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A bitter fight between two tribes over sacred land where one built a casino

Associated Press

WETUMPKA, Ala. (AP) — At the height of Muscogee power, thousands of people filled the tribe’s sprawling territory on the lush banks of the Coosa River in present-day Alabama.

Oce Vpofv, or Hickory Ground, was a town, a ceremonial site, burial ground, and the last tribal capital before the Muscogee people were forcibly removed from the Southeast to Oklahoma on the Trail of Tears.

Today in its place, the Wind Creek Casino and Hotel rises 20 stories above the winding river. The development is at the center of a long-simmering dispute between two tribal nations. The Muscogee Nation are descendants of people who called the land home and Alabama’s Poarch Band of Creek Indians is a separate tribal nation that shares ancestry with the Muscogee and built the casino after gaining ownership of the site.

The Muscogee Nation contends that Alabama’s Poarch Creeks do not have historic ties to Hickory Ground and illegally excavated the remains of Muscogee ancestors to build the $246 million casino. The Poarch Band maintains that it too has ancestral ties to Hickory Ground and has worked to preserve much of the historic site. The excavation of the graves and development at the historic site has fueled a dispute that has devastated the relationship between two tribal nations. Their historic link has only exacerbated the deep sense of betrayal that Muscogee in Oklahoma feel over the development of what was their tribal capital.

“They dug up my ancestors, put them in boxes, and built a casino directly on top of my family’s burial ground,” said George Thompson, a Mekko, or traditional chief in the Muscogee Nation.

The Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hear oral arguments on Wednesday in the Muscogee Nation’s appeal of the dismissal of a lawsuit challenging the casino’s construction. The lawsuit also names federal officials and the university that performed archeology work at the site.

The 85,000-square-foot casino and the long-running legal dispute accompanying it underscore how colonization has reshaped the lives of the Muscogee people, and the limits of the modern U.S. legal system in addressing tribal grievances.

A painful history

Once among the largest tribal nations in the Southeast, the Muscogee territory includes parts of the present-day states of Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. After passing the Indian Removal Act in 1830, the U.S. forced the Muscogee people to leave their capital. The Muscogee collected ashes from their most sacred ceremonial fire in Hickory Ground and carried them on the Trail of Tears to Indian Territory, present-day Oklahoma. There, they placed them in the fire of a new ceremonial grounds, one of several that still burn today. Left behind were the graves of their ancestors, to return to nature as intended.

A few Muscogee families from about 130 miles south of Wetumpka were allowed to stay, some because they fought alongside the U.S. during the Creek War from 1813 to 1814. Their descendants would later form the Poarch Band of Creek Indians.

The Poarch Band acquired a portion of the Hickory Ground in 1980 with the help of a historic preservation grant. The title transfer included a 20-year preservation covenant to protect the integrity of the site.

“The Creek people in Oklahoma pride in heritage and ties to original homeland can only be enhanced. There is still an existing Hickory Ground tribal town in Oklahoma. They will be pleased to know their home in Alabama is being preserved,” the Poarch Band wrote in a 1980 letter to an Alabama state agency requesting preservation grant funds. The Poarch Band acquired federal recognition in 1984 with the support of their Oklahoma cousins.

Then a fight began over development of the land.

A bitter fight

When the protective covenant expired in 2000, the Poarch Band brought in archeologists affiliated with Auburn University to do an archeological excavation and study of the property. The towering resort — one of several casinos in the Poarch Band’s portfolio of properties inside and outside Alabama — was later built on the site and opened in 2013.

Thompson, a plaintiff in the lawsuit, said he and others visited the construction site and broke down in tears at the site of bulldozers and dirt piles where our ancestors once lay in peace.”

The Muscogee Nation believes that 57 sets of remains were removed during the excavation. The tribe says it has never received a full inventory of what was removed from either the Poarch Band or Auburn University, and alleges that some remains are still being improperly stored.

The Poarch Creeks say they worked to protect it from commercial development.

“Poarch Creek members have ancestral ties to this historic Creek town, as do members of the Muscogee Creek Nation of Oklahoma,” a Poarch Band spokeswoman wrote.

The Poarch Band say that the Auburn-affiliated archeological study and other work that had been done contradict the Muscogee Creek accusation that the Poarch broke their promises to protect Hickory Ground. The Poarch Band says that 17 acres were set aside for preservation, acreage including the sacred ceremonial site that both tribal nations can “visit, offer prayer, and pay homage to their ancestors.”

Poarch Band officials say they decided to proceed with the reinterment of excavated remains in 2012 after no agreement could be reached between the two tribal nations.

Fifty bundles of remains and funerary objects were wrapped in cloth and placed near the ceremonial ground, they have said. The Muscogee Nation and Thompson said they were not consulted about that reburial.

Lawyers for Auburn University wrote in court filings that the university is neutral in the dispute between the two tribes and will follow whatever the court decides.

An unforeseen circumstance

The federal office for the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act says that the law doesn’t address the excavation of ancestral remains on land controlled by one tribal nation but historically linked to another. Several tribal nations across the country were forcibly removed from their homelands, and in some cases a different tribal nation would later come to control them. In comments to the federal office, other tribal nations have expressed concerns a similar situation could happen to them.

“No one ever thought when they were writing NAGPRA that another tribe would do this,” said Muscogee Secretary of Culture and Humanities RaeLynn Butler.

The fight could soon see a skirmish in Congress. The Poarch Band is currently supporting a bill by Alabama Congressman Jerry Carl that would offer the tribe a way around a 2009 U.S. Supreme Court decision that found only tribes with federal recognition by 1934 could put land into trust for tribal use, such as casinos. The Muscogee Nation and other tribal nations are opposing the legislation, alleging that it would hurt their legal case and other tribes seeking the same legal remedy. Carl disputes that.

The dispute over Hickory Ground has created widespread resentment among tribal citizens in Oklahoma, where “Poarch” is often considered a dirty word. Questioning the cultural or political validity of the Poarch Band is a common refrain at ceremonial grounds in the Muscogee Nation. The tribal council also passed a resolution rescinding its support for the Poarch Band’s federal recognition.

“They knew then what they wanted,” said Jeff Fife, a Tvstvnvke, or warrior, for Hickory Ground and chief of staff for Principal Chief of the Muscogee Nation.

“They didn’t want our language. They didn’t want our culture or tradition. They wanted money.”

Article Topic Follows: AP National News

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