Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Native American Religious Concerns Cost Washington State $58M

In December 2004, the Washington State Department of Transportation stopped construction of a massive dry dock in Port Angeles, Washington, even though the state had already spent $58 million on it. At the time, the reason for the cancellation was said to be archeological concerns. The dock was located on the site of Tse-whit-zen, an important Klallam Indian village containing at least several hundred intact burials. (Background from History Link.org.) Now it appears that the real reason for ending construction was religious objections raised by the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe.

Washington's Peninsula Daily News yesterday reported that a letter to the auditor investigating the closing down of the project from Allyson Brooks, head of the state Department of Archaeology & Historic Preservation, revealed the true motivation of state officials. She wrote: "the underlying issue . . . is how we incorporate cultural values and religious beliefs into our decision-making processes in a manner that is fair, sensitive, constitutional and still results in a complete project.''

Over 350 bodies of tribal members were reburied after construction began, but the Klallam tribe wanted the remains returned to the Tse-whit-zen site. They believe their ancestors are angry that their remains were removed. Tribal members put red ochre below their eyes when they visit the site to ward off ancestors' anger, and they ceremonially wash with water containing snowberries when they leave so they will not take their ancestor's anger home.