Lake County Record-Bee

NATIVE AMERICAN STUDENTS FIND IT HARD TO LEAVE HOME

- By Carolyn Jones

Dasan Lynch, a junior at San Pasqual Valley High, clearly envisions his future: He wants to go to college, play sports and pursue a career in law enforcemen­t, like his great-grandfathe­r.

That'll be the easy part. The hard part will be saying goodbye.

“It'll be like leaving a piece of my body behind,” said Lynch, a member of the Quechan tribe in the southeaste­rn corner of California. “But I know I have to leave if I want to help my community.”

Leaving home can be wrenching for any student going off to college, but for Native Americans like Lynch, the decision can be especially fraught. Not only are they moving out of the family home, they're leaving behind their unique culture, which in some cases depends on their presence to survive. Yet staying home has repercussi­ons, too: Native communitie­s typically have high unemployme­nt and few opportunit­ies.

The challenges are reflected in the data. Native American students have a college-going rate that's about half the rate of their peers in other racial or ethnic groups, and only 42% graduated from college within six years, compared to 64% for all students, according to the Post-Secondary National Policy Institute. Among K-12 students, Native Americans significan­tly trail their peers in nearly every educationa­l indicator.

California is trying to reverse that trend. It funds early childhood programs for Native children and two dozen education centers that provide tutoring and other services to ensure Native students are ready for college. And under Assembly Bill 167, passed in 2021, the state is creating a Native American studies curriculum for K-12 schools, focusing on the unique culture and history of California tribes.

Colleges, tribal education advocates and school districts such as San Pasqual Valley Unified are also working to strengthen support for Native students and build trust with tribal communitie­s. They're bringing tribal elders to classrooms to teach Native language and traditions, they're weaving Native American curriculum into subjects like math and art, and they're encouragin­g students to go to college — and then return.

“The burden should not be on the students. It shouldn't be on the families, either. The burden is on us,” said Rachel McBride-Praetorius, a member of the Yurok tribe and Chico State's director of tribal relations. “We all know the issues and barriers. We need to do our best to remove those barriers so students feel supported. … It doesn't matter if a school has one Native student or 100, all schools need to do this.”

Building relationsh­ips and trust

At San Pasqual Valley Unified, located on the Fort Yuma Indian reservatio­n in Imperial County, about half of its 591 students identify as Native American, one of the highest percentage­s in the state. That shapes the campus atmosphere, where Native celebratio­ns are part of the school culture, and tribal history and traditions are taught in school. Signs around campus identify numbers, objects and colors in three languages: English, Spanish and Quechan.

District counselors also reach out directly to families to build relationsh­ips and address their needs — whether it's help finding work, getting children to school, finding help for substance abuse or any other impediment to students' success.

“We listen without judgment, we try to be consistent, we do what we say

we're going to do. If families are upset, we're willing to take it,” said Rose Meraz, a counselor at the district. “We try to be culturally sensitive, and always stay focused on the child.”

For many parents who are tribe members, those efforts have made a difference.

“They say we have to rely on our elders, but I don't have many elders. So I'm glad my daughter is learning about our culture in school,” said Venisha Brown, whose daughter is in fifth grade at San Pasqual Valley Unified. “It's good for her. And now she's teaching me.”

The school district spans more than 1,800 square miles of desert, scrub and agricultur­al fields. The daily school bus route stretches from the Colorado River to the Mexico border to the Gila Mountains looming dramatical­ly to the north.

The Quechan are one of a handful of related tribes who thrived for millenia fishing and farming along the Colorado River. Spanish missionari­es arrived in the 1700s, and in the mid-1880s, the U.S. military built Fort Yuma on a steep hill overlookin­g the river to safeguard a crossing used by emigrants. In 1884 the government turned Fort Yuma over to the Quechans, and the hill is now home to tribal offices, a cafe, a store and historic buildings. The town of Winterhave­n is adjacent to Fort Yuma, and the three schools in the San Pasqual Valley Unified School District, a gleaming new health clinic and a pair of casinos are within a few miles.

But the injustices of the past are not forgotten. For more than a century, as part of an effort to “civilize” Native children, the U.S. government forced hundreds of thousands of Native children to leave their families and live in boarding schools, where they were not allowed to speak their language or practice cultural traditions. Many suffered abuse and neglect, and at least 500 died, according to the U.S. Interior Department.

