
LANDBACK: A Tipi Village Takes on Healing & Homelessness
Season 3 Episode 313 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
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This limited series features the very best of Laura Flanders' investigative reporting on the people and places addressing today's problems in creative, transformative ways. This award-winning series features the diverse, often grassroots leaders who are driving forward-looking change across the country and around the world.
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LANDBACK: A Tipi Village Takes on Healing & Homelessness
Season 3 Episode 313 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
This limited series features the very best of Laura Flanders' investigative reporting on the people and places addressing today's problems in creative, transformative ways. This award-winning series features the diverse, often grassroots leaders who are driving forward-looking change across the country and around the world.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- LANDBACK isn't just literal land back it's reclamation of cultural identity.
- There's a direct correlation between the healing of Indigenous People and the healing of the land.
- On a nightly basis, there is anywhere from 75 to 100 people utilizing the camp.
- It pushed people out of their comfort zone in order to start learning and evolving your thinking outside of the city services.
- Camp Mni Luzahan is the very example of what happens when indigenous peoples are able to reclaim land.
(upbeat background music) - Coming up on Laura Flanders and Friends the place where the people who say it can't be done, take a back seat to the people who are doing it.
Welcome.
(upbeat music continues) In 1980, the U.S Supreme Court ruled that the land behind me on which Mount Rushmore is carved, had been stolen from the Sioux People in violation of an 1870s treaty.
And in 1980, the court awarded the Sioux $2 million in compensation.
But the Sioux didn't want that money, they want the land.
And they want it still and not just to own it, but to operate it and look after it in an entirely different way.
I'm in South Dakota, in the Black Hills with the people of the NDN Collective looking at their work around this campaign, they call LANDBACK.
The campaign launched on Indigenous Peoples' Day, 2020, Just a few months before in the midst of nationwide demonstrations against police brutality and anti-Black racism, members of the NDN Collective and hundreds of other indigenous land defenders had rallied to stop President Trump from giving his 4th of July address from their ancestral homelands.
But how did a demand that First Nations and Indigenous People have long been making, become a new campaign to radically transform communities, society and more.
At the NDN office in Rapid, I spoke with LANDBACK campaign director, Krystal Two Bulls and president and CEO, Nick Tilsen, to learn more.
- In one year.
what we've been able to accomplish feels like, it feels like we've been organizing this campaign for like five years.
We were obviously catalyzed on July 3rd when we did the action and where, you know, Nick Tilsen and myself and another of our organizers with other land defenders were arrested.
And that action itself was catalyzed as well by the Movement for Black Lives in the organizing that they had done around the murder of George Floyd in tearing down, colonial statues that continue to uphold white supremacy and the narrative of white supremacy in this country.
- For us, sitting here in the Black Hills watching this happen and Trump was coming here, I thought about what could we do?
What could we do as Lakotas, as Indigenous People to stand in solidarity with the Black liberation movement in the moment of a racial uprising, but stand in our own power, with our own identities and who we are, but contribute to that narrative.
But at the same time make sure that the struggle for Indigenous People, Indigenous lands and our future isn't erased in the process.
And I was like, this is perfect.
Because the Mount Rushmore is not something, it's not a statue that you can topple.
It's not a flag that you can lower.
It's not a painting that you can take off the wall.
The only way to achieve justice in this situation is return the land.
- From that moment, the hashtag, you know, which originated from our relatives up north, in so-called Canada and artists from up there, it just took off here in the so-called U.S.
And so from that moment, we've just been running, pretty much sprinting a marathon race, but, you know, we had our official launch on Indigenous People's Day, and we were really intentional about that day being a day for us to really ground almost every indigenous struggle in LANDBACK and really pushing forth the meta-narrative of LANDBACK as the ultimate connector, right, and the ultimate umbrella of organizing pretty much anything that Indigenous Peoples are organizing towards, and fighting for can fall up underneath the banner of LANDBACK.
First and foremost, LANDBACK is literal reclamation of land, right?
Like it is literally, we want access to our lands.
We want to be able to embody our original instructions to be the caretakers of this land.
That's not in a colonial context in terms of the way, you know, people think about ownership of the land.
For us, that's not the context, right?
Like it's more about returning to the land because the way that we're taught in our ceremonies and our teachings tell us is that, we are the land and we belong to the land, not the other way around.
And LANDBACK is also the reclamation of everything stolen from us, when we were forcefully removed from the land.
And that includes our ceremonies.
That includes our languages.
That includes our way of life, our culture, our spirituality.
We had all of that pre-colonization.
- We absolutely wanna meet the needs of our people.
Our people need housing.
