San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SPIRIT MOUNTAIN • Preserving sacred site a priority

- Schechter is a freelance writer. This article appeared in The New York Times.

sity. (The desert is home to more than 200 endemic plants.)

The lawsuit prompted residents to reach out to tribal members from the Fort Mojave and Chemehuevi reservatio­ns who had been disputing a separate developmen­t in nearby Ivanpah Valley. Even though the proposed wind farm in Searchligh­t wouldn’t have touched Spirit Mountain, Bundorf said the tribes “weren’t too pleased” about it, either. Together, with help from two nonprofit groups, the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n and the Conservati­on Lands Foundation, they decided to apply for national monument status.

In June 2021, the Searchligh­t town board unanimousl­y voted to approve the proposal. (Similar resolution­s passed in the neighborin­g towns of Laughlin and Boulder City.)

A year later, two Nevada congresswo­men, Dina Titus and Susie Lee, sent letters to the White House calling on the administra­tion to support the bill to make Avi Kwa Ame a national monument. An online petition garnered 90,000 signatures.

Titus had previously shepherded three national monuments (Gold Butte, Basin and Range and Tule Springs Fossil Beds) through Congress, and she saw that Avi Kwa Ame had broad bipartisan appeal in her district of Las Vegas. “People see this valley growing so fast, they want to save something so it doesn’t become another suburb,” she said.

In late November, at the White House’s annual Tribal Nations Summit, President Joe Biden stated his support for protecting Avi Kwa Ame, though he has yet to declare its status as a national monument. Still, Titus, who was in the crowd that day, said she felt a surge of joy when she heard the news. “It was very gratifying,” she said.

‘A template for the future’

To date, Bears Ears National Monument in eastern Utah has been the only national monument to explicitly address its Indigenous roots. (Today, the monument is co-managed by a council made up of delegates from five tribes.) Should Avi Kwa Ame become the next such designatio­n, it would likely send a clear message to Indigenous communitie­s, who have long fought for a meaningful say in the management of their ancestral lands.

“I really see this as a template for the future,” said Taylor Patterson, the executive director of Native Voters Alliance Nevada, a Las Vegas-based nonprofit that focuses on Indigenous issues. “Not often do we have outdoor recreation people working with tribes. It’s symbolic of what all land designatio­n in the future should be like.”

The National Park Service, which hired its first Native American director in late 2021, has at times clashed with tribal nations. Patterson cited Death Valley National Park, which was establishe­d as a national monument in 1933 at the cost of evicting the area’s native inhabitant­s, the Timbisha Shoshone. “You have a history of essentiall­y kicking people out of their landscape,” she said.

Designatio­ns like Avi Kwa Ame, she explained, could help travelers see that America’s beloved national parks and Indigenous sacred sites are essentiall­y two sides of the same coin. “When we talk about visiting Grand Canyon, Death Valley or Yosemite — all of those spaces are sacred to tribal people.”

‘When I looked at it, I knew who I was’

Earlier in the week, I had driven to Needles, Calif., to visit the Pipa Aha Macav Cultural Center (Pipa Aha Macav is the Fort Mojave term for “people by the river”). Driving south on Highway 95, I passed a sprawling solar project that eventually gave way to open desert. Creosote bushes, still green from the August monsoon, carpeted the valley. In the distance, I could make out the silhouette of the Highland Range, crowned with dark pinyon and juniper forests.

Johnny Ray Hemmers, a tribal council member, met me in the center’s cultural classroom, where local youths learn traditiona­l activities like painting, beading and dancing. Hemmers, 38, is a warm, quicktalki­ng man with twinkling eyes. He spoke openly about his tribe’s long history in the desert and of the significan­ce of Ave Kwa Ame. “As a child, seeing the mountain meant a lot to me,” he said.

“When I looked at it, I knew who I was and where I came from.”

Avi Kwa Ame, for the Fort Mojaves, is not a recreation­al place. Each October, members take part in a 34-mile ceremonial run that begins at the base of the mountain and continues all the way to Needles, ending with a plunge in the icy Colorado River. The event honors traditiona­l “spirit runners” who once ferried messages between tribes, similar to couriers in ancient Greece.

I also spoke to a member of the Moapa Band of Paiutes, a neighborin­g tribe who do not count Avi Kwa Ame as their origin site but still recognize its deep cultural relevance. “Our footprints are all throughout this area,” said Shanan Anderson, the tribe’s cultural manager.

The Fort Mojave tribe identifies itself as the mountain’s caretaker, and its members are no strangers to environmen­tal justice. In 1998, they successful­ly fended off a proposed nuclear dump site in Ward Valley, 20 miles west of Needles, and in 2006 they marked a legal victory against Pacific Gas & Electric, whose pipelines threatened to seep toxic chromium-6 into the Colorado River. They are confident that the campaign for Avi Kwa Ame will end in victory, too.

In June, Hemmers was part of a delegation that met with Deb Haaland, the secretary of the Interior, at the foot of Avi Kwa Ame to explain the site’s significan­ce. Under craggy granite spires, the tribe sang traditiona­l songs that have been passed down over generation­s. After hearing their stories, Haaland was visibly moved. “She had tears in her eyes,” Hemmers recalled.

A closer look

I was determined to get a closer look at Avi Kwa Ame, so I left the Joshua Tree Highway and rejoined Highway 95, then turned left at a junction marked Christmas Tree Pass. The name comes from a local tradition of dressing up the surroundin­g juniper trees with tinsel and glass baubles during the holidays, a practice many tribes consider offensive. Since the 1990s, the Bureau of Land Management has tried to discourage such defacement, but the shiny ornaments remain.

A flat dirt road took me through vast desert scrub until I found myself entering the foothills of Avi Kwa Ame. According to Fort Mojave mythology, the creator god Mastamho emerged from these foothills to start the work of shaping humankind. In their eyes, he still resides here.

The high canyon walls held slanted rock formations that resembled ogling faces. I was solidly in the backcountr­y now, my car dwarfed by mountains that were dizzying, elegant and layered with history. I had to keep stopping to admire the shifting texture of the rock, which varied from busy, jagged spikes to swollen, bulbous mounds. No cars honked or tried to pass me, because so few travel the 70-odd miles from Vegas to get here.

I spent a few minutes ambling at the mountain’s base, then got back in my car. Avi Kwa Ame may be the monument’s holy center, but at such close range, its character eluded me. Instead, I had to step back and see the mountain in the context of its architectu­re, like an altar inside a Roman basilica.

I pressed on and emerged at the other side of the canyon, where the vistas became limitless and painterly. I stood on top of a ridge that plummeted 3,000 feet into Lake Mojave and gazed into the distant reaches of western Arizona. It was dusk, and a fiery orange sunlight spread slowly over the steplike mesas. It was staggering­ly beautiful, and the spectacle was over in a few minutes.

 ?? JOHN BURCHAM NYT PHOTOS ?? Christmas Tree Pass, near Avi Kwa Ame, got its name from locals decorating desert plants with baubles, a practice many local Native American groups find offensive.
JOHN BURCHAM NYT PHOTOS Christmas Tree Pass, near Avi Kwa Ame, got its name from locals decorating desert plants with baubles, a practice many local Native American groups find offensive.
 ?? ?? The Joshua Tree Highway is a 10-mile corridor that cuts through the largest Joshua tree forest in the world.
The Joshua Tree Highway is a 10-mile corridor that cuts through the largest Joshua tree forest in the world.
 ?? ?? A sign along Joshua Tree Highway, part of the journey to Avi Kwa Ame in southern Nevada.
A sign along Joshua Tree Highway, part of the journey to Avi Kwa Ame in southern Nevada.

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