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Hope for Modoc identity
Some Modocs seek to separate from Klamath
Tribes
By Lee Juillerat, Herald and News 10/7/09
Modoc Indians seeking
their own identity and tribe will host a meeting of Modoc
people Friday
night to explain and, they hope, enlist support to
separate from the Klamath Tribes.
“We are our own
people. This is our land.
We have to stand up
to get it back,” said Wayne Anderson, who is leading
efforts of Modoc Indians for a “Declaration of the Rights
of the Free and Sovereign People of the Modoc Indian
Tribe.”
Anderson and Two
Eagles, also known as Perry Chestnut, who was adopted into
the Anderson family and Modoc
Tribe by the late Miller Anderson, said they want to
preserve Modoc tribal and cultural traditions.
“They’re being
assimilated,” said Chestnut, who estimates there are more
than 200 people with Modoc heritage in the Klamath Basin.
“The Modoc Tribe is being extinguished as a government and
tribal entity.”
Chestnut said he and
several Modocs believe their interests are overridden by
Klamath Indians, who are the majority of the Klamath
Tribes, the federally recognized tribal organization for
Klamath, Modoc and Yakooskin people.
“I know there’s a lot
of dissatisfaction among the Modocs with the way that
confederacy has worked out,” Chestnut said. “Their
interests are always neglected and never brought to the
table.”
The meeting
During the meeting,
Chestnut and Anderson said they will explain how preparing
a declaration can be a first step to establishing a Modoc
self-government and sovereignty over ancestral homelands.
They said people of
mixed blood have the right under federal law to choose
their tribal affiliation. Signature sheets will be
available for people age 18 and older to declare their
identity as Modoc..
“The Modocs in the
Klamath Basin have no separate identity anymore,” Chestnut
said, noting there
were efforts to create a separate tribe more than a decade
ago by Miller Anderson, Wayne’s father.
“There’s been 136
years of the Klamaths having their way,” he said, noting
differences between Modocs and Klamaths that, in part, led
to the Modoc War and more recent disagreements about water
dealings affecting Lower Klamath Lake, Lost River and
Clear Lake.
“Our culture is being
taken away from us day-by-day,” Anderson said. “We’re a
lost people. We’re not a lost people without a cause.
We’re trying to get peace of mind, to get what’s ours.”
A call to the Klamath Tribes for comment was not
immediately returned.
Side Bar
Meeting set for Friday evening
“Reclaiming That Which is Sacred: A Call to Action,” is
the topic for a meeting set for 7 pm. Friday at the
Klamath County Commissioners hearing room at the
Government Center, 305 Main St.
The speaker will be
Two Eagles, also known as Perry Chestnut who lives in
Issaquah, Wash., is a former Klamath Basin resident who
was adopted into the Miller family and the Modoc Tribe in
1992 by the late Miller Anderson.
About the
Modocs
The Modocs are
American Indians who originally lived in a region of
northeastern California and southeastern Oregon that now
includes areas of Siskiyou, Modoc and Klamath counties.
Estimates for the precontact populations of most native
groups in California have varied from 400 to 500.
Following the 1872-73
Modoc War, 155 Modocs who were followers of Captain Jack
were forced onto trains and sent to Oklahoma. In 1909 they
were allowed to return to Oregon, but only 29 did.
The Modoc Tribe of
Oklahoma, which was federally recognized by the U..S. in
1978, is
headquartered in
Miami, Okla., in the northeastern part of the state. Of
the 200 enrolled tribal members, 120 live in Oklahoma. The
Oklahoma Modocs operate their own housing authority,
casino, tribal smoke shop, Red Cedar Recycling, Modoc
Buffalo Project and Modoc Flooring. They also issue their
own tribal license plates. The casino is in Miami and
includes a restaurant, gift shop and hotel.
The Oregon Modocs are enrolled in the federally recognized
Klamath Tribes. Several hundred live in the Klamath Basin,
although many have intermarried within the Klamath and
other tribes.
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Page Updated: Thursday October 08, 2009 02:35 AM Pacific
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