Our people need a better education system, our people need jobs, our people need childcare centers.
Our people need all the things that people need in society today to meet their needs.
We wanna make sure that we create community development strategies to help accomplish that.
Right?
And that's some of the work that we're engaged in now.
It's where we're reclaiming different lands, here, right in the Black Hills, right here in Rapid City.
Some of 'em we're buying, some of 'em we're getting gifted.
Some of 'em we're being negotiated.
Some of 'em the city are having to give up or return them.
And we're utilizing those lands to engage what does that future look like?
Because for so often, you know, many of our people haven't been asked the question, "What is it that you want for your future?
What kind of community do you wanna live in?"
- Like, just about every city in the United States, Rapid City in South Dakota in the county of Pennington has a big problem with poverty, homelessness, addiction and abuse.
- The homeless population is growing.
There's been an influx from the local Indian reservations, many who are here, many new homeless members who are here are attracted by the free food and parks.
There are several groups now feeding homeless members in city parks and about town and that is a big attraction.
We know this because this is what they tell us.
Many of this group are also attracted by the availability of alcohol.
- They've spent millions of dollars trying to address that problem too.
But in the winter of 2020, the movement organization NDN Collective arguably accomplished more.
When they brought dozens of their relatives from downtown, up here into the hills, to a camp, a tipi camp called Camp Mni Luzahan - Since mid-October, Camp Mni Luzahan has provided shelter and community to those in need.
Today, they allowed the media in for the first time.
giving details about day-to-day life in the camp and insight for the future.
There are between 12 and 20 volunteers a day, and any number of people using their services, which makes the camp into a mini community with multiple tents, a mess hall, and even a communal fire.
One of the main volunteers said their goal is to protect relatives.
- I spoke to two of the members of NDN Collective about what happened here.
- We have a history of our people living along the Rapid Creek.
The Rapid Creek is where Rapid City got its name from.
And many of our relatives gravitate towards that, right?
Like water's life.
It has energy, you know.
There's safety in it.
And so, a lot of our unhoused relatives stay along that creek.
- Our Creek Patrol started last summer initially to check and make sure the welfare and safe being of our people, our relatives down on the creek, here in Rapid City.
offering supplies, such as hygiene, blankets, food every now and then, a hot meal, taking it out to them and just making sure their overall safety is okay.
- There's a lot of gaps in services wherever you are, in whatever city you reside in.
And so Creek Patrol was kind of a call to action as you will, by a group of individuals that just saw that need and that went out there and just did the work.
They started over a year ago now.
And I came into Creek Patrol about three months later.
There's a lot of harassment along that Creek.
When people know that these people are vulnerable and then also know that there's no repercussions or consequences to actually inflicting harm or violence on the unhoused.
- The police department is supposed to protect and to serve all our people.
But the thing is, the police department here in Rapid City, they criminalize and abuse these relatives.
- What was the relationship between the work of the Creek Patrol, working with the unhoused relatives down along the creek and the creation of Camp Mni Luzahan that followed?
- It was starting to get cold last year, about this time.
We needed someplace for them to go.
We asked the city, if we can find a place to rent, a vacant building, we reached out to the mayor.
They left us with no options.
And so we decided, well, we're gonna set up tipis here, in a central area where they can just walk over and, you know, have a warm place.
The city and the police department surrounded us with, I think, half the police force, if not the whole police force and a SWAT team and some highway patrol.
They surrounded us and arrested us for trying to protect our relatives.
When we got out of jail and we were showed this place and we came over the hill and it was meant to be.
That spot was just, is really awesome.
It was really a great feeling getting that.
So we went down and got the tipis and gathered a lot of people from the city, a lot of community members went up with us and helped us clear spots and set up the tipis.
And we lit the fire.
We lit a community fire in the center of camp.
And that fire burned from the time camp was set until we closed down.
- [Female Reporter] The camp, located on land owned by the Oglala Sioux, Rosebud Sioux and Cheyenne River Sioux tribes has multiple sleeping tents and tipis.
A cook shack, a mess hall with movie night capabilities and communal fires.
The camp has received numerous donations, including food, money and everything in between.
- What do you think Camp Mni Luzahan was able to provide that Rapid City services hadn't?
Many of the people you were housing at the camp were struggling with different sorts of addictions.
- I think the biggest thing is that we saw them as relatives that we saw them as humans.
They weren't just a number, that we weren't getting funding for them, but that it provided a safe space for them to be.
- On a nightly basis, there was anywhere from 75 to 100 people utilizing the camp.
As they started seeing that these lands are our homelands, this land belongs to them.
