Houston Chronicle Sunday

Spiritual battle

For Standing Rock Sioux, pipeline threatens sacred lands

- By Emily M. Miller What’s the backstory? Who’s protesting? So what does opposition to the pipeline have to do with religion and spirituali­ty? Why are Christians getting involved?

NEAR THE STANDING ROCK SIOUX RESERVATIO­N, N.D. — It’s being called “the largest, most diverse tribal action in at least a century,” with scores of Native American tribes camped among the hills along the Cannonball River.

They’ve gathered in tents and teepees, and in prayer and protest, to oppose the constructi­on of an oil pipeline, engaged in what both activists and religious leaders are calling a spiritual battle.

And they won a partial victory on Sept. 9, when the federal government ordered a provisiona­l halt on constructi­on near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservatio­n.

But what’s behind the opposition to the pipeline, and what makes it spiritual? Let us explain. What’s the backstory?

The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe has filed a lawsuit over a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers permit for the constructi­on of a $3.8 billion undergroun­d pipeline that would run nearly 1,200 miles from the Bakken and Three Forks oil fields in North Dakota to an existing pipeline in Illinois.

The Dakota Access pipeline would transport 470,000 barrels of crude oil per day, according to Dallas-based Energy Transfer, the parent company of Dakota Access. It would reduce the amount of oil shipped by truck and train, providing safer transport of oil, the company argues.

But it also would snake through sacred sites on lands where the Sioux once lived and, according to the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, a spill would “present an existentia­l threat” since the pipeline would come within a halfmile of their reservatio­n. Who’s protesting?

An estimated 8,000 people were camped along the Cannonball River this past week.

Camp coordinato­r Phyllis Young says members of 280 Native American tribes have come to express their support — from as far away as Hawaii and Ecuador, according to the Sacred Stone Camp Facebook page. Many non-Native people also have joined.

So what does opposition to the pipeline have to do with religion and spirituali­ty?

“You can’t separate spirituali­ty from our everyday life,” said Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Councilman Dana Yellow Fat. “We do everything with prayer.”

The demonstrat­ion began in April with a 26-mile prayer ride on horseback from Sitting Bull’s burial site in Fort Yates. Prayer continues at the camps throughout the day, in the morning and evening and at mealtimes, in vigils, in songs, in prayer ties knotted to fences along constructi­on sites, in the sage and cedar and tobacco that is burned.

Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Chairman Dave Archambaul­t II has mentioned visions and dreams by several Lakota and Dakota Sioux about “a black poisonous snake trying to come among us.” He also has cited instructio­ns the Sioux believe the Creator has given them to care for the land, including the water and all creation.

“Mni wiconi” — “Water is life” — has become one of the rallying cries of those opposing the pipeline.

Mark Charles, a Navajo Christian and Washington correspond­ent for Native News Online, puts it this way: “The way most Natives feel about the land where they’re living is the way most European Christians (American Christians of European origin) feel about Israel. Why? Because that’s where their creation story takes place.” Why are Christians getting involved?

Bruce Ough, bishop of the United Methodist Church’s DakotasMin­nesota Area and president of the United Methodist Church’s Council of Bishops, calls it “a spiritual battle.”

“Ultimately, this is a protest about the stewardshi­p of God’s creation and justice for the indigenous peoples of the Great Plains,” Ough said.

It’s also about reconcilia­tion, said Shantha Ready Alonso, executive director of Creation Justice Ministries. Many nonNative Americans participat­ing in the demonstrat­ion want to acknowledg­e the injustices done to indigenous peoples by European Christians who took their lands and played a role in massacres of Native Americans.

“There’s a lot to confess, there’s a lot to repent and, in this case, this is an opportunit­y to stand with the tribe and affirm and follow their leadership in taking one more step toward reconcilia­tion,” Alonso said.

Representa­tives from several Protestant Christian denominati­ons, including the United Methodist Church, United Church of Christ, Episcopal Church, Presbyteri­an Church (USA) and Evangelica­l Lutheran Church in America — as well as the Nation of Islam — have visited the camps or spoken out against the pipeline project.

 ?? Alyssa Schukar photos/ New York Times ??
Alyssa Schukar photos/ New York Times
 ??  ?? Above: Susan Leopold, of the Patawomeck Tribe of Virginia, watches the sun rise over the Sacred Stone Camp, where thousands of Native Americans have joined the Standing Rock Sioux tribe’s protest in Cannon Ball, N.D. Left: Phil Little Thunder Sr....
Above: Susan Leopold, of the Patawomeck Tribe of Virginia, watches the sun rise over the Sacred Stone Camp, where thousands of Native Americans have joined the Standing Rock Sioux tribe’s protest in Cannon Ball, N.D. Left: Phil Little Thunder Sr....

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