Ancient Burial Grounds
Grave Injustice
Federal Laws about Burial Remains put Politics before Science
IMAGINE AN AMERICA where the federal government takes an
active role in promoting the spiritual values of a certain cultural group. This
group rarely documents its largely unknown religious practices and in fact
considers many rituals too secret for public knowledge. Yet should outsiders
violate its beliefs, the government can threaten them with lawsuits, fines, or
prison sentences.
Many people believe this scenario needn't be imagined at all, because this
America exists now. A statute called the Native American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) has created a legal and cultural imbroglio that has
scientists frustrated, art dealers scared, and the general public befuddled. In
the words of one archaeologist, Geoffrey Clark of Arizona State University,
"What we're seeing here is the triumph of political correctness over logic
and reason."
To Native American groups and their supporters, NAGPRA and similar laws are
long-overdue measures that protect burial remains and sacred objects, helping
redress the wrongs Indians have suffered since 1492. According to Arizona Judge
Sherry Hutt, speaking before the U.S. Senate in 1999, NAGPRA is "one of
the most significant pieces of human rights legislation since the Bill of
Rights." For Fort Lewis College anthropologist Kathleen Fine-Dare, author
of Grave Injustice: The American Indian Repatriation Movement and NAGPRA,
"This was more than a law; it was a change in the American
consciousness." Cherokee tribe member Steve Russell, an associate
professor of criminal justice at Indiana University, says the law "has
helped transform Indian bones from archaeological specimens to the remains of
human beings."
The law's critics disagree. "This law presents a clear and present
danger to our study of the past," says Alan L. Schneider, an attorney with
the Oregon-based pro-archaeology group Friends of America's Past. "The
people in Congress who voted for this measure never thought it would go this
far." The sentiment is echoed by a leading dealer of Indian artifacts who,
like many people interviewed for this article, prefers not to be identified by
name. "NAGPRA frightens everyone--dealers, collectors, everyone" he
says. "I don't want Big Brother snooping around my business."
How did a well-intentioned piece of legislation come to provoke fears of
Orwellian snooping? The answer involves the weighted history of Indian
relations, a vaguely written federal law, and the zealous agencies that seek to
enforce it, as well as aspects of Native American culture that strike some
non-Indians as confusing and often contradictory.
Repatriation Rising
Signed by the first President George Bush in 1990, NAGPRA requires federal
agencies, and institutions that receive federal money, to inventory any bodily
remains or important cultural artifacts of Indians, native Alaskans, or
Hawaiian peoples in their collections--and to return those items, on request,
to "culturally affiliated" tribes or descendants. In addition, the
statute restricts commercial trade in those objects. Exempt from the law are
objects held by the Smithsonian Institution (a separate statute, the 1989
National Museum of the American Indian Act, covers those) or objects found
after 1990 on state-owned lands (most states have their own repatriation laws).
Nor does NAGPRA apply to items amassed in private collections before 1990 or
discovered on private land.
"Congress was seeking a balance between private rights and the rights
Of Indians," says Jack Trope, executive director of the not-for-profit
Association on American Indian Affairs (AAIA), who served as an instrumental
adviser to legislators during the creation of NAGPRA. "But at the same
time, most people drafting this law felt that our legal system needed to do a
better job of representing Native American culture."
The act was the latest in a series of often faltering efforts to preserve
Native American culture and grant Indians equal protection under the law.
Congress established the Antiquities Act of 1906 in part to prevent the looting
of Native American sites. In 1978 legislators passed the American Indian
Religious Freedom Act, under which the government recognized Indian religious
values and rituals, and in 1988 they created the Archaeological Resources
Protection Act, which mandated stiff penalties for removing Native American
objects from public lands without a permit. The law, however, stipulated that
recovered objects remained the property of the United States, to be
"preserved by a suitable university, museum, or other scientific or
educational institution" rather than repatriated to tribes.
