Tag Archives: Survival International

Hopi tribe gets sacred mask purchased at auction

A tribal rights organization says Hopi tribal officials have been presented with one of dozens of Native American sacred masks sold during an April auction in France that drew protests.

Survival International spokeswoman Kayla Wieche (WEE’-kee) says attorney Pierre Servan-Schreiber and representatives of Survival International presented the mask to tribal officials and religious leaders in Flagstaff, Ariz., on Friday.

Servan-Schreiber participated in unsuccessful legal efforts in France to block the April 12 auction of 70 sacred objects, and he purchased one of the masks to give back to the Hopis.

Wieche says Servan-Schreiber purchased the mask for 6,000 euros ($7,800).

Advocates for the Hopi tribe had argued in court in Paris that the masks have special status and are not art — they represent their dead ancestors’ spirits.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Brazil accused of not protecting Indians

Brazil‘s government has failed to comply with a court order to protect the Awa indigenous people in the Amazon jungles, a British-based Indian rights group said Thursday.

Survival International said in a statement that authorities have ignored a federal judge’s deadline “to evict all invaders from the heartland of Earth’s most threatened tribe by the end of March.” It said the deadline passed and not a single illegal logger or settler has been evicted.

On March 12, 2012, judge Jirair Aram Meguerian ordered that all the loggers and settlers should be removed within 12 months.

The organization said the Awa tribe “is at extreme risk of extinction.”

It added that Funai, Brazil‘s indigenous affairs agency was “still waiting for support from the Justice Ministry, the federal police and central government to evict the invaders.”

Funai’s press office said it had no immediate comment. Calls to the Justice Ministry and federal police went unanswered.

Survival International said that more than 30 percent of Awa territory has been deforested and that loggers are “rapidly closing in on their communities and have already been marking trees for deforestation.

It quotes an Awa Indian called Haikaramoka’a, as saying: “The loggers are ruining our forest. They have built roads. We are scared; they could go after the uncontacted Indians. We are scared because the loggers could kill us, and the uncontacted Indians.”

About 100 of the 450 Awa remain uncontacted and are at particular risk of diseases brought in by the outsiders. Survival International said.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/VP-2KoNRC88/

French hearing on contested Hopi artifacts auction

A French judge will decide Friday whether to let a Paris auction house sell dozens of items central to an Arizona tribe’s religious practices.

A lawyer for the Hopi Tribe and the association Survival International argued at a hearing Thursday against the auction of the kachina masks, urging the court to suspend it so that their origin can be determined.

The judge said a ruling will come down Friday midday, just before the sale is scheduled to begin.

The Hopi Tribe contends the items were stolen and has asked the auction house, Neret-Minet Tessier & Sarrou, to prove otherwise. The items are considered communal property of the Hopi Tribe.

The auction house’s lawyer argued that the items are cultural artifacts that have been bought and sold several times.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/oPRz8Q_zqnU/

Paris judge sets hearing on auction of Hopi items

A judge in Paris is holding a hearing Thursday on the auction of dozens of items central to an Arizona tribe’s religious practices.

Neret-Minet Tessier & Sarrou plans to sell the collection Friday that it describes as 70 kachina masks of the Hopi Indians, although some of the items are labeled as coming from New Mexico pueblos.

The Hopi Tribe contends the items were stolen and has asked the auction house to prove otherwise through certificates of ownership or some chain of title. The items are considered communal property of the Hopi Tribe, and its chairman said no one other than a Hopi has the right to possess them.

The non-profit organization, Survival International, took up the Hopi’s cause this week with a lawyer filing a motion in a Paris court to suspend the auction so that the origin of the items could be determined. The Hopi consider the kachinas living beings that emerge from the earth and sky to connect people to the spiritual world and their ancestors.

“Given the importance of these ceremonial objects to Hopi religion, you can understand why Hopis regard this or any sale as sacrilege, and why they regard an auction not as homage but as a desecration to our religion,” Hopi Chairman Le Roy Shingoitewa said.

The auction house didn’t respond to a request for comment this week from The Associated Press.

The Hopi Tribe said it believes the items that date back to the late 19th century and early 20th century were taken from the northern Arizona reservation in the 1930s and 1940s, possibly by a French citizen who was visiting. Curiosity about one of the oldest indigenous tribes in the United States led collectors and researchers to the reservation in search of religious and ceremonial items and details about the culture and traditions, Hopi archaeologists say.

“In the United States, people went to lengths to come to Hopi to get any type of religious items because maybe they saw a benefit down the road for them financially,” said Lloyd Masayumptewa, a Hopi from the village of Oraibi who studies archaeology. “Even our ancestral homes throughout the Southwest, people are still looting ancient sites and making a living out of it. The black market is huge for anything prehistoric.”

Some items were stolen after visitors gained knowledge about where they were kept, Hopi families facing starvation sometimes exchanged

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News