Culture clashes and crimes
>> Monday, September 23, 2013
BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
The kindness of
expatriate Cordillerans, specifically couple Conrad and Pilar (nee Manno)
Marzan, brought me to Alcatraz in the autumn of 2008. As we passed the cells of
the island penitentiary, we were guided by radios attached to our ears telling
us where some if its famous occupants were locked up.
What I wanted to hear
then but didn’t was about
the 19 men of the Hopi Nation who were rounded up in November, 1894. They, too,
were imprisoned for almost a year at Alcatraz that is now one of San
Francisco’s top tourism come-ons. I
put off the radio, haunted by the mass arrest and imprisonment, the image of
which occupied my mind on the boat back to the mainland. The image haunts now
and then, reason for this revisit.
The Hopi men were
described as “murderous-looking” and misidentified as Apaches in a story by the
San Francisco Call. Their crime: resistance
to cultural imposition, subjugation and domination. They had refused to send
their children to boarding schools under a government program to “Americanize”
them and, in the process, wipe
out their own culture.
The 19 men were
released in September, 1895. Just before their womenfolk and children would
have to spend another harsh and cold winter without their menfolk.
In 1995, historian
Wendy Holiday of the Hopi Cultural Preservation Office wrote a story on the
Hopi prisoners. She asked readers who had stories about them to contact her and
help document this event in Hopi history – from the American Indian
perspective.
That indigenous view
surfaced in autumn of 1969, six years after the penitentiary was closed.
Thousands of Indians and non-Indians landed on Alcatraz to reclaim it as Indian
land. They invoked “discovery”, in the same token that European colonizers
earlier invoked the self-serving principle of “terra nullius” in claiming
Aboriginal and indigenous lands.
They occupied The Rock
for almost a year and a half. The occupation proved a powerful rallying point
to demand respect for indigenous peoples and their human rights. Ben Winton,
writing for Native People’s Magazine in 1999, noted that “despite its chaos and
factionalism, the event resulted in major benefits for American Indians.”He quoted historian
and law professor Vine Deloria Jr. of the University of Colorado:
“Alcatraz was a big
enough symbol that for the first time this century Indians were taken
seriously.” And John Trudell, a Santee Sioux: “Alcatraz put me back into
my community and helped me remember who I am. It was a rekindling of the
spirit. Alcatraz made it easier for us to remember who we are.”
Tourists now line up
daily at San Francisco’s Pier 39 for the boat to take them to The Rock. They
are issued audio gadgets that serve as their guide to the now empty, silent
cells of the more famous, or infamous convicts who did time there – Al Capone,
Robert Stroud (Birdman of Alcatraz), George “Machine Gun” Kelly.
I punched the audio
guide on , but my mind was off the names it featured. What struck my Igorot
brain and eye were the sepia photos of the 19 Hopi prisoners. In deep autumn,
they were taken away from their wives, children and families who had to survive
the coming winter without
them. On the return boat back to the mainland, I struck some pesky flies from
what appeared to be a swarm. Six
that didn’t escape Alcatraz, I said to fellow passengers also trying to ward
off those landing on their faces.
At Alcatraz, I
searched for the names of the 19 Hopi men. I later found them in Holiday’s
article posted on the Hopi website: Aqawsi, Heevi’yma, Kuywisa, Lomahongiwma,
Lomayawma, Lomayestiwa, Masaatiwa, Nasingayniwa, Patupha, Piphongva,
Polingyawma, Qosventiwa, Qotsyawma, Sikyaheptiwa, Talangayniwa, Talasyawma,
Tawaletstiwa, Tuvehoyiwma, Yukiwma.
My mind turned to
Australia’s Aborigines, about whom I learned from Bob Randall, Deborah Bird
Rose and Rebecca Hossack, my teachers a year back at Schumacher College in the
Devon countryside of England.
Randall belonged to the “Lost Generations” of
Aboriginal children who were taken away from their parents and brought to
special schools to be to
educated in the ways of their European colonizers. Randall, a traditional
co-owner of the giant Uluru Rock that
is sacred to his people, never saw his mother again after he was plucked from
her arms.
He spoke without
bitterness - and with gentle, irrepressible humor. He called for a healing
together. It’s the
message of an award winning documentary film of which he is the narrator.
Directed by Melanie Hogan, a white Australian, it’s entitled “Kanyini”, which
means interconnectedness.
“The purpose of life
is to be part of all that there is,” Bob said. “Our parents said we are
connected to everything else, and the proof is being alive. You’re one with
everything there is.”
Rose, a respected
American-Australian anthropologist, noted how the European colonizers applied
their self-serving concept of terra nullius in claiming lands Down Under. “The
idea that the land was untransformed led directly to the idea that land was
un-owned,” she noted. “Locke’s famous statement on property could have been
written precisely to justify the dispossession of indigenous peoples in the
European settlement of Australia.”
Contrary to the
colonizers’ view that the Aborigines were simply hunter-gatherers or parasites
who depended on food naturally produced by the land, Rose asserted they did
have land management systems, using fire as a tool..
Hossack, an expert in
Aboriginal art based in London, opened up on the problems of drug and alcohol
abuse, poverty, gambling and feeling of aimlessness among Aborigines as a
result of colonization that uprooted them from their cultural roots. She spoke
of Albert Namatjira, perhaps the greatest and most famous Aboriginal painters.
The quality of his art made him the first among his people to be granted
Australian citizenship under the laws of the colonizer.
Citizenship meant the
right to acquire land and property – and to buy goods, including alcohol. True
to his tribal culture and upbringing, Namatjira shared what he had. In so
doing, he was charged and
found guilty of passing on alcohol to a fellow Aborigine. He was sentenced to
six years imprisonment, but was released after two months. Incarceration for
acting in accordance with the dictates of his culture made him a despondent and
broken man.
Namatjira’s fate
brings one to that of Cayat. He was an Igorot( probably a Kalanguya,) during
the American colonial period here. The Baguio court then convicted the guy for
possession of a bottle of
commercial gin. I remember
his young Igorot lawyer, the late Sinai Hamada who went up to the Supreme Court
to contest the constitutionality of the law that banned Igorots from having in
their possession or consuming intoxicants, except the “tapuy” they customarily
produced. Two years after Cayat’s final conviction, the law, premised on the
assumption that tribals couldn’t hold their drink, was rescinded.
The laws that governed
the native American the American colonizers applied to the tribal Filipinos
such as the Igorots. To make up for the injustices, American laws gave the
Indians the right to open and operate casinos in their reservations.
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