The sea change in public attitudes toward Native American culture began in
the most unlikely of places. In 1976 Maria Pearson, a Yankton-Sioux woman
living in Iowa, learned that a road crew had excavated a grave site, unearthing
26 Caucasian skeletons and one of an Indian woman. State officials reburied the
white bones in a new cemetery but shipped the Indian remains to Iowa City for
further study. "That's discrimination," said Pearson, recalling the
incident for an Iowa newspaper in 2002. "What made those white people not
worth studying? The Indian has got to remain buried just like everyone
else."
Arguing that the issue was a civil rights violation, Pearson went to Iowa's
governor, only to be rebuffed. Undeterred, she fought on, rallying a grassroots
movement that led, in 1982, to the first state law requiring that public
agencies return Native American remains to their affiliated tribes. Coupled
with a rising interest nationwide in Indian rights, Iowa's statute gave impetus
to a legal groundswell that eventually led to NAGPRA.
Today museums across the country are inventorying and repatriating
thousands of bones and funeral objects held in their collections. For example,
the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History is returning some of the 18,500
human remains and tens of thousands of artifacts it possesses from over 90
indigenous peoples. In the largest repatriation case to date, the Robert S.
Peabody Museum at Phillips-Andover in 1999 returned the bones of 2,000 Pecos
Indians and over 500 funerary items to the pueblo of Jemez, New Mexico. As
recently as last October, Chicago's Field Museum returned the bones of 150
people to the Haida tribe in British Columbia.
"It's been good for everyone," says Fort Lewis College's
anthropologist Fine-Dare, who applauds her own institution's efforts to inform
more than 25 Indian tribes about the school's holdings of Native American
bones. "It helps show that historical wrongs can be corrected--and that
museums don't have to be gutted in the process." Still, in part because of
the huge number of bones possessed by American museums, "only around 10
percent have found their way back to their tribes since NAGPRA's passage,"
estimates Karenne Wood, repatriation coordinator for the AAIAA.
Abusing the System
Few, if any, critics take issue with returning bones of Indians to their
descendants. It's the abuse of the process that angers many archaeologists and
anthropologists. They argue that NAGPRA has given Native Americans license to
claim human remains whether or not there is a genealogical link, often at the
expense of scientific knowledge.
In 1988, for example, an 8,000-year-old skeleton was found in Hourglass
Cave in the Colorado Rockies. The National Parks Service repatriated that
skeleton to the Ute Indians after a study that many leading anthropologists
thought was inadequate. In 1989, similarly, an 11,000-year-old skeleton was
discovered in Idaho. State officials turned it over to the
Shoshone-Bannock--permitting only one anthropologist to examine the bones--even
though the tribe is believed to have dwelled in the region for only 2,000
years. "NAGPRA and similar laws have created expectations among Native
American activists and some government officials that they can use these
statutes to impede scientific study," says Schneider of Friends of
America's Past.
Worse, critics contend, the law encourages Indians to assert claims based
on myths, rituals, oral traditions, and other tribal practices not normally
recognized by the scientific community. Some Indians now argue that information
garnered from the study of their ancestors' bones is "proprietary"
and thus the exclusive possession of the tribe. Others attempt to prevent the
publication of photographs of sacred objects or to dictate the circumstances in
which institutions exhibit certain artifacts, based on claims that the items
are "alive" or otherwise possess a divine spirit.
In many cases Indians have persuaded state agencies to uphold tribal
taboos, such as preventing menstruating women from handling certain objects.
"A lot of this nonsense comes from the politicization of NAGPRA,"
says one physical anthropologist who wishes to remain anonymous. "Many
Indian tribes are just creating traditions as a way of pursuing social, legal,
and cultural power."
The issue came to a head with Kennewick Man. In this much-publicized case,
the chance discovery of a skull along the Columbia River in Kennewick,
Washington, in 1996,1ed to the finding of 9,000-year-old skeletal remains.
