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<DIV><FONT size=4>Yurok Indians exult at return of sacred cache</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><A class="email fn" href="mailto:pfimrite@sfchronicle.com">Peter Fimrite,
Chronicle Staff Writer</A></DIV>
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<DIV class=date>Friday, August 13, 2010</DIV>
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<P>The Smithsonian Institution has returned a trove of precious artifacts to
the Yurok Indians in California in what is one of the largest repatriations
of Native American ceremonial artifacts in U.S. history. </P>
<P>The Yurok, who have lived for centuries along California's Klamath River,
received 217 sacred items that had been stored on museum shelves for nearly
100 years. The necklaces, headdresses, arrows, hides and other regalia from
the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian are believed to be
hundreds, if not thousands, of years old. </P>
<P>"It's awesome. It's a big thing with our people," said Thomas O'Rourke,
chairman of the Yurok, a tribe that lived next to the Klamath River in far
Northern California for 10,000 years before Europeans arrived. "These are
our prayer items. They are not only symbols, but their spirit stays with
them. They are alive. Bringing them home is like bringing home prisoners of
war."</P>
<P>To celebrate the return of the items, the Yurok will hold a
Kwom-Shlen-ik, or "Object Coming Back," ceremony today in the town of
Klamath. </P>
<P>The returned artifacts were sold to the museum in the 1920s by Grace
Nicholson, a renowned collector of Indian art, who owned a curio shop in
Pasadena in the early 20th century. Ceremonial Indian regalia was in vogue
among wealthy Americans at the time.</P>
<P>The sacred cache is part of an ongoing effort around the country to
return Native American burial artifacts, ceremonial items and remains taken
by white settlers from Indian villages and indigenous sites. </P>
<H3 class=subhead>Repatriating belongings</H3>
<P>The 1989 National Museum of the American Indian Act transferred
stewardship of more than 800,000 Indian artifacts to the Smithsonian and
required the institute to consider repatriating them to federally recognized
tribes. </P>
<P>Among the items claimed by the Yurok were finely woven baskets, wolf
headdresses, eagle and California condor feathers, head rolls made from
pileated woodpecker scalps, white deer skins, obsidian blades and flint, all
of which have been used for centuries in sacred rituals and dances. </P>
<P>"If we were to study or use scientific methods for testing we could
probably come up with some rough dates, but generally they are made of
materials that aren't readily available anymore," said Buffy McQuillen, the
repatriation coordinator for the Yurok. </P>
<P>Many of the items, for instance, are woven together using fibers from
iris, a local plant that is now rare in the area. Also difficult, if not
impossible, to find today are woodpecker scalps, condor feathers and white
deer skin, apparently from rare albino-type deer, McQuillen said. </P>
<P>"They are definitely old," she said. "They were acquired in the early
1900s, but they were in use and practice many years before that." </P>
<P>O'Rourke said the items will be used beginning Aug. 27 in the tribe's
White Deerskin Dance, a ceremony designed to give thanks for what nature has
provided to the people. They will also be used starting Sept. 24 in the Jump
Dance, another traditional ceremony that asks the creator for balance and
renewal. The dancers perform nine abreast in full regalia for 10 days,
primarily inside a traditional redwood plank house.</P>
<P>"We are getting (the returned items) ready to dance. They are going to
work," O'Rourke said. "It's been a long time since they've heard their
native voices and native songs."</P>
<H3 class=subhead>Largest tribe</H3>
<P>The Yurok is the largest tribe in California, with 5,600 members.
O'Rourke said most of the tribe members live within 50 miles of the
reservation, which encompasses 57,000 acres, including 44 miles of the
Klamath.</P>
<P>At one time there were more than 50 villages in the tribe's ancestral
territory, which covered about 500,000 acres and 50 miles of coastline. The
Yurok, who called themselves Oohl, or Indian people, were renowned for
fishing, canoe making, basket weaving, story telling and dancing. </P>
<P>The Yurok were first visited by the Spanish in the 1500s and later by
American fur traders and trappers, including Jedediah Smith, who raved about
the abundant wildlife in the area. In 1850, gold miners moved in, bringing
with them disease and violence. The Yurok population declined by 75 percent,
and the remaining Indians were forcibly relocated to a reservation in
1855.</P>
<P>Javier Kinney, a tribal leader who was one of four Yurok selected to go
to Washington, D.C., to pick up the ceremonial regalia, said the returned
items signify a new beginning.</P>
<P>"Our responsibilities are to preserve our culture, our language and our
religious beliefs not only for us, but for our children and their children,"
Kinney said. "This signifies a new day for the Yurok. We're not a people of
the past that are only in history books."</P>
<P>The returned items make up 30 percent of the National Museum's Yurok
holdings. </P>
<P class=dtlcomment>E-mail Peter Fimrite at <A
href="mailto:pfimrite@sfchronicle.com">pfimrite@sfchronicle.com</A>.</P></SPAN>
<P id=pageno>This article appeared on page <STRONG>A - 1</STRONG> of the
San Francisco Chronicle<BR></P>
<BLOCKQUOTE><I>Posted by Margie
Whitnah</I><BR></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV></DIV></DIV></BLOCKQUOTE></BLOCKQUOTE>
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