J
JRKH
Guest
Yes. I understand this and is a large part of the reason that I said in my first post that the idea would not likely be workable - each tribe would wish to purchase property in different parts of the country.A composite Native state didn’t work with Oklahoma, what makes you think it would work now? You have to remember that tribal cultures vary, and a lot of the variation has to do with the climate and topography of the area where they traditionally lived. The ancestral land area of each tribe is sacred to that tribe. The cultural roots are deep in those areas. That is one reason why I moved to Wisconsin, and left an Apache friend behind in the SouthWest. The love for one’s homeland runs deep, deeper than relationships.
Many of the relocated Cherokee moved back home because of that homesickness. Other tribes did the same.
So - I don’t understand. Is it your idea that the parks be turned over to the Indians as tribal lands to be used as they see fit, or that the lands be turned over to the Indians for the purpose of the Indians maintaining them as national parks?The transition would have to happen all within the Department of the Interior, which is the locus for both National Parks and BIA. Since many reservations are close to National Parks, it would not be that difficult. Job re-training would have to be a major focus, and that is already happening, with many Native young people going to college and choosing majors in ecology-related fields.
Peace
James