Although scientists believed the bones originated from a Caucasian man, a
coalition of Indian groups claimed the remains, asserting that the skeleton lay
in territory that has traditionally belonged to their people. Or, as one tribal
leader stated, "From our oral histories, we know that our people have been
part of this land since the dawn of time." The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers--which has jurisdiction over the Columbia River--accepted this
argument and announced it would repatriate the skeleton.
Members of the scientific community cried foul and filed a lawsuit; the
government and Native American tribes appealed. As the case awaited resolution,
archaeologists found they had to battle Indians and their government supporters
for every scrap of information they could glean from the skeleton. "The
government did a CAT scan of the bones and we asked for the results," says
Schneider, who served as a lawyer representing the scientists in the case.
"Native Americans objected, and we had to file a motion to see the
data." In the words of one physical anthropologist, "It's clear to me
that Native Americans are eager to block study of the skeleton. Otherwise it
might prove they were not the first to inhabit this continent."
On February 4, a three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled in favor of the scientists, arguing, in effect, that the Indians had put
forth an "extreme" definition of "Native American." At
press time, the tribes had not yet decided whether to appeal the ruling.
To NAGPRA's credit, the law has been used to deny many of the more
outrageous claims. In 1993, for instance, archaeologists working on a
10,000-year-old site in Montana discovered some ancient human hairs and
announced their intention to study them. Although there was no evidence of
burials at the site, two Indian tribes, the Confederated Salish and Kootenai
and the Shoshone-Bannock, filed a NAGPRA suit, contending in part that such
research was sacrilegious. The government rejected their argument--although the
lengthy court battle prevented study of the hairs for years.
A similar case involves the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone, who in 1997 attempted
to assert "cultural affinity" with the 9,500-year-old remains found
in Spirit Cave, Nevada, basing their claim largely on tribal traditions that
indicated their ancestors had lived in the area since "time
immemorial." In that case the tribe's claim was rejected. In November 1999
the Confederate Tribes of Grand Ronde, Oregon, claimed the Willamette Meteorite
on display in New York's Museum of Natural History, calling it a "holy
object" that conveyed messages from the spirit world. The case was settled
with an arrangement that allows the Indians access to the meteorite for
cultural and religious purposes.
Perhaps the most bizarre NAGPRA case involves Honolulu's Bishop Museum.
This institution had in its collection 83 artifacts and human remains taken in
1905 from the Kawaihae Cave complex on Hawaii. In 2000 the museum gave the
objects to an ethnic Hawaiian organization called the Hui Malama, which
proceeded to rebury them somewhere in the cave complex. Several other native
Hawaiian groups complained, arguing that the Bishop had not allowed them time
to assert their claims to the objects, as stipulated by NAGPRA. The issue was
taken up by the NAGPRA Review Committee, which last May castigated the museum
for giving the Hui Malama possession of the objects and ordered the group to
return the objects to the museum. When the Hui Malama refused, the Bishop
requested the fight to break into the complex and seize the objects. The
Department of Hawaiian Homelands declined the request, and the matter is
heading for the courts.
It's this affirmation of group--or tribal--rights over the imperatives of
science and the free transmission of knowledge that outrages so many critics.
"This is a question of who owns the past," maintains Arizona State's
Clark. "I believe in an archaeology that is scientific and belongs to the
national patrimony, not to any ideology or 'consciousness group.'" Others
worry about the statute's effect on the law in general. Argues attorney
Schneider, "A lot of people in government agencies have bought into the
idea that they can do anything they want to do right by Indians. Look at the
state of Nebraska--it repatriated all skeletal remains to Indian tribes, even
those which were Caucasian."
Meanwhile, Schneider continues, "you have agencies giving tribal oral
traditions the same weight as written documentation and people in the federal
Justice Department contending that scientific study of Indian culture is a
savaging of that culture." Add to these concerns the extraordinary
sensitivity the government shows toward Native American religion, and you have
what many perceive as a kind of touchy-feely attack on fundamental standards of
science and knowledge. As the late Clement Meighan, a UCLA archaeologist and
fierce NAGPRA critic, wrote in the November 1994 issue of Archaeology magazine,
"The New Age disposition to invoke or invent beliefs no one really holds,
and to maintain they are of a value at least equal to, if not supremely greater
than, those that account for the triumph of Western civilization, is given
concrete expression in the repatriation movement."
