tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6306800130766759280.post5662897507173715326..comments2024-02-07T01:11:06.752-08:00Comments on Green Gal: Yosemite Ahwahnichi - Miwok or Paiute?Green Galhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04723346521794131232noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6306800130766759280.post-34108820363680409412020-08-03T09:32:56.763-07:002020-08-03T09:32:56.763-07:00Hi, In writing my historical fiction Great Spirit ...Hi, In writing my historical fiction Great Spirit of Yosemite: The Story of Chief Tenaya, I researched a lot of information and concluded that the Ahwahneechees, although "inter-marrying" with other indigenous groups, were primarily descended from the Mono Lake Paiutes. The book is called Great Spirit of Yosemite: The Story of Chief Tenaya. It is a fiction, but it tries to be true to the historical events surrounding the Ahwahneechees (Yosemites) at the time of the Mariposa Indian War. Details of the book and some early reviews can be found on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/53276384-great-spirit-of-yosemite<br />and on my website: http://www.pauledmondsonauthor.com<br />I hope that you find this of interest. Best wishes, PaulAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6306800130766759280.post-253113109642945002019-11-30T09:40:52.133-08:002019-11-30T09:40:52.133-08:00What documentation exists related to the marriage ...What documentation exists related to the marriage of Tenaya's father to a Mono Lake Paiute woman, as well as the marriage of Tenaya himself to a Mono Lake Paiute woman, or is this merely oral tradition among certain surviving elements of the Ahwahneechee population?Eldon Grupphttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09498316496029791142noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6306800130766759280.post-21358152925624927442010-04-01T18:26:09.758-07:002010-04-01T18:26:09.758-07:00Little Know Yosemite Vistor Facts:
Around 1980 a ...Little Know Yosemite Vistor Facts:<br /><br />Around 1980 a group of Yosemite National Park employees of American Indian descent got together and made a non-profit called the American Indian Council of Mariposa. They did this to become an official tribe, but to be an official tribe they had to pass criteria set up by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Branch of Federal Acknowledgment.<br />What many of us believe, and we have quite a bit of proof, is that to meet the criteria for federal recognition certain people at the park assisted them to change the history of Yosemite; the history of the Native American people, maybe unknowingly or maybe on purpose.<br />To try to meet the criteria the non-profit group changed it's name from the American Indian Council of Mariposa to the Southern Sierra Miwuks. You see there was more written about Miwoks in Yosemite than about Indians of Mariposa County.<br />So we believe that they modified themselves to the name.<br />The group is primarily made up of Casson Yokuts from Madera County, Central Miwoks who assisted James Savage and signers of the Fremont treaty and others. They are not the original American Indians of Yosemite, but only descendents of Indians who went to work at the park.<br />They started to claim that Yosemite was their ancient homeland, but they really only had ties to Yosemite as employees and former employees to the park. The group as of 1999 had gotten over $400,000 dollars in grants to become a tribe. Yet most of the founders of the group are already enrolled members of other tribes and so are their children.<br />We Paiutes started to notice that our ancestors, who were part of the original people of Yosemite, were suddenly being changed from Paiutes to Miwoks. That started to appear in books, publications and even guide markers in Yosemite National Park. They were even on the governmental websites.<br />We noticed employees and former employees of the park were actually changing historical accounts NOT for the benefit of the general public, but to meet the criteria for their efforts to become a tribe. Children were now repeating the lie and NOT getting the true history of Yosemite.<br />This is a big conflict of Interest, since they were employees of the park, and influencing the actual history of a national park. Some of us believe that once they become federally recognized, by changing the history of Yosemite to match themselves, they are going for a casino around Mariposa or Midpines. <br />Now that might be great for the county...how was it gotten? Through misinformation? <br />That is why we ask and park will not listen, because they are "friends" with these fellow employees of the Park and the park has gone into an unheard of 15 year agreement with the Southern Sierra Miwuks, a non-profit, and not a tribe.Joe Rhoanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07211302821762681196noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6306800130766759280.post-9116064647902393172010-04-01T18:20:34.936-07:002010-04-01T18:20:34.936-07:00And right you are, many of us have been addressing...And right you are, many of us have been addressing these issues and more regarding the park service and the tribal group who have allowed the cultural distruction to continue on in Yosemite.<br />To the outsider, the NPS is doing a great job and making great improvements mainly thru certain organizations like the Yosemite Fund who promise to keep Yosemite and its components prestine and unaltered. If they are so keen on this perception why have they looked the other way on cultural issues?Joe Rhoanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07211302821762681196noreply@blogger.com