#Navajos

2025-11-21

#Hydropower Developer No-Show Leaves #Navajos with More Questions than Answers

Chapter officials table hydropower resolution, ask for more community info sessions as FERC seeks to end a policy blocking permits on Tribal land absent Tribal support

by #HerbYazzie, Coal-Lease Area Resident; #AdrianHerder, #TóNizhóníÁní; #TaylorMcKinnon, #CenterForBiologicalDiversity
via #CensoredNews, Nov. 21, 2025

Excerpts: #KayentaAZ— "On a cloudy, rainy Wednesday afternoon, the Kayenta Chapter held its monthly meeting where a resolution by #NatureAndPeopleFirst was first on the agenda. Impacted community members from the coal-lease area on Black Mesa (#DziłYíjiin) filled the chapter house to voice concern about the resolution. But before discussions could begin, Chapter officials tabled the resolution because the developers didn’t show up.

"Nature and People First (#NPF) are developers who are pushing #PumpedStorageHydropower (#PSH) on the #NavajoNation, particularly in the #BlackMesa region. Pumped storage pumps water uphill during low electricity prices and then releases it back downhill through generators when electricity prices are high, producing electricity and revenue. Pumped storage #hydropower, which requires huge amounts of water, is different than hydrogen, which other developers wanted piped across the Nation."

[...]

"#TóNizhóníÁní (#TNA) e-filed comments objecting to #FERC’s proposed policy reversal along with the #CenterForBiologicalDiversity, #AmericanRivers and more than a dozen #tribes across the US. 'For decades, #CoalMining on #BlackMesa has not only extracted coal but also billions of gallons of #groundwater to support the #mining operation,' wrote #AdrianHerder with Tó Nizhóní Ání. 'Energy projects that propose to use large amounts of water for #EnergyProduction should be vetted diligently.' Water access and reliability is crucial for our communities on Black Mesa and the southwest region of the United States.

"Tribal communities understand the resources and impacts by industry. Any project that proposes to use groundwater when it has been heavily impacted and in a state of recovery should not be considered for continued industry use."

bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2025/11

#WaterIsLife #Diné #Dineteh #Greenwashing #PeabodyCoal #ReaderSupportedNews

National and Tribal parks in the Navajo Nation

Source: nps.gov Source: pinterest

Some of the most stunningly beautiful landscapes in the entire United States can be found within the Navajo Nation. This semiautonomous region occupies 27,413 square miles in parts of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah, with its capital located in Window Rock, Arizona – that’s a larger land mass than 12 different states.

Source: nnld.org/images/maps/Navajo_Nation_2020.jpg

Within the Navajo Nation are three National Park Service sites and six Tribal Parks. Each offers various opportunities and/or activities, a number of which require approved tour operators or guides.

Please adhere to all tribal laws while visiting the Navajo Nation and do not attempt to hike into wilderness areas on the Navajo Nation without a permitted Diné/Navajo tour guide. 

As the images throughout this post attest, these national/tribal parks abound with amazing landscapes and impressive vistas. Be sure to always show the same level of sincere respect and care for these national/tribal treasures as any guest would or should when visiting a protected or sacred site.

Peace!

_______

NATIONAL

Canyon de Chelly National Monument

Canyon de Chelly – Source: planeta.com

Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site

Hubbell Trading Post – Source: archaeologysouthwest.org

Navajo National Monument

Navajo National Monument – Source: sharinghorizons.com

TRIBAL

Four Corners Monument Navajo Tribal Park

Four Corners Monument – Source: kekbfm.com

Lake Powell Navajo Tribal Park – includes:

  • Antelope Canyon X
  • Lower Antelope Canyon
  • Upper Antelope Canyon
  • Cardiac Canyon 
  • East Waterholes
  • Rainbow Bridge Trail
Little Antelope Canyon – photo by author

Little Colorado River Navajo Tribal Park

Little Colorado River – Source: navajopeople.org

Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park

Monument Valley- Source: road-trippin.fr

Tseyi’ Dine’ Heritage Area– located near the entrance to Canyon De Chelly National Monument.

Window Rock Navajo Tribal Park & Veterans Memorial

Window Rock & Navajo Code Talkers Memorial – photo by author

SOURCES:

#environment #FourCorners #fun #geography #history #landUse #monuments #NationalParks #NativeAmericans #naturalBeauty #NavajoNation #Navajos #parks #sacred #scenery #tourism #travel #tribalParks

2025-01-14

From 2010: #Navajo Commercial Farm Using #GeneticallyModified Seeds, Despite Global Protests

By #BrendaNorrell, #CensoredNews, June 16, 2010

"While #IndigenousPeoples protest #Monsanto’s genetically modified seeds around the world, the Navajo Nation’s commercial farm, #NavajoAgriculturalProductsIndustries, continues to use these seeds for commercial crops.

"Haitian farmers are now burning donated Monsanto seeds. In India, thousands of farmers committed suicide after switching from traditional seeds to genetically modified seeds. In Chiapas, Mayan farmers have refused to use the seeds which damaged heritage seed stock. Cross pollination from genetically modified seeds can endanger crops from ancient seed stock in the region.

