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Table of Contents
Growing Number of Cities Weigh Tribal ‘Land Acknowledgements’
A tribal land acknowledgement adopted in Tempe, Arizona, recognizes that the landscape in and around the city including Papago Park in Phoenix, pictured are sacred to the O Odham and Piipaash, two tribes with long histories in the region. In Arizona and other states, some local governments are formally recognizing Native American connections to lands.
Mike Janes
Four Seam Images via The Associated Press
Doreen Garlid, a first-term city councilmember in Tempe, Arizona, pinched her leg under the table to keep from weeping as she read a Jan. 14 resolution into the record. The unusual resolution, popularly known as a land acknowledgement, declared that Tempe sits on traditional O Odham and Piipaash lands and celebrates the contributions the two tribes made to the region.
Housing and Development Newsletter
Landscaping plans include plants the Chumash traditionally gathered for food, medicine and making items used in their daily lives. One section will highlight the plants used for weaving highly specialized baskets.
Construction is moving forward on the Santa Ynez Chumash Museum and Cultural Center off Highway 246, with plans for completion this year. (Contributed photo)
In addition to getting the structure built, a parallel effort has seen the tribe amass a collection of more than 20,000 cultural objects to help tell their story of Santa Ynez Chumash.
At the time of the design’s unveiling, tribal leaders said groundbreaking would occur before the end of the year.