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Navajo

The Navajo (/ˈnævəh, ˈnɑːvə-/; also spelled Navaho; Navajo: Diné or Naabeehó) are a Native American people of the Southwestern United States.

Navajo
Diné
Manuelito (Navajo, 1818–1893), a chief during the Long Walk
Total population
399,690 enrolled tribal members[1] (2021)
Regions with significant populations
United States
(Navajo Nation, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah).

Canada:

700 Residents of Canada identified as having Navajo ancestry in the 2016 Canadian Census.[2]
Languages
Navajo, English, Spanish
Religion
Indigenous Religion, Native American Church, Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Apachean (Southern Athabascan) peoples, Dene (Northern Athabascan) peoples

With more than 399,494 enrolled tribal members as of 2021,[1][3] the Navajo Nation is the largest federally recognized tribe in the United States; additionally, the Navajo Nation has the largest reservation in the country. The reservation straddles the Four Corners region and covers more than 27,325 square miles (70,000 square km) of land in Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico. The Navajo Reservation is slightly larger than the state of West Virginia. The Navajo language is spoken throughout the region, and most Navajos also speak English.

The states with the largest Navajo populations are Arizona (140,263) and New Mexico (108,306). More than three quarters of the enrolled Navajo population resides in these two states.[4]

Besides being enrolled in the Navajo Nation, some Navajo people are citizens of the federally recognized Colorado River Indian Tribes.

History edit

Early history edit

 
A 19th-century hogan
 
Navajos spinning and weaving on vertical loom

The Navajos are speakers of a Na-Dené Southern Athabaskan language which they call Diné bizaad (lit. 'People's language'). They refer to themselves as the Diné, meaning (the) people.[5] The language comprises two geographic, mutually intelligible dialects. The Apache languages are closely related to the Navajo Language; the Navajos and Apaches migrated from northwestern Canada and eastern Alaska, where the majority of Athabaskan speakers reside.[6] Additionally, some Navajos speak Navajo Sign Language, which is either a dialect or a daughter of Plains Sign Talk. Some also speak Plains Sign Talk itself.[7]

Archaeological and historical evidence suggests the Athabaskan ancestors of the Navajos and Apaches arrived in the Southwest around 1400 AD. The Navajo oral tradition is transcribed to retain references to this migration.[citation needed]

Initially, the Navajos were largely hunters and gatherers. Later, they learned farming from Pueblo peoples, growing mainly the traditional Native American "Three Sisters" of corn, beans, and squash. They adopted herding sheep and goats from the Spaniards as a main source of trade and food. Meat became essential in the Navajo diet. Sheep became a form of currency and family status. [8] Women began to spin and weave wool into blankets and clothing after learning this from Pueblo Indians; they created items of highly valued artistic expression, which were also traded and sold.

Oral history indicates a fraught relationship with the Pueblo people[9] and a willingness to incorporate Puebloan ideas. There were long-established trading practices between the groups and ongoing conflict that led to the Pueblo people closing many traditions, altering ceremonial timing to avoid Navajo raids, and restricting access to information regarding traditional practices and imagery. Mid-16th century Spanish records recount that the Pueblo traded maize and woven cotton goods for bison meat, hides, and stone from Athabaskans migrating around the Pueblos or settling nearby. In the 18th century, the Spanish reported that the Navajos maintained large herds of livestock and cultivated large crop areas.[citation needed]

Western historians believe that the Spanish before 1600 referred to the Navajos as Apaches or Quechos.[10]: 2–4  Fray Geronimo de Zarate-Salmeron, who was in Jemez in 1622, used Apachu de Nabajo in the 1620s to refer to the people in the Chama Valley region, east of the San Juan River and northwest of present-day Santa Fe, New Mexico. It is unclear from Navajo sources when they became more distinct from their Apache relatives. Navahu comes from the Tewa language.[10]: 7–8  By the 1640s, the Spanish began using the term Navajo to refer to the Diné.

During the 1670s, the Spanish wrote that the Diné lived in a region the Navajo called Dinétah, about 60 miles (97 km) west of the Rio Chama Valley region. In the 1770s, the Spanish sent military expeditions against the Navajos in the Mount Taylor and Chuska Mountain regions of New Mexico.[10]: 43–50  The Spanish, Navajos, and Hopis (who are a Pueblo people) continued to trade with each other and formed a loose alliance, that changed often, to occasionally fight Apache and Comanche bands for the next 20 years. During this time there were relatively minor raids by Navajo bands and Spanish citizens against each other.

