Five years ago this July, an ancient skeleton was found on the banks of the
Columbia River during a hydroplane race near Kennewick, Washington. When
the bones turned out to be a major archaeological find, the remains of a
9,000 year-old prehistoric man, a political, legal, cultural, and racial
battle ensued. Just who was Kennewick Man, who owned his bones, and what
should be done with them?
The Indians and Federal government have argued that the law --
specifically, the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation
Act -- gives local tribes, including the Umatilla, Colville, Yakama, and
Nez Perce, the right to have the bones, and the right to dispose of them in
any way they choose.
The Indians have dubbed Kennewick Man "the Ancient
One" and claim the right to rebury him according to their traditional
practices with or without further study. But a group of prominent
scientists has disagreed, choosing instead to challenge the law in Federal
court, where arguments are being heard this week and a ruling is expected
later this summer.
Could Kenewick Man be from caucasian origns?
They want to study the bones, which they argue are
potentially of great scientific value. They also argue that Kennewick Man
is so old, he cannot be properly affiliated with any modern-day tribe. In
essence, they say, Kennewick Man is no Indian -- even if he might be a
native American.
While no one has argued that Kennewick Man is -- or was -- a Native
American in the modern sense, the general consensus is that today's Indians
have all descended from North America's early inhabitants, the paleo-Indian
hunters who came across the land bridge from Asia after the last Ice Age
and slowly populated the continent.
Evidence of multiple migrations
But part of the scientific interest in
Kennewick Man stems from the fact that long-held notions about how the
Americas were populated are being revised: There is now substantial
evidence that there may have been many migrations during and between ice
ages, going back not just 12,000 or so years ago, but perhaps 20,000 or
30,000 years. Kennewick Man and his ilk may be part of a much more
complicated story that we don't know much about yet.
Some have suggested
that these early immigrants to the Americas may have come not only on foot
but by skin boat, and there is some evidence -- tool designs, for example
-- that suggests some may have shared their origins with inhabitants of a
prehistoric Europe.
This last possibility has added major fuel to the Kennewick Man fire. The
first scientist to examine the bones, anthropologist James Chatters,
reported that Kennewick Man's skull exhibited "caucasoid" characteristics
-- a politically charged word that many interpreted to mean "caucasion," or
"white." Indeed, Chatters says that he at first thought he was inspecting
the skeleton of a white settler.
The possibility that 9,000 years ago,
white men were wandering around the Americas fed both the controversy and
public interest -- even though no one credible was explicitly making the
claim that Kennewick Man was a white man (though the Asatru Folk Assembly,
a Northwest neo-pagan group associated with white supremicists, also sued
over the bones).
Relative of Jean-Luc Picard or Chief Black Hawk?
It didn't help matters when Chatters released an image
reconstructing Kennewick Man's face that showed him to be the spitting
image of British actor Patrick Stewart, famous for playing starship captain
Jean-Luc Picard on the Star Trek Next Generation TV series.
Funnily enough,
Vine Deloria, Jr. had pointed out that Kennewick Man/Picard is also the
spitting image of an 1833 portrait of Chief Black Hawk. In any case,
Chatters' words and images had indelibly set the image in peoples' minds
that Kennewick Man was a caucasian -- or at the very least, a proto-white
man rather than a proto-Indian.
That bit of mystery suggested that the scientists who wanted to study
Kennewick Man and sample his DNA had a valid reason for doing so -- to see
if he was white or not -- and made the Indian opposition look as if it was
trying to mount a cover-up.
For the Indians' part, not only were white
scientists trying to desecrate the remains of one of their distant
ancestors, but they were blatantly trying to undermine Native American
identity and beliefs -- which include a mythology that doesn't recognize
that their ancestors were migrants from anywhere including Asia, let alone
Europe.
Native American skepticism about science is understandable. White science
claims to be the antithesis of mythology -- but what is a hypothesis? It is
a mini-scientific myth, a for-instance or a what-if that suggests we try a
truth on for size until it no longer fits.
Many of the questions science
asks itself –many of the positions it posits for testing -- come from
deeply rooted cultural and political beliefs. In the 19th century,
scientists believed that racial characteristics were all-important, and
that the study of bones would tell them what we all needed to know about
each race -- including why others were inferior.
That science has been
thoroughly discredited, but not until hundreds of thousands of Indian bones
had been robbed from graves, collected from bounty hunters, measured and
stored in museums -- most of them without the permission of the
individuals, families, and tribes involved.
David Hurst Thomas, curator of
anthropology at the Museum of Natural History in New York, last year wrote
a superb book on the sordid history of archaeology and Native Americans,
appropriately titled Skull Wars. In light of this background, it's
difficult to suggest that anyone approaching Kennewick Man in the name of
science would be doing so without having -- or being thought to have -- a
larger agenda. And when that agenda explicity includes re-looking at the
origins of Native Americans, one can understand why the debate around
Kennewick Man has been so volatile.
What has been lost in much of the debate around Kennewick Man is the white
man's own mythology.
The idea that the Kennewick bones may have belonged to
a white man doesn't simply spring from only from innocent scientific
curisoity, but also from very old impulses that have resonated since 1492
-- perhaps longer.
