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Honoring Indigenous Peoples Day - capradio org

Today on Insight, we re honoring Indigenous Peoples Day, the challenges of becoming a federally recognized tribe, the history of two-spirit members within tribal and indigenous communities, and much more.

A century-old fight for tribal recognition simmers over the eastern Sierra Nevada s Mono Lake

A century-old fight for tribal recognition simmers over the eastern Sierra Nevada s Mono Lake Louis Sahagún © Provided by The LA Times View of Black Point on the north shore of Mono Lake on Feb. 4 in Lee Vining, Calif. The north shore of the lake was a site of Native American massacres in the 1800s. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times) In a fevered bid for wealth, white ranchers and gold miners began pouring into the remote Mono Lake Basin east of Yosemite in the 1850s, taking over the ancestral lands of Native Americans who had existed there from time immemorial.

A century-old fight for tribal recognition simmers

(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times) Without federally protected land to call home, Mono Lake Paiute tribal members are scattered across the state. But their spiritual hubs remain nearby the almost million-year-old alkaline Mono Lake in the shadows of the jagged eastern escarpment of the Sierra Nevada. The tribe takes its name from its traditional word for what was once a high-protein food source, the pupae of tiny black alkaline flies that carpet the Mono Lake shoreline. They have a crunchy, nutty flavor, which makes them very snackable when dried. The tribe’s ancestors adapted to life in the high-altitude valley with short growing seasons by irrigating villages, harvesting pine nuts and hunting pronghorn antelope and jackrabbits for food and pelts for clothing.

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