In 1800, Governor Fernando Chacón led 500 men to the Tunicha Mountains against the Navajo. Twenty Navajo chiefs asked for peace. In 1804 and 1805, the Navajo and Spaniards mounted major expeditions against each other's settlements. In May 1805, another peace was established. Similar patterns of peace-making, raiding, and trading among the Navajo, Spaniards, Apache, Comanche, Hopi, and Pueblo people continued until the arrival of Americans in 1846. [10]

Territory of New Mexico 1846–1863 edit

The Navajos encountered the United States Army in 1846 when General Stephen W. Kearny invaded Santa Fe with 1,600 men during the Mexican–American War. On November 21, 1846, following an invitation from a small party of American soldiers under the command of Captain John Reid, who journeyed deep into Navajo country and contacted him, Narbona and other Navajos negotiated a treaty of peace with Colonel Alexander Doniphan at Bear Springs, Ojo del Oso (later the site of Fort Wingate). This agreement was not honored by some Navajo, nor by some New Mexicans. The Navajos raided New Mexican livestock, and New Mexicans took women, children, and livestock from the Navajo. [11]

In 1849, the military governor of New Mexico, Colonel John MacRae Washington—accompanied by John S. Calhoun, an Indian agent—led 400 soldiers into the Navajo country, penetrating Canyon de Chelly. He signed a treaty with two Navajo leaders: Mariano Martinez as Head Chief and Chapitone as Second Chief. The treaty acknowledged the transfer of jurisdiction from the United Mexican States to the United States. The treaty allowed forts and trading posts to be built on Navajo land. In exchange, the United States, promised "such donations [and] such other liberal and humane measures, as [it] may deem meet and proper."[12] While en route to sign this treaty, the prominent Navajo peace leader Narbona, was killed, causing hostility between the treaty parties.[13]

During the next 10 years, the U.S. established forts on traditional Navajo territory. Military records cite this development as a precautionary measure to protect citizens and the Navajos from each other. However, the Spanish/Mexican-Navajo pattern of raids and expeditions continued. Over 400 New Mexican militia conducted a campaign against the Navajo, against the wishes of the Territorial Governor, in 1860–61. They killed Navajo warriors, captured women and children for slaves, and destroyed crops and dwellings. The Navajos call this period Naahondzood, "the fearing time."

In 1861, Brigadier-General James H. Carleton, Commander of the Federal District of New Mexico, initiated a series of military actions against the Navajos and Apaches. Colonel Kit Carson was at the new Fort Wingate with Army troops and volunteer New Mexico militia. Carleton ordered Carson to kill Mescalero Apache men and destroy any Mescalero property he could find. Carleton believed these harsh tactics would bring any Indian Tribe under control. The Mescalero surrendered and were sent to the new reservation called Bosque Redondo.

In 1863, Carleton ordered Carson to use the same tactics on the Navajo. Carson and his force swept through Navajo land, killing Navajos and destroying crops and dwellings, fouling wells, and capturing livestock. Facing starvation and death, Navajo groups came to Fort Defiance for relief. On July 20, 1863, the first of many groups departed to join the Mescalero at Bosque Redondo. Other groups continued to come in through 1864.[14]

However, not all the Navajos came in or were found. Some lived near the San Juan River, some beyond the Hopi villages, and others lived with Apache bands.[15]

Long Walk edit

 
Manuelito (Navajo, 1818–1893), a chief during the Long Walk

Beginning in the spring of 1864, the Army forced around 9,000 Navajo men, women, and children to walk over 300 miles (480 km) to Fort Sumner, New Mexico, for internment at Bosque Redondo. The internment was disastrous for the Navajo, as the government failed to provide enough water, wood, provisions, and livestock for the 4,000 to 5,000 people. Large-scale crop failure and disease were also endemic during this time, as were raids by other tribes and white civilians. Some Navajos froze in the winter because they could make only poor shelters from the few materials they were given. This period is known among the Navajos as "The Fearing Time".[16] In addition, a small group of Mescalero Apache, longtime enemies of the Navajos had been relocated to the area, which resulted in conflicts.

