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http://www.owlstar.com/dailyheadlines.htm http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2003/05/27/~/chiloquin Edison Chiloquin given farewell Service retells elder's life to entire Basin community May 25, 2003 By LEE JUILLERAT, H&N Staff Writer CHILOQUIN - A community gave its farewells Friday to Edison Chiloquin. People from around the Klamath Basin filled the Big Gym in the town named after Chiloquin's great-grandfather to pay tribute to a man remembered for a variety of reasons. Chiloquin, 79, a full-blooded Klamath Indian, died May 17 at his Chiloquin home. During open casket ceremonies, interspersed with traditional Native American drumming and dancing, Chiloquin was remembered for his heroics as an Army scout during World War II, his ability to discard alcoholism, his love for his extended family and his refusal to accept payment for ancestral lands when the Klamath Tribe was terminated. "He stood up for what he believed in," said tribal Chairman Allen Foreman, Chiloquin's first cousin, during remarks that included the presentation of a blanket to Chiloquin family members. Chiloquin earned international attention during the 1970s when he refused to accept a $273,000 payment and, instead, burned a sacred fire at the site of his great-grandfather's village along the banks of the Sprague River. After five years of negotiations, President Jimmy Carter signed the Chiloquin Act in January 1980 that gave Chiloquin and his descendants title to 580 acres of what is now known as Pla-ik-ni Village. Until his death, there had been plans for a work party at the village this weekend in anticipation of a celebration for Chiloquin's 80th birthday on Aug. 31. Instead, several hundred people gathered in the Big Gym to celebrate Chiloquin's life. A framed copy of the Chiloquin Act was among items displayed, along with a collection of photographs and sampling of his art. For several decades, Chiloquin painted cartoons on trash cans and also sold paintings and pen and ink drawings. Many were published in his occasional community newspaper, "The Teetotaler." Several people spoke about Chiloquin's stubbornness, especially during the years he, family and friends maintained a sacred fire at the village site. Some urged fellow Klamaths to use Chiloquin's example in the Tribes' current efforts to obtain former tribal lands that have been part of the Winema National Forest for nearly 50 years. Others spoke of Chiloquin as a role model, especially for Klamaths and other Indians afflicted by alcoholism. Carla Cranewalker, who was married to Chiloquin during the 1980s, told about his insistence on being mentally and physically strong. "The message he said was be strong. Don't walk, run. Don't sit down," Cranewalker said. "He was a sacred man, a medicine man. I came back to pay my respect to the man who made me the best woman I could be." Cranewalker drew laughs when she admitted she was late in arriving at Friday's ceremony, "but he was late for our wedding - four hours." Punctuating the mood were the evocative sounds of the Steiger Butte Drum and the controlled frenzy dances by Garrold and Irwin Wilson and Westlee Whitcraft. Chiloquin's Army service, for which he won the Silver Star, Bronze Star and two Purple Hearts, among other medals, was honored through a series of dances and Veterans of Foreign Wars honor guard and gun salute. An American flag, which was placed alongside Chiloquin in his casket, was also presented to the family. Friday afternoon the casket, which included photographs of family members, a jar of Tabasco sauce, a blanket, a painting of a raven and his straw cowboy hat, was buried at the nearby Friendship Cemetery. Copyright c. 2003 Herald and News/Klamath Falls, Or. |
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