"#Navajos have long planted century-old corn using traditional #DryFarming. Navajos relied on the stars to know when to plant and sometimes planted in spirals, according to Navajo elders in Rock Point, Arizona.

[...]

"However today the Navajo commercial farm boasts on its website that it plants genetic #HybridCorn seed purchased from '#PioneerSeed Company, #Syngenta Inc., and Monsanto companies." The commercial farm, NAPI, is located on the Navajo Nation near Farmington, N.M., and grows commercial food crops, including corn for potato chips, along with potatoes, wheat and other crops.

"Around the world, #Monsanto and genetically modified seeds have meant death for Indigenous Peoples and their crops."

[...]

"The area of northwest #NewMexico has been known as a 'US Sacrifice Area,' since the 1970s. It is the Navajo people who
have been sacrificed, by way of the US government working in collusion with #corporations and the elected Navajo Nation government.

"While #NAPI continues to use genetically modified seeds on its commercial farm, NAPI also has a #RaytheonMissile manufacturing plant located on the commercial farm where the crops are grown, a fact many would like kept secret. The fact that the Raytheon Missile factory is located on the Navajo farm was censored by Indian Country Today in 2006. At that time, Cuba was expressing interest in purchasing food products from NAPI and Indian Country Today editors demanded
that no research be done on Raytheon's missile plant at the farm or any possible pollutants discharged from Raytheon."

Read more:
bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2010/06
#CorporateColonialism #GMOs #BigAg
#EndCapitalism #Colonialism #Decolonize #TraditionalFoods
#Capitalism #CulturalGenocide

2024-08-02

Live in #CameronArizona: #Navajos Protest #Uranium Trucks

Walk to Cameron Chapter House, one-half mile walk today to oppose uranium trucks on #NavajoNation.

"The sacredness of life is no longer honored." Cora Maxx-Philips

August 2, 2024
via #CensoredNews

"#Dine' Warrior #KleeBenally remembered and honored for #HaulNo!

"Navajo #HumanRights Commissioner Cora Maxx-Phillips said, 'We are in the sacrifice Zone my dear brothers and sisters, and that is why we are here today!'

"'We will not be silenced!' She said the privileged white people say, 'Not in my backyard.'

"'We are just as worthy. Stop using us #IndigenousPeoples to be in your sacrificial zone.'"

"Describing 80 years of #cancer and #corruption, toxic greed, she said, 'This is #EnvironmentalRacism .'"

"'How many more people have to die.' she said. 'You don't fool us.'

"She said the entire infrastructure is to help #corporations. 'When it comes to push and shove, corporations will have their way. The sacredness of life is no longer honored.'"

Source:
bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2024/08

Livestream: facebook.com/PresidentNygren

#EnergyFuels #PinyonPlain #ReaderSupportedNews #CorporateColonialism #NoUraniumMining #IndigenousNews #IndigenousResistance
#DefendTheSacred #DefendMotherEarth #EarthDefenders #WaterIsLife #Arizona

2024-03-14

Estos son los rostros de los auténticos norteamericanos

Conocidos como apaches, sioux, los cheroquis o los cheyenes, existieron otras muchas etnias como los pies negros, los arapajó o los navajos

Los diversos pueblos forma­ban conjuntos humanos de demografía modesta, lo que les permitía tener siempre a su dis­posición grandes extensiones de terreno y jamás co­nocieron el hacinamiento ni los problemas urbanos

2023-02-25

There is precedent for #ThackerPass resistance!

Navajo and Hopi tribes campaign to remain on Black Mesa lands and protect it from coal mining, United States, 1993-1996

"The land on the Big Mountain reservation has been disputed by the U.S. Government and the Navajo and Hopi tribes since 1882. This area in Black Mesa, Arizona, which was extremely rich in sulfur coal deposit, attracted mining companies and the government due to the potential profit. Mining began on the Navajo and Hopi land and started to increase greatly by the 1970s. Congress signed a relocation act in 1974, which would allow one company, Peabody Coal, to mine this area uninhibited. The reservation lands of Black Mesa were then to be used as strip mining sites for private U.S. mining companies.

"Since 1974, Navajo and Hopi peoples received a lot of pressure from the government and mining companies, Peabody Coal in particular, to relocate. The U.S. government issued laws reducing Navajo and Hopi ability to keep livestock on their land. They also offered $5000 to those who willingly gave up their homes and moved elsewhere. Despite all the government pressure, by the 1990s, there still remained about 300 Navajo and Hopi families who had refused to leave.

"Despite the government pressure, #Navajos and #Hopis, already sharing government protected land, lived amicably and struggled beside one another in order to protect the land their people shared. The struggle between the government and the #indigenous tribes continued through the '90s but escalated on 5 August 1993 when a federal judge ordered the remaining Navajo to either relocate or sign a lease that would give them squatter’s rights on the land for the next 75 years. The Navajo ignored the order and continued living on the land—neither relocating nor signing a lease.