In 1868, the Treaty of Bosque Redondo was negotiated between Navajo leaders and the federal government allowing the surviving Navajos to return to a reservation on a portion of their former homeland.

Reservation era edit

 
Navajo woman and child, circa 1880–1910

The United States military continued to maintain forts on the Navajo reservation in the years after the Long Walk. From 1873 to 1895, the military employed Navajos as "Indian Scouts" at Fort Wingate to help their regular units.[17] During this period, Chief Manuelito founded the Navajo Tribal Police. It operated from 1872 to 1875 as an anti-raid task force working to maintain the peaceful terms of the 1868 Navajo treaty.

By treaty, the Navajos were allowed to leave the reservation for trade, with permission from the military or local Indian agent. Eventually, the arrangement led to a gradual end in Navajo raids, as the tribe was able to increase their livestock and crops. Also, the tribe gained an increase in the size of the Navajo reservation from 3.5 million acres (14,000 km2; 5,500 sq mi) to 16 million acres (65,000 km2; 25,000 sq mi) as it stands today. But economic conflicts with non-Navajos continued for many years as civilians and companies exploited resources assigned to the Navajo. The US government made leases for livestock grazing, took land for railroad development, and permitted mining on Navajo land without consulting the tribe.

In 1883, Lt. Parker, accompanied by 10 enlisted men and two scouts, went up the San Juan River to separate the Navajos and citizens who had encroached on Navajo land.[18] In the same year, Lt. Lockett, with the aid of 42 enlisted soldiers, was joined by Lt. Holomon at Navajo Springs. Evidently, citizens of the surnames Houck and/or Owens had murdered a Navajo chief's son, and 100 armed Navajo warriors were looking for them.

In 1887, citizens Palmer, Lockhart, and King fabricated a charge of horse stealing and randomly attacked a dwelling on the reservation. Two Navajo men and all three whites died as a result, but a woman and a child survived. Capt. Kerr (with two Navajo scouts) examined the ground and then met with several hundred Navajos at Houcks Tank. Rancher Bennett, whose horse was allegedly stolen, told Kerr that his horses were stolen by the three whites to catch a horse thief.[19] In the same year, Lt. Scott went to the San Juan River with two scouts and 21 enlisted men. The Navajos believed Scott was there to drive off the whites who had settled on the reservation and had fenced off the river from the Navajo. Scott found evidence of many non-Navajo ranches. Only three were active, and the owners wanted payment for their improvements before leaving. Scott ejected them.[20]

In 1890, a local rancher refused to pay the Navajos a fine for livestock. The Navajos tried to collect it, and whites in southern Colorado and Utah claimed that 9,000 of the Navajos were on a warpath. A small military detachment out of Fort Wingate restored white citizens to order.[citation needed]

In 1913, an Indian agent ordered a Navajo and his three wives to come in and then arrested them for having a plural marriage. A small group of Navajos used force to free the women and retreated to Beautiful Mountain with 30 or 40 sympathizers. They refused to surrender to the agent, and local law enforcement and military refused the agent's request for an armed engagement. General Scott arrived, and with the help of Henry Chee Dodge, a leader among the Navajo, defused the situation.[citation needed]

Boarding schools and education edit

During the time on the reservation, the Navajo tribe was forced to assimilate into white society. Navajo children were sent to boarding schools within the reservation and off the reservation. The first Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) school opened at Fort Defiance in 1870[21] and led the way for eight others to be established.[22] Many older Navajos were against this education and would hide their children to keep them from being taken.

Once the children arrived at the boarding school, their lives changed dramatically. European Americans taught the classes under an English-only curriculum and punished any student caught speaking Navajo.[22] The children were under militaristic discipline, run by the Siláo.[clarification needed] In multiple interviews, subjects recalled being captured and disciplined by the Siláo if they tried to run away. Other conditions included inadequate food, overcrowding, required manual labor in kitchens, fields, and boiler rooms; and military-style uniforms and haircuts.[23]

Change did not occur in these boarding schools until after the Meriam Report was published in 1929 by the Secretary of Interior, Hubert Work. This report discussed Indian boarding schools as being inadequate in terms of diet, medical services, dormitory overcrowding, undereducated teachers, restrictive discipline, and manual labor by the students to keep the school running.[24]