For five centuries, there has been a lingering desire to
establish that Europeans or others with whom they identified (Biblical
peoples) were here before the Indians -- or, that whites in fact are the
Indians. Call it The Great White Myth, one as durable as Eden or El Dorado.
Some whites are not merely content with having taken the continent, they
want to colonize its history.
After the European "discovery" of American, there was much speculation
about the people who lived here. There was also a fascination in the late
Renaissance with "recovered knowledge," the belief that the ancients had
secreted away wisdom that would be of great benefit today, helping to usher
in a new age or renewal, the "great instauration" as Sir Francis Bacon
termed it.
In that context, the peoples of the New World could in fact be
an older version of oursleves. Were they outcasts from the Biblical Eden?
Were they survivors of Atlantis, Plato's lost continent? Were they remnants
of the Lost Tribes of Israel or survivors of the Great Flood?
When the Elizabethans began looking for historical justifications for their
expansionist plans -- you know it as the British Empire -- their wisest men
cited as precedents the story of King Arthur, who supposedly sent a large
expedition into the Arctic regions which never returned but was thought to
have survived and maybe colonized unknown lands.
There was the voyage of
the Irish monk Brendan. And there was the legend of the Welsh Prince,
Madoch, who is said to have established a colony in America somewhere near
today's Mobile, Alabama in the year 1170. The colony moved inland, and was
lost, but for centuries afterward reports of so-called white or Welsh
Indians who were light skinned and blue-eyed filtered out of the continent.
The Mandans were said to be descended from the prince's people; the
Cherokees had heard of them; on maps, they were referred to as the "White
Paduchas." If you think that's farfetched, at least one of the best minds
of the late 18th and early 19th century did not. When Thomas Jefferson sent
the first American scientific expedition across the continent, he
personally asked Lewis and Clark to keep an eye out for them.
When the
explorers encountered the Salish-speaking Flatheads, they noted their
language carefully, believing its gutteral tones to possibly be evidence of
vestigal Welsh. Some members of the expedition were sure they had found the
Welsh Indians at last.
As the continent was settled, so was the myth of the Welsh Indians.
They
were never found, though stories about them moved with the frontier -- the
last one placing them somewhere in Northern British Columbia. Perhaps they
were simply wiped out by smallpox or one of the other innumerable plagues
that depopulated the countryside with the European advance.
More likely
they simply represented a perpetual mirage in the European mind that a kind
of deeper, more genuine claim could be made of the land. We were not
conquering America -- we were reconquering it, not unlike the way Europeans
reconquered the Iberian Peninusla from the Moors -- a task the Spanish
completed the same year Columbus bumped into the Americas.
Today, we've explored all the lonesome bits and pieces: there is no place
for the Welsh Indians to be hiding, except in history. The evidence is
conclusive that the Vikings were in North American about 500 years before
Columbus. It shouldn't be surprising that others are trying to push the
white window back even further.
In the mid-1990s, the Canadian writer
Farley Mowat, an early advocate of the idea that the Norse beat Columbus
here, wrote a book called The Farfarers which suggests that a people he
calls the "Alban" -- which derives from Albion, the ancient Greek name for
Britain which means "white" -- came to North American 500 years before the
Vikings. In fact, he says, they settled and occupied the Canadian Arctic,
probably before the Inuit arrived. White men, in other words, may have been
the first Eskimos!
Of course, there's very little proof the Alban ever existed in Europe, let
alone North America. Mowat's book is filled with historical musings backed
by some archaeological curiosities, but mostly it's projection wrapped in a
big wad of wishful thinking. It's that wishful thinking that has resurfaced
in the case of Kennewick Man. I admit even I was thrilled that he might
have been some kind of wandering Norseman who found his way across the
icemass from Norway to Greenland and down through Canada into the Columbia
River Basin.
What person named "Knute" wouldn't be? But it is, I think,
part of an urge we have to look at the place we call home and see our
reflections in it, reflections like those in endless carnival funhouse
infinity mirrors: the past is us, going on forever.
Kennewick Man offers an incredibly rich opportunity for everyone to seek
these reflections for themselves. Native Americans can cloak him with a
wise, spiritual persona that reflects their ways -- traditions that may not
have come into existence until 5,000 years after Kennewick Man was dead and
buried.
Scientists can pose as wise men too, standing up against Native
American "creationism" in the name of the truth, yet perpetuating their own
myth of objectivity. And Euro-Americans can tap into a longstanding
yearning to belong in a place we took from its inhabitants, a land dripping
with the irony of a history we hope will prove that whites are the real
"native" Americans, as if that would justify all we have done.
Nespelem Oral History The town of Nespelem, situated on the Colville Indian Reservation derived its name from an Indian word meaning "large meadow beside a stream."
Sinixt Lake indians Most Sinixt or Lake indians are now part of the Colville tribe in Washington state, but once roamed both Washington and British Columbia.
Chelan Indians
The Chelan Indians were historically located at the outlet of Lake Chelan in Washington State.
Marriage and Wedding Customs Men of the Plateau Tribes usually had at least two wives at the same time, more if they were wealthy.