Crackdown
At least no one's going to jail. Well, not in the museum community. The
story is different among commercial traders of Native American artifacts. Says
Jeff Myers, a New York dealer of Eskimo artifacts, "What started as a way
to return Indian bones and protect Native American burial grounds from looting
has turned into something far more complex and troubling."
The first case of a private individual convicted under NAGPRA occurred in
1994. FBI agents arrested an Arizona man, Richard Corrow, for attempting to
sell sacred Native American artifacts he had purchased on tribal lands. He also
possessed objects containing bald eagle feathers, in violation of the 1940
Eagle Protection Act and the 1918 Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA). He received
five years' probation. In 1997 a federal court in New Mexico sentenced Arizona
dealer Rodney Tidwell to 33 months in prison for selling Acoma priest robes and
Hopi ritual masks. Both Corrow and Tidwell appealed, arguing that NAGPRA is too
vague regarding which Native American objects are sacred and which aren't.
Although their appeals were unsuccessful, the debate they started continues.
Critics maintain that the whole idea of "sacred objects" is often
highly problematic and open to various interpretations and politicization. Many
Indians converted to Christianity, they observe, and sold or gave away objects
they once considered holy. Now, encouraged in part by NAGPRA, Indians are
rediscovering their ancestral beliefs and demanding the repatriation of those
items. "A lot of Native Americans are born-again animists," Ramona
Morris, president of the Antique Tribal Art Association, notes wryly. Others
complain that, given more than 2 million Native Americans of over 769 federally
recognized tribes, no one knows the full extent of Indian rituals and methods
of worship, including many that Indians keep secret.
The only authorities are Indians themselves. As one leading Santa Fe dealer
moans, "The government will ask Indians, 'Is this important to your
tribe?,' and of course they'll say yes in order to get possession of the
objects. Next thing you know, they're putting it back on the market."
Perhaps even more troubling, by relying on the subjective judgment of tribal
leaders, government agencies edge closer toward a relationship with Native
American spirituality that violates the constitutional separation of church and
state.
Tribal art dealers stay on the right side of the law by avoiding human
remains, objects known to be deemed sacred (such as tribal masks), and anything
containing the feathers of eagles and other birds protected by law. At the same
time, dealers handle only artifacts they know have come from private
collections, since NAGPRA's jurisdiction over Native American objects is
limited to those that originate from federal or tribal lands. But some
observers worry that even this affirmation of private ownership is eroding.
"Although the law was originally intended just for museums," says
Albuquerque's Robert Gallegos, one of the few dealers unafraid to publicly
criticize NAGPRA, "federal agencies are trying to make it apply in the
private sector."
In the early 1990s this fear was palpable among dealers in the southwest.
Back then there were stories of raids by a joint task force that included
agents from the FBI, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the Bureau of Indian
Affairs, and the National Park Service, among others. This task force would
storm into even the most respected Santa Fe businesses looking for contraband
"as if we were crack houses," in one dealer's words. The reds
disbanded the task force in 1992, but a BLM spokesman defended the agents'
actions at the time: "For years dealers have had a free hand in illegally
trafficking Native American artifacts ... so of course they're going to
complain and spread accusations against us." These days, dealers say,
NAGPRA enforcement has eased up. Unchanged, however, is the government's
dismissive attitude toward dealers' concerns. For example, when I asked a
spokesman for the U.S. attorney in New Mexico about the trade's criticisms of
NAGPRA, he repl ied that he didn't know of any negative comments. After hearing
a list of complaints about the law and its enforcement, he scoffed that
"somebody's fed you a lot of paranoia." Dealer Gallegos thinks that
paranoia is just the point. "The government wants dealers to get paranoid
about the law," he says. "They want us to become so afraid of NAGPRA
that we voluntarily stop trading in this field and don't challenge the law in
court."