And by the tribes allowing us to open up the camp on Lakota territory, in our Black Hills, it sparked a little fire.
And so slowly, they started getting, you know, four or five people being sober for a week.
And then pretty soon it started growing all the way into April.
We had, I'm guessing a little more than 50% of them were sober.
- We didn't have training.
We didn't go into like Camp Mni Luzahan training and like learn how to take care of each other.
It was like this inherent knowledge that we carried with us.
And I think that what that allowed us to do is like for one, connect to the land, which I felt was very, very important, but also it created like this system of accountability and like relying on each other and finding purpose within camp.
And, just being in the land, being away from things that are distracting us from really, truly connecting to each other.
- Our people can work with our people because we understand, we lived the trauma on a day-to-day basis.
We live and deal with the racism and the systematic oppression that this government has put on our people.
And so it's easier for us to connect than it is for somebody who has never lived with the trauma that we grew up with.
- Because of colonization, because of assimilation, so many of our unhoused relatives are actually those that are victims of boarding schools or the grandchildren of boarding school survivors.
And there was a boarding school in Rapid City that was really right directly near where Camp Mni Luzahan existed.
And really when we talk about the creek, our relatives used to make camp along that creek because they wanted to be close to their children in the boarding schools.
- [Laura] The trauma of the not so distant past runs into the present along the banks of Rapid Creek, but healing is possible.
And for the members of NDN Collective that process, isn't just about reclaiming land, but also history.
To learn more about the Rapid City Indian Boarding School, I met with Amy Sazue up at Camp Mni Luzahan.
She's education equity organizer at NDN Collective.
- So we call ourselves, our informal name is the Rapid City Indian Boarding School Lands Team.
So our team did actually go down to the National Archives and look into, just looking for more information about the school, about children that might've died, and then what happened to them.
So in that process, we found over 50 kids that died at the Rapid City Indian Boarding School.
And we knew just some stories in our communities that a lot of these kids' families were looking for them.
And so, identified the names, kind of got that part of the project going.
But in the meantime, we opened up this whole big issue about the land.
So from Bacon Park in Rapid City all the way to Canyon Lake, was all land that belonged to the school.
And the reason they had so much land is because the kids went to school for a very minimal time in the morning and then worked.
That was the point of the boarding school system was to strip away identity, culture, anything having to do with being Lakota and get people who are ready to join the workforce.
And so that's what they were doing with these kids.
And so this land, when the boarding school closed, Rapid City leadership went to the Department of Interior.
The Department of Interior issued a statute that said that the land could be used in three different ways.
So the first was that it could be given for free to schools, the national guard, parks and needy Indians could get it for free.
West middle school, the school district got parts of it.
Churches bought a ton of it.
The interesting part of this story is that needy Indians got zero.
So the lands project is really focusing right now on reconciliation of those three land parcels and getting the Children's Memorial established and preserving that site on the side of the hill, where we found evidence of graves.
We wanna build a Memorial there so that we can come pray there and remember the kids, we'll also protect that land and make sure there's no development.
It's not being dug up and people aren't driving ATVs on it anymore, or walking their dogs on top of the graves of children who died.
I can't think of any other instances where all three tribes own land together and also were able to come together in agreement on something that is happening off of tribal land or off the reservation.
What's really beautiful about that is it doesn't just mean the Oglala Sioux tribe, Rosebud Sioux tribe, and Cheyenne River Sioux tribe, it includes all of our Dakota, Nakota relatives across the state.
And this place in camp was super diverse.
And it was mostly the local tribes, the closest ones, but it was super diverse.
And it's just creating a space for that, for allowing us to come back together and to extend invitations to each other, and to accept the invitation to come together and talk and figure out a solution is amazing, it's historic.
- So what's next for the LANDBACK campaign in Rapid City, the Black Hills and beyond?
If the Creek Patrol and volunteers at Camp Mni Luzahan could make such a difference on only a small portion of reclaimed property, how could the LANDBACK movement transform society at large for everyone?
- We've learned that when our relatives, even those that are deep into addiction, and deep into trauma, when they get back on the land, they heal.
And that they find purpose and they find their identity in that that leads to the more healing.
And then they wanna do more on the land.
And then that... So it's like this cycle that feeds itself of healing and growth and purpose.
And then we also discovered that we don't need police in those places.
So the one thing about that piece of land is that, you know, Rapid City Police Department, can't go on that land, that property, it's tribal land.
And so we had to learn really quickly how to navigate the different things that come up within our peoples.
And these are our people, our unhoused relatives are the epitome of what colonization has done to our people.
They are a direct result of that and we see it in them.
