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Sogorea Te Land Trust

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indigenous land trust in California

Sogorea Te Land Trust
FounderCorrina Gould andJohnella LaRose
Websitesogoreate-landtrust.com

TheSogorea Te Land Trust is an urbanland trust founded in 2012 with the goals of returning traditionallyChochenyo andKarkin lands in theSan Francisco Bay Area toIndigenous stewardship and cultivating more active, reciprocal relationships with the land.[1] The land trust inspired the work of theTongva Taraxat Paxaavxa Conservancy in the Los Angeles region of Southern California.[2]

Background

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Ohlone history

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Main article:Ohlone

TheOhlone people have lived in what is now theBay Area since 4000 BCE.[3] The arrival ofSpanish soldiers andmissionaries in the 18th century disrupted and undermined the Ohlone people's way of life, and their population (along with that of other indigenous groups inCalifornia) was reduced to a fraction of its former size. When California was incorporated into theUnited States, the Ohlone (as well as most other indigenous groups) were denied land and legal recognition by the United States.[4]

Modern activism

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Beginning in the 1970s, Ohlone descendants have engaged in efforts to reclaim historic Ohlone land, and to revitalize their languages and cultures.[4] In the 1990s, Corrina Gould (a Chochenyo and Karkin Ohlone leader) and Johnella LaRose (ofShoshoneBannock and Carrizo heritage) co-foundedIndian People Organizing for Change.[1][4]

History

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In 2011, Indigenous People Organizing for Change led the occupation of a construction site for a waterfront property called Glen Cove Park, which was being built on the site of an ancient Ohlone village,[1] gathering place, and burial ground, known as Sogorea Te in theKarkin language.[4][5] While the occupation was successful and development was halted, the land was not turned over to the Ohlone people, as they are denied recognition as aNative American tribe by thefederal government of the United States.[4] Instead, the land was transferred to the nearest federally recognized tribe, theYocha Dehe Wintun Nation, which lacked any connection to the location or to the occupation, and consequently gave significant concessions to the land developers.[5]

To prevent a similar situation from occurring again, the Sogorea Te Land Trust was founded in 2012 by Gould and LaRose as a way to collectively own and buy back the traditional lands of the Karkin and Chochenyo people. The first plot of land for the Land Trust was donated byPlanting Justice, a non-profit organization dedicated to improvingfood security,[4] and is located near 105th Avenue inOakland.[1] A second piece of land, consisting of a small garden, was secured in 2018 on 30th and Linden inWest Oakland.[4] Another parcel of land in SouthwestBerkeley was donated to the trust in 2022.[6] The land has been used as acommunity garden since 2004, with support from the nonprofit We Bee Gardeners.[6]

Purpose

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The vision for the land trust is for it to be a patchwork of small plots of land across theEast Bay, the traditional territory of theChochenyo andKarkin divisions of theOhlone people, that would be available for communal use, beginning with land that is either owned by the city, neglected, abandoned, or under alien.[1] The organization is also in the process of building a ceremonial space at its 105th Avenue location.[4] Long-term goals for the project include aburial ground for the bones of Ohlone ancestors, medicine plant gardens, and educational and cultural centers for native languages and cultures.[1] The organization also hopes to create an opportunity for all people to develop more active relationships with the land and as a community.[4][5]

Shuumi Land Tax

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In order to financially support their goals, the Sogorea Te Land Trust has begun a project that it calls the Shuumi Land Tax (shuumi means "gift" inOhlone languages[4]), which asks non-indigenous people living on Ohlone land to pay dues for the land that they live on.[1] The tax has no legal ramifications and no connection with the local and state governments or theInternal Revenue Service. The organization prefers this term (as opposed to merely calling contributionsdonations) as it asserts indigenoussovereignty.[7] The suggested tax amount is calculated based on the would-be taxpayer's usage of the land: renters are asked to pay a small percentage of their rent, homeowners are expected to pay based on the number of rooms (for an estimated total between $65 and $500).[7] Those who use the land for commercial purposes are expected to make a contribution based on the size and scale of their business.[8]

In media

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The founding of the Sogorea Te Land Trust is the subject of the filmBeyond Recognition, produced in 2014 by Underexposed Films.[5]

References

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  1. ^abcdefgKost, Ryan (November 28, 2017)."Indigenous women lead effort to reclaim ancestral lands".San Francisco Chronicle. RetrievedOctober 30, 2018.
  2. ^Golden, Kate (December 13, 2022)."How Indigenous People Got Some Land Back in Oakland".Bay Nature. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2023.
  3. ^Stanger, Frank M., ed. 1968.La Peninsula Vol. XIV No. 4, March 1968.
  4. ^abcdefghijNoiseCat, Julian Brave (March 22, 2018)."'It's About Taking Back What's Ours': Native Women Reclaim Land, Plot By Plot".Huffington Post. RetrievedOctober 30, 2018.
  5. ^abcdParrish, Will (March 4, 2015)."Protecting Ohlone Heritage".East Bay Express. RetrievedOctober 30, 2018.
  6. ^abRauch, Kate Darby (April 20, 2022)."'This land is coming back to us': Berkeley community garden gifted to Ohlone land trust".Berkeleyside. RetrievedJune 30, 2022.
  7. ^abDalmas, Jeremy (April 16, 2018)."Native Americans ask East Bay residents to pay 'tax' on land".KALW Local Public Radio 91.7 San Francisco. RetrievedOctober 30, 2018.
  8. ^"Shuumi Land Tax".Sogorea Te Land Trust. RetrievedOctober 30, 2018.

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