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Modocs discuss separation
Proposal would establish a Modoc tribe
by Lee Juillerat, 2/2/10 Herald and News
Manion
Economic
self-sufficiency for Modoc Indians can only be achieved
if people with Modoc blood separate from the Klamath
Tribes and create their own federally recognized tribe.
Chesnut and Manion spoke Friday night at a meeting to discuss creating a Modoc tribe.
“The only way this
can happen,” Manion said after outlining a plan he
believes can help give Modocs economic self-sufficiency,
“is that we set ourselves up as the Modoc tribe.”
Chesnut
Membership in tribe
Claiming that leaders of the Klamath Tribes
have continued a generations-long “climate of
corruption,” Chesnut said Modocs face “paper genocide”
unless they move to create a tribe with membership
based on heritage and lineage, not blood quantum.
The
two spoke to a gathering of about 25 people at a meeting
at the Klamath County Government Center.
“If we don’t do
anything, we will be assimilated into the Klamath Tribe,”
he said, noting all Indian tribes face extinction within
two or three generations as marriages outside the tribes
affect blood quantum percentages. Chesnut said the
Klamaths currently require members be onequarter Indian.
Criticism of
Klamaths
Chesnut, Manion and
others at the meeting took turns criticizing Klamath
Tribes’ leaders, who they claim discriminate and exclude
Modocs and Yahooskins from decision making processes.
“We are like the dogs
that sit around people’s tables and wait for scraps,”
claimed Manion, who owns property on the Klamath Marsh,
but has worked as an engineer in Iraq and Afghanistan the
past seven years.
“I think this is a big
opportunity for our people because we’ve always been shut
out,” said Patrick Foster, who said he is a 100 percent
Yahooskin, but has been required to register as a Klamath.
“I’m glad this is happening.”
“As a people we need
to have a voice,” said Kevin Fields, who said his
non-Indian appearance resulted in officials changing his
nationality from Indian to Caucasian when he entered the
military.
Several audience
members said they have sometimes
been denied medical
services, and fear harassment if they sign a petition
supporting establishment of a Modoc tribe.
Wayne Anderson, an
enrolled Klamath Tribes member, said his and his family’s
efforts to promote economic development for the Tribes
were regularly disregarded by tribal leaders.
Chesnut , who was
adopted into the Modocs by the late Miller Anderson and
his family, said he and Anderson presented a proposal to
tribal leaders in 1993 for a Jumping Rock Resort at Modoc
Point.
Chesnut said a
development firm was interested in financing and building
the complex with a five-star hotel, motel, casino,
restaurants, rodeo grounds, horse track, truck stop, mall,
private airport, sports complex, two golf courses and
other facilities.
He said tribal leaders
declined to allow the proposed developer to make a
presentation at a tribal council meeting.
Opportunities
to gain
“his is an example of
an opportunity lost,” Chesnut said. “ This is also an
example of an opportunity we can gain if
we break away.”
The Tribes’ Kla-Mo-Ya
Casino, which was built after the Jumping Rock Resort
proposal, is a short distance from Modoc Point.
Chesnut said a better
site would be near Weed with access from Interstate 5
and Highway 97, possibly in cooperation with the Shasta
Nation, another group of Indians seeking federal tribal
recognition.
Chesnut also presented
a map he said outlines Modoc tribal homelands ceded to the
federal government by the Lakes Treaty of 1864.
The area generally
goes east to Goose Lake, southeast near Alturas, south
near Fall River Mills, southwest to McCloud, west near the
eastern side of Mount Shasta and north along a meandering
line near Ashland, Chiloquin and Winter Rim.
“This is what we have
the potential of getting back,”
he said.
“What if most the
Modocs don’t want to break away from the Klamath Tribes,”
Chesnut was asked.
His answer: “It won’t
happen.”
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Page Updated: Friday February 12, 2010 03:10 AM Pacific
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