be collected by nine Sioux tribes. The money stems from a 1980 Supreme Court ruling that set aside $105 million to compensate the Sioux for the taking of the Black Hills in 1877, an isolated mountain range rich in minerals that stretched from South Dakota to Wyoming. The only problem: The Sioux never wanted the money because the land was never for sale."
That one of the most impoverished communities in the Americas would refuse a billion dollars demonstrates the relevance and significance of the land to the Lakota nation, not as an economic resource but as a relationship between people and place, a profound feature of the resilience of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas.
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