"From 1993 to 1996, the 300 Navajo families stood their ground and occupied their land against government wishes. They also ignored the continued orders demanding that they either choose to relocate or to forfeit their rights to the land and become squatters. In response, in November of 1993, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) began daily raids of livestock in order to push out the remaining Navajo and charged increasingly large sums to release the livestock.

"In the meantime, #PeabodyCoal had #mined the area since 1968 and continued to do so as the tribes fought to stay on their land. To transport the coal, Peabody created a slurry pipeline that used natural reserves belonging to the natives. This act dried up fifty springs and #poisoned water, killing livestock and threatening the lives of the Navajo. Navajo elders took actions in order to combat the advancing mining. El Elders Pauline Whitesinger and Roberta Blackgoat, in particular, were known for their decades of resistance, for tearing down fences, for confronting the BIA, and for ignoring official demands and turning away government workers who tried to persuade them off their lands.

"In 1993, Peabody bulldozed at least four Navajo #burial grounds. The Navajo blocked bulldozers with their bodies, tore down fences, turned away government officials, wrote numerous letters and emails, lobbied for government attention, and raised awareness among the Navajo people using the internet and frequent meetings. It is unclear when several of these tactics were employed. In addition, Navajo peoples filed several lawsuits in response to unfair land use by Peabody, for water rights, and against Peabody’s violation of federal #mining laws. Peabody carried on with their normal practices despite objections. Peabody Coal cited studies backed by their own funding that indicated that their mining practices were in no way damaging the environment.

"On 11 March 1996, a federal judge ruled the activity of Peabody as an infringement on human and environmental rights of local residents. Peabody’s pipeline was found guilty of violating the National Environmental Policy Act and the Surface Ming Control Act. Thus, the judge revoked Peabody's mining permit. He found that the tribal councils, the OSMRE, and BIA were disregarding the basic rights of the people in this area for profit's sake. Peabody appealed the decision and continued fighting for reestablishing mining access after this ruling.

"When the deadline, 1 April 1996, finally arrived most of the remaining families had not complied with the courts. The Navajo remained in their original homes, though as many as fifty families had accepted the proposal by the government. The courts took no action against the remaining families.

"On 26 September 1996, the U.S Congress passed the Navajo-Hopi Settlement Act, which would require all Navajo to relocate by 2000. In 1996, a group of Hopi and Navajos travelled to the London Stockholders meeting of Hanson’s ltd. to protest Peabody Coal’s presence in Black Mesa. Lord Hanson ordered his security guards to throw out the tribe representatives. Before doing so, resistance leader, Roberta Blackgoat offered a prayer. Today, families still refuse to acknowledge the various land acts. In regard to Peabody Coal, the Department of Interior Office of Surface Mining (IOSM) granted a permit to Peabody Coal to allow the continuation of operations in Black Mesa on 22 December 2008. However, after reevaluation due to an appeal from Navajo and Hopi peoples, the Department of IOSM withdrew this permit granted to Peabody on 8 January 2010. This was a success for the tribal and environmental organizations."
#EnvironmentalRacism #CulturalGenocide #NativeAmericans

websites.umich.edu/~snre492/pa

2023-02-25

Diné elders resist eviction from Big Mountain

Debra O'Gara and Guerry Hoddersen, August 1986

"Forced relocation. The words bring to mind the Trail of Tears, Nazi concentration camps, and the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. Past atrocities, not present and future ones.

"But on the #BlackMesa surrounding Big Mountain in northeastern Arizona, over 11,000 #Diné (Navajo) are facing a new holocaust: removal by armed U.S. troops from their ancestral homelands in an area jointly held by the Navajo and Hopi nations.

"The U.S. media bills the government’s role as peacemaker in a #Hopi vs. #Navajo war. But the reality is very different at Big Mountain.

"For over 50 years, #mining companies have sought to exploit the rich mineral resources that lie beneath the land now occupied by the #Navajos. To do this they first secured the assistance of the federal government, which in the 1920s and ’30s unilaterally replaced the traditional forms of government, based on clan elders, with malleable tribal councils. Over the years these councils have been only too willing to negotiate mineral leases, and the elite who run the councils have gotten rich doing it.

"Now, giant energy #corporations like #PeabodyCoal, #KerrMcGee, and #Exxon want unhampered access to the estimated 44 billion tons of high-grade #coal and deposits of oil, natural gas, and #uranium found on and around #BigMountain.

"There’s only one problem: the traditional Diné who live on the land will not move voluntarily.

"So once again the energy moguls have turned to their servants in the government and the Hopi council for help.

"Forced relocation, the holocaust hatched in corporate boardrooms, has in fact gathered formidable support: it is endorsed by Congress, covered up by the press, and sanctioned by a phony tribal leadership."
#CulturalGenocide #ForcedRelocation #NativeAmericans #EnvironmentalRacism #ThackerPass
socialism.com/fs-article/dine-

Sultan GalievSultanGaliev
2020-05-04

RT @PartiIndigenes@twitter.com

Les indiens luttent à mort contre le coronavirus mais oubliés par le pouvoir américain bit.ly/3didp0f

🐦🔗: twitter.com/PartiIndigenes/sta

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