And if we can find healing for them on those lands, without these services that continuously fail us and without the police continuously to brutalize us and harass us, then what is possible is unlimited.
And Camp Mni Luzahan is a perfect example of how our people heal when we reclaim land.
- Our values our Lakota values, all the respect and the generosity, the humility, everything that our ancestors had before us slowly came back.
And it was really amazing because all of that was there in the camp.
- What Camp Mni Luzahan did was provided a home for our unhoused in these eight months.
But the bigger thing that it did was it challenged people's thinking of like what is possible and what people are comfortable with.
I mean, when we had Camp MniLuzahan, our community was uncomfortable.
They were so uncomfortable with a bunch of, you know, Native Americans up on this hill on sovereign land and we can't even go up there because we don't have the rights to go up there and like, what are they doing?
And they're gonna set the hills on fire, like, oh my gosh, all these things, you know.
And here we are up there and just like connecting and healing.
But what that does is it pushed people out of their comfort zone in order to like start learning and evolving your thinking outside of the city services, outside of governmental funding, and really puts it back in the hands of the community.
What can we do.
- Public lands throughout the nation have been mismanaged by the Bureau of Land Management.
Have been mismanaged by the Forest Service.
You know, people don't realize this, like through the public lands that the federal government has stolen from Native People, they have mismanaged those lands and have made them playgrounds for transnational corporations to profiteer off of these public lands, using tax paying dollars to profiteer off of the lands the stolen lands of people.
And so the first thing is we're gonna stop the extractive industry model.
And the question is then what can we do to restore?
So there's gonna be a huge amount of restoration that'll have to happen in those places.
Those restoration efforts will create huge amounts of jobs, of opening up creeks, you know, stopping uranium, you know, cleaning up Superfund sites, cleaning up these places that, you know, corporations have polluted.
Those will create jobs.
And then thinking about what does regenerative economics look like in these places.
There's a direct correlation between the healing of Indigenous People and the healing of the land.
- The big picture, big story is that you can't erase parts of history and then try to say that we're in a healing or in reconciliation until there's truth.
And there's a recognition of a full and accurate history of, I mean, not just our country, but specifically of Rapid City.
LANDBACK, isn't just literal land back.
It's reclamation of cultural identity.
It's reclamation of even solidarity of standing together with relatives and people that... And realizing that recognizing that we're all related and that we're in this together and we're stronger together.
Solidarity is what is getting all of this done.
- If I had a choice in what I was doing as a career and what I was doing in my life, I wouldn't necessarily choose this.
I'd rather be hunting.
And I'd rather be spending time with my nephew and talking to him about the importance of these things and being able to drink that fresh water that literally still comes out of the earth and we can still drink it to this day.
I'd rather be doing those things.
But because I can't do those things without corporations trying to come into my community and extract, or without racist people like, you know, harassing us or without educational institutions completely erasing our existence or without the world itself ignoring the fact that we exist and that an entire nation was built over the top of us.
I can't do that.
I can't live that life without those things impacting me.
And so therefore, everything in me tells me that we need to set it right.
(soft music) - Ever since the first colonizers came, having land in the United States has meant having infuence and power And the LANDBACK struggle is partly about that, about getting control over some land back.
But LANDBACK is also about how a place is cared for and how that land is used, and for what purpose.
Just months after I was in Sourh Dakota in 2021, the news broke that that midwestern state was a world class tax haven - like Switzerland and the Cayman Islands.
A global investigation called the Pandora Papers revealed that the state was sheltering billions of dollars for the international rich who were seeking to protect their assets from governments where they live.
In other words, thanks to its super secretive trust laws, South Dakota was a global magnet for money makers who wanted to tower up their wealth and keep it and give nothing back.
That█s the way lawmakers in South Dakota had set things up - and kept it even after the Covid pandemic, when people needed their government█s help and those governments needed that tax money most.
So, South Dakota represents a pretty stark and striking example of a choice when it comes to how a place is operated Is it set up for the rich and greedy to tower up thier wealth and hide it - or used to tend to a place - as in the indigenous vision of caring, with people together moving towards a just and healthy world.
Tower up or tend.
Which do you fancy?
I'll only say that towers tend to crumble.
and I█ll leave it at that.
You can find more of our reporting on the LANDBACK story on our website.
I'm Laura Flanders for Laura Flanders and Friends.
Til the next time, stay kind, stay curious, and thanks for joining us.
For more on this episode and other forward-thinking content subscribe to our free newsletter for updates, my commentaries and our full uncut conversations We also have a podcast It█s all at Laura FLanders.org (upbeat music)
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