Protecting the sacred: Navajo Nation buys land at revered peak in Colorado

Navajo Nation owns almost 29,000 acres in two Colorado counties

For decades, Navajos have sought protection for their sacred places, and now the Navajo Nation has bought Colorado ranch land at the base of one of their sacred peaks. With a recent $8 million purchase, the Navajo Nation owns almost 29,000 acres in two Colorado counties.

Native Americans revere their sacred places, whose names have come down to them in ancient stories. But after being pushed westward in the 19th century and shunted away from wagon road and railroad corridors, many tribes lost access to their sacred sites. Navajo sacred landscapes stretch across the Southwest and the sprawling 17 million-acre reservation. At the heart of Navajo cosmology are four sacred mountains, two of which are in Colorado.

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We climbed 13,232-foot Hesperus Peak one August. From the top of the La Platas, we saw the rest of the world, including the sandstone spires of Monument Valley far to the west. Known in Navajo as Dibe-Ntsaa, Hesperus is the northernmost of the four sacred Navajo mountains, the male mountain of black jet. We climbed with respect, and at the top found a feather offering in a small stone enclosure. We thought we saw the curve of the Earth.

From almost anywhere across the traditional Navajo homeland, or Dineh Bikeyah, at least one of the sacred mountains is visible. Medicine men, or hatali, journey to the four mountains to gain minerals and plants for their jiish, or medicine bundles, so they can perform ceremonies to keep the People healthy or to restore them to health. These are ancient traditions, and just as four sacred mountains hold up the roof of the world, four main upright logs hold up the roof beams of east-facing Navajo hogans.

In my book Sacred Objects and Sacred Places: Preserving Tribal Traditions, I wrote: “For native peoples, the landscape not only includes the physical world of rocks, trees, mountains and plains, but also the spirit world.

While Native American religion depends on a detailed and particular sense of place that goes back in language and in stories for thousands of years, Christianity is by comparison evangelical and transportable, Bible-based and not rooted to a particular landscape. Europeans abandoned their cemeteries and cathedrals as they set sail for America. They crossed the water and then they crossed the continent and reconstituted their religious communities by building new churches.”

In his book God Is Red, Vine Deloria explains that Native Americans “have many more sacred places than do non-Indians ... because of our considerably longer tenure on this continent.” He adds that these sites are “sanctified each time ceremonies are held and prayers offered.”

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Their sacred sites have long been important to Navajos. In 1963 as Glen Canyon Dam began to fill Lake Powell, Navajos complained that the waters of Bridge Creek would back up under Rainbow Bridge and potentially damage it and that hikers could now easily access it without walking the rigorous Rainbow Trail.

The tribe was also upset that thousands of annual tourists visiting Nonnezoshe, or Rainbow Bridge, would walk under it and not understand the sacred power of the largest free-standing natural bridge in the world. The stone arch is so large the nation’s capital building can fit beneath it. “One of the wonders of the world,” Theodore Roosevelt exclaimed, “a majesty never shared by any arch ever reared by the mightiest conquerors.”

The Navajos sued. They lost at the Supreme Court, a setback for the American Indian Religious Freedom Act. Today, visitors flock to Rainbow Bridge via scenic tour boats, but signs and National Park Service policy discourage anyone from walking under the stone arch.

The Colorado State Historic Preservation Office has asked the military not to practice overflights above the two Navajo sacred mountains in Colorado – Hesperus and Mount Blanca – and the U.S. Air Force has complied. The mountains are considered Traditional Cultural Properties where ageless ceremonial practices are continued.

The two southern sacred mountains in Navajo cosmology are Mount Taylor in New Mexico and the San Francisco Peaks in Arizona. In 1864, the Navajos were forcibly rounded up by Kit Carson’s blue-coated soldiers during the Long Walk to Bosque Redondo in southeastern New Mexico. After the Treaty of 1868, Navajo clans could finally return to their canyons and mesas; they wept when they topped a rise and saw Mount Taylor. In rags and on foot, they rejoiced for being almost home. The sacred peaks, as natural boundaries of their world, have deep meaning for the Dine, or the People.

A decade ago, the U.S. Forest Service permitted a ski resort at the base of the San Francisco Peaks to use reclaimed sewer water to make snow. The Navajos joined other tribes in a lawsuit over what they perceived to be desecration of a sacred site. They lost in federal court. But their beliefs and their lawyers persevere.

In December, President Donald Trump shrunk Bears Ears National Monument by 85 percent, and the Navajos have again filed a lawsuit. The day of Trump’s proclamation, the attorney general of the Navajo Nation, Ethel Branch, said:

“What we saw today is a tremendous affront to tribal sovereignty, and it is a tremendous overreach of executive authority. We intend to hold the president accountable for his actions in federal court.”

Navajo Nation Council Delegate Davis Filfred concurs as reported in The San Juan Record. He said: “More than 150 years ago, the federal government removed our ancestors from Bears Ears at gunpoint and sent them on the Long Walk, but we came back. The president’s proposal is an attack on tribes and will be remembered as equally disgraceful – but once again, we will be back. We know how to persist; we know how to fight; and we will fight to defend Bears Ears.”

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So purchasing private ranch land in January at the base of a sacred mountain such as Mount Blanca, Sisnaajini or Black-Belted Mountain, is another way to protect tribal traditions. On the east side of the Sangre de Christos, in the Wet Mountain Valley, the Navajo Nation bought the 12,500-acre Boyer Ranch adjoining an earlier 16,000-acre purchase near Wolf Springs.

They now own land in both Huerfano and Custer counties.

“It is a blessing for the Navajo Nation to once again have land in the state of Colorado,” said Navajo Nation President Russell Begaye in the Wet Mountain Tribune published in Westcliffe on Jan. 11. “When land was being designated by the federal government, they refused to include Colorado as part of Navajo. We now own more of our ancestral land.”

With the two ranch purchases, Navajos have 400 cattle, 900 head of bison and the potential for a high-altitude fitness center.

“We have some remarkable athletes on the Navajo Nation and this would be a great opportunity to train our youth and celebrate health and wellness. The land there is beautiful, and it is not just for us but also for future generations,” said Vice President Jonathan Nez in the Wet Mountain Tribune.

Economic development with grass-fed beef and bison, tribal health potential and athletic training, and sacred site access and protection – all in two ranch purchases. That’s planning for the future by honoring the past. “The sale of lands to the Navajos appears to be another mode of large-tract preservation, conservation and traditional rural/agricultural uses,” says neighbor and local forester Len Lankford.

“It holds the promise of continuing long-term ownership of those who really care for the land.”

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Like Blanca, Hesperus is an ancient metamorphic mountain with granite inclusions surrounded by scree fields and dark boulders. We camped for two nights so we could see the last of the summer sun on its west face. On our path up, we walked between 200- and 300-year old Douglas fir trees. From the top, we saw the rounded shape of Navajo Mountain and the Bears Ears rising above Cedar Mesa.

After the climb, we slept well that night. Our day complete. Surrounded by Navajo sacred geography, we had earned hozho, or peace and harmony, just as the tribe hopes to achieve hozho for its people.

Andrew Gulliford is a historian and an award-winning author and editor. Reach him at andy@agulliford.com.

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