In the view of Gallegos and others, the feds will often bundle a NAGPRA
violation together with court-tested laws such as the MBTA. "But
prosecutors will get the dealer to plead guilty to NAGPRA," Gallegos adds.
"In this way, they build legal precedents to buttress NAGPRA, while
spreading a climate of fear through the dealer community."
The Sting
This strategy is what many observers believe lay behind the government's
sting operation against respected Santa Fe artifact dealer Joshua Baer, perhaps
the most alarming private-sector application of NAGPRA, so far. The case began
in August 1999,when Baer was approached by an art dealer named Bob Clay. Clay
told Baer he was representing a wealthy Norwegian collector named Ivar Husby
who was interested in buying some first-rate Indian artifacts. In fact, Clay
was undercover FBI agent Robert Whitman and Husby was an agent of the Norwegian
National Bureau of Investigation. During the next 16 months, Baer did some
$40,000 worth of business with the two men, as they wormed their way into his
confidence. In September 1999, the agents expressed interest in purchasing
items from the dealer's personal collection. Baer at first declined, noting
that the objects contained eagle feathers, which the MBTA forbade him to sell.
The agents persisted in their requests, with Husby threatening to terminate
future business dealings. In need of cash--his gallery was suffering financial
difficulties--Baer relented under the pressure and offered Husby more than a
dozen Indian artifacts from October 1999 to January 2000. Federal agents raided
Baer's gallery in January 2000, confiscating artifacts and business records; in
October 2001, he was indicted for violating NAGPRA and the MBTA.
"This was a classic abuse of the law, when cops enforce a vague statue
and make criminals out of people," says Albuquerque lawyer Peter
Schoenburg, who represented Baer in the case. "How do you define what's
sacred to Indians? The traditions are secretive, sometimes contradictory, and
tribes refuse to write them down. Take the Navajo bull-roarers, for
instance--Navajos will say some, none, or all the bull-roarers are sacred. How
is anyone to know?" (A bull-roarer is musical instrument consisting of an
oval piece of wood attached to a lasso.) Even worse, Schoenburg argues, was the
way the two agents manipulated Baer. Agent Whitman actually became a close
friend of the Baer family, writing to the dealer soon after the raid on his
gallery: "I've been doing this all over the world for a long time. This
was the toughest case I ever had because I truly like you and your
family." Schoenburg filed a motion arguing that the agents' behavior
constituted entrap ment, but the court dismissed it.
In September 2002, Baer pleaded guilty to six charges of violating the MBTA
and three charges of violating NAGPRA, crimes that carried a maximum penalty of
10 years in prison. But Judge John Edwards Conway sympathized with the dealer,
noting at Baer's sentencing that many of the types of objects he had offered
for sale had been sold by Native American tribes themselves. Conway refused to
give Baer prison time. "This is not my favorite statute, so I'm not going
to put him in jail," the judge remarked. Astonishingly, he even encouraged
Baer to spread the word about NAGPRA to other dealers because "most people
have no idea this law exists."
Native Americans and their advocates respond that most people have no idea
how important NAGPRA has been in protecting Indian culture from looters, who
regularly pilfer objects. (Archaeology magazine once estimated that thieves
have ransacked 90 percent of the known archaeological sites in the Southwest.)
"Native Americans suffered from a kind of historical trauma" says the
AAIa's Trope. "The repatriation of ancestral objects is a very emotional,
healing experience for them." Moreover, the horror stories about the
statute ignore the ways NAGPRA has increased scientific knowledge.
"Through consultation with Indians, we've learned more about tribes than
ever before]' says Thierry Gentis, assistant curator and collections manager of
the Haffenreffer Museum at Brown University.
But even if you grant those points--and not every critic of the statute
will--that would simply suggest that the law should be reformed rather than
repealed outright. In practice, NAGPRA's opponents say, the law has done far
more for new age sophistry and legal abuse than for science and justice.
"In the end," says archaeologist Clark, the struggle is "all
about identity politics and power."
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