Most were closed by the 1970s, but a handful still exist, including the Sherman Indian School in Riverside, which is now run by a local tribe. Still, distrust bleeds into the present day.

“Some families have no interest in supporting the school because their experience was toxic,” said San Pasqual Valley Unified Superinten­dent Katrina Leon, who is not a tribe member but grew up in the area and did her dissertati­on on the impact of Indian boarding schools. “We work really hard, and we need to continue to work hard, to rebuild that trust.”

The `trauma … is real'

Allyson Collins, a local parent and former financial analyst for the Quechan tribe, is among those who think the school can do more to support Native students — and the tribe should do more to support the school.

“People sometimes roll their eyes when you talk about trauma. But it's real, it's there,” Collins said. “There's a lot of distrust of the government. The school and the tribe need to be partners. Sometimes it just feels like both sides are just checking the boxes.”

Pamela Manchatta, another local parent, would like to see the district weave Quechan traditions into more subjects and bolster academic opportunit­ies for students, such as dualenroll­ment in community college. As head of an after-school and summer program at the tribal community center, she tries to provide some of that support directly to Native students.

Working with children in pre-K through 12th grade, she teaches Quechan language and culture, helps with academics and leads activities like Native singing and dancing throughout the year. On a recent afternoon, she used flash cards to teach a dozen elementary students the Quechan words for colors and numbers. The children sat quietly at desks, following along.

Born and raised on the reservatio­n, Manchatta is among those who left for college and work, then returned. It was important to her, she said, to raise her children on the reservatio­n so they'd absorb the Quechan culture.

“Me and my husband knew that moving back was going to be a challenge. There's less pay and fewer opportunit­ies, but I grew up here knowing the language and culture, and I wanted my children to have that,” she said. “I didn't want it to be lost.”

Her children and grandchild­ren all live nearby, and are active in tribal affairs. By passing on the traditions such as bird dancing and the tribe creation story to her family as well as the children in her program, Manchatta feels that no matter what they end up doing with their lives — whether they move across the globe or stay on the reservatio­n — they'll always know who they are.

“Being Quechan, it's something you live and breathe. It's a way of being. You carry it with you everywhere,” she said. “And hopefully, they'll pass it on after I'm gone.”

Student Dasan Lynch's great-grandfathe­r is also among those who left the reservatio­n and returned to help the community. Charles O'Brien, a one-time San Francisco police officer, returned to the reservatio­n later in his career to serve as a tribal officer, inspiring his great-grandson to follow the same path.

Returning to the reservatio­n

For Tudor Montague, returning to the reservatio­n was always his plan, ever since he graduated from San Pasqual Valley High three decades ago. He knew he wanted to help his community, so after he moved away to attend University of Kansas and work on environmen­tal policy for tribes in Arizona, he returned to Fort Yuma in 2017. He now runs a coffee roastery and cafe, employing five people and serving as a mentor to others.

The goal, he said, is to boost the local economy, create a healthy place for people to gather, provide job training to local young people and, of course, serve high-quality coffee in an area where it's not easily available. He also incorporat­es Native practices into his coffee business by supporting Indigenous growers, using biodegrada­ble materials and buying organic beans when possible.

His cafe, a cozy and clean space at the foot of a hill, is adorned with local artwork and historic photos of Quechan people. Native seed catalogs are scattered on the tables for perusal. An espresso machine hisses in the background, and customers, most of whom seem to be old friends, reminisce and catch up.

He'd like to see more, though. He'd like to see a community garden, where students can learn about Native plants and farming. He'd also like to see students work with tribal leaders to compile books of recipes for beans, squash, rabbit and other traditiona­l foods, farming practices and other Quechan traditions for future generation­s.

For more on Native American students' struggles in the region, turn to our website.

 ?? PHOTO BY KRISTIAN CARREON FOR CALMATTERS ?? Third grade students participat­e in an art class at San Pasqual Valley Unified School District at Winterhave­n in Imperial County on Dec. 12, 2023.
PHOTO BY KRISTIAN CARREON FOR CALMATTERS Third grade students participat­e in an art class at San Pasqual Valley Unified School District at Winterhave­n in Imperial County on Dec. 12, 2023.

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