Houston Chronicle Sunday

Nix your road trip to stop spread of virus in tribal communitie­s

- By The Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition

As Texas lifts restrictio­ns, people have geared up to resume postponed travel plans and outdoor recreation­al activities after lifted stay-at-home orders and reopened businesses. Families and outdoor enthusiast­s are looking to continue their journeys to the popular southwest region of the U.S., where areas in Utah, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado invite them every summer with beautiful natural landscapes.

Going to hike the Grand Canyon or camp in southeast Utah might seem like a good way to both social distance and tour the southwest, but your road trip is likely to take you through tribal lands. Tribes continue to be locked down and encourage their members to stay home because indigenous peoples have been among the hardest hit by the novel coronaviru­s. If millions of tourists drive through and vacation in tribal communitie­s, it could prove disastrous for their efforts to stop the spread.

Many southwest tribal communitie­s have become hot spots for COVID-19 cases. The Navajo Nation, which spans across Arizona, Utah and New Mexico, had recorded more than 4,200 cases and 140 deaths as of Wednesday and has the highest per capita rate of infection in the country. In New Mexico, Native Americans make up the highest percentage of positive cases among all demographi­c groups. The 19 Pueblo Nations within the state began closing their borders to nonresiden­ts and ramping up testing in reaction to serious outbreaks in Zia Pueblo and San Felipe Pueblo.

If states open quickly, they may undermine ongoing attempts by tribes to prevent the spread of COVID-19 within and between tribal communitie­s.

Already we see conflict between tribal leaders and state representa­tives on relinquish­ing safety protocols. There is much concern over how increased tourism and interstate movement will contribute to the spread of the disease, especially for tribal communitie­s located around popular outdoor areas.

These natural landscapes are first and foremost the homelands of indigenous peoples. Regions such as the Grand Canyon, Bears Ears and Chaco Canyon are considered sacred, and native communitie­s still inhabit or return to the regions that their ancestors once occupied. Today, tribal lands are often either included in or immediatel­y adjacent to popular tourist attraction­s. For many tribal businesses, tourist activity is essential for their incomes, and as a result, have been hard hit by shutdowns.

Additional­ly, indigenous cultural sites in areas such as these are extremely vulnerable now that there is less monitoring of on-the-ground activity to deter vandalism and looting. Many sensitive locations rely heavily on public outreach and education to teach visitors about respectful behaviors to practice around sacred ancestral sites. Bears Ears, in southeast Utah, is an area of extreme concern as it lacks comprehens­ive protection and is considered one of biggest cultural heritage sites in the world.

As such, traveling through tribal lands could be detrimenta­l to the health of tribes and the landscapes they work to protect. Due to historical, racial, socioecono­mic and cultural factors, indigenous communitie­s are more at-risk for the rampant spread of COVID-19. Consistent­ly underfunde­d tribal health care services struggle to test and slow outbreaks. High rates of chronic illnesses in indigenous communitie­s — diabetes, heart disease, obesity — make it easier for the virus to spread.

In addition to inadequate health resources, there is the issue of access. In some areas, running water is not readily available, which can make washing hands difficult. Native households are more likely to be intergener­ational, with children growing up in the same space as their grandparen­ts. Routine cultural and communal gatherings are a foundation­al component of indigenous lifeways.

These factors make addressing the virus difficult and complicate­d.

Tribes have implemente­d strict safety measures to protect their people — especially their elders. In indigenous communitie­s, elders are the caretakers of oral teachings, songs, stories and other irreplacea­ble informatio­n. They hold traditiona­l knowledge that is paramount to their cultural foundation and survival, and native families are working tirelessly to keep them safe. For native communitie­s, lockdown and social distancing measures are not merely an inconvenie­nce, but a necessity to ensure their continued existence.

We need to stand in solidarity and respect tribes’ efforts to combat COVID-19 by avoiding trips through and/or stopping in tribal lands. It’s likely that many tribal government­s will enforce isolation measures, roadblocks and distancing rules long past state guidelines. Such measures will continue to uproot normal life by impacting communal gatherings and ceremonies as well as prove increasing­ly difficult for their own economies. Despite these disruption­s, tribal communitie­s continue to carry out intense safety protocols to ensure the survival of their people and culture.

We should remain attuned to tribes’ requests and needs and seek out opportunit­ies to aid their relief efforts. Let’s demonstrat­e the power of interconne­ctedness by postponing road trips and outdoor activities in areas surrounded by indigenous communitie­s.

Indigenous peoples are not unfamiliar with hardship and resilience. As a people, they have survived and persevered through disease and epidemics since the arrival of colonists to their homelands hundreds of years ago. While tribal communitie­s are facing new challenges presented by COVID-19, they are meeting them with the same diligence, creativity and wisdom of their ancestors.

The Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition represents a historic consortium of sovereign tribal nations — the Hopi Tribe, Navajo Nation, Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, Pueblo of Zuni, and Uintah and Ouray Ute Indian Tribe — united in the effort to conserve and protect the Bears Ears cultural landscape.

 ?? Courtesy Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition ?? Community members of the Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico organize supplies donated to their emergency mobile pantry.
Courtesy Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition Community members of the Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico organize supplies donated to their emergency mobile pantry.
 ?? Courtesy Michael A. Estrada ?? The Bears Ears landscape is the indigenous homeland to the Dine, Ute, Paiute and Pueblo peoples.
Courtesy Michael A. Estrada The Bears Ears landscape is the indigenous homeland to the Dine, Ute, Paiute and Pueblo peoples.

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