This report was the precursor to education reforms initiated under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, under which two new schools were built on the Navajo reservation. But Rough Rock Day School was run in the same militaristic style as Fort Defiance and did not implement educational reforms. Navajo accounts of the Evangelical Missionary School portray it as having a family-like atmosphere with home-cooked meals, new or gently used clothing, humane treatment, and a Navajo-based curriculum. Educators found the Evangelical Missionary School curriculum to be much more beneficial for Navajo children.[25]

 
Untitled. Ansel Adams. 1941. Taken near Canyon de Chelly

In 1937, Boston heiress Mary Cabot Wheelright and Navajo singer and medicine man Hastiin Klah founded the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe. It is a repository for sound recordings, manuscripts, paintings, and sandpainting tapestries of the Navajos. It also featured exhibits to express the beauty, dignity, and logic of the Navajo religion. When Klah met Cabot in 1921, he witnessed decades of efforts by the US government and missionaries to assimilate the Navajos into mainstream society. The museum was founded to preserve the religion and traditions of the Navajo, which Klah was sure would otherwise soon be lost forever.

The result of these boarding schools led to much language loss within the Navajo Nation. After the Second World War, the Meriam Report funded more children to attend these schools with six times as many children attending boarding school than before the War.[26] English as the primary language spoken at these schools as well as the local towns surrounding the Navajo reservations contributed to residents becoming bilingual; however Navajo was still the primary language spoken at home.[26]

Livestock Reduction 1930s–1950s edit

The Navajo Livestock Reduction was imposed upon the Navajo Nation by the federal government starting in 1933, during the Great Depression.[27] Under various forms, it continued into the 1950s. Worried about large herds in the arid climate, at a time when the Dust Bowl was endangering the Great Plains, the government decided that the land of the Navajo Nation could support only a fixed number of sheep, goats, cattle, and horses. The Federal government believed that land erosion was worsening in the area and the only solution was to reduce the number of livestock.

In 1933, John Collier was appointed commissioner of the BIA. In many ways, he worked to reform government relations with the Native American tribes, but the reduction program was devastating for the Navajo, for whom their livestock was so important. The government set land capacity in terms of "sheep units". In 1930 the Navajos grazed 1,100,000 mature sheep units.[28] These sheep provided half the cash income for the individual Navajo.[29]

Collier's solution was to first launch a voluntary reduction program, which was made mandatory two years later in 1935. The government paid for part of the value of each animal, but it did nothing to compensate for the loss of future yearly income for so many Navajo. In the matrilineal and matrilocal world of the Navajo, women were especially hurt, as many lost their only source of income with the reduction of livestock herds.[30]

The Navajos did not understand why their centuries-old practices of raising livestock should change.[28] They were united in opposition but they were unable to stop it.[31] Historian Brian Dippie notes that the Indian Rights Association denounced Collier as a 'dictator' and accused him of a "near reign of terror" on the Navajo reservation. Dippie adds that "He became an object of 'burning hatred' among the very people whose problems so preoccupied him."[32] The long-term result was strong Navajo opposition to Collier's Indian New Deal.[33]

Navajo Code Talkers in World War II edit

 
General Douglas MacArthur meeting Navajo, Pima, Pawnee and other Native American troops

Many Navajo young people moved to cities to work in urban factories during World War II. Many Navajo men volunteered for military service in keeping with their warrior culture, and they served in integrated units. The War Department in 1940 rejected a proposal by the BIA that segregated units be created for the Indians. The Navajos gained firsthand experience with how they could assimilate into the modern world, and many did not return to the overcrowded reservation, which had few jobs.[34]

Four hundred Navajo code talkers played a famous role during World War II by relaying radio messages using their own language. The Japanese were unable to understand or decode it.[35]

Uranium mining edit

In the 1940s, large quantities of uranium were discovered in Navajo land. From then into the early 21st century, the U.S. allowed mining without sufficient environmental protection for workers, waterways, and land. The Navajos have claimed high rates of death and illness from lung disease and cancer resulting from environmental contamination. Since the 1970s, legislation has helped to regulate the industry and reduce the toll, but the government has not yet offered holistic and comprehensive compensation.[36]

U.S. Marine Corps Involvement edit

The Navajo Code Talkers played a significant role in USMC history. Using their own language they utilized a military code; for example, the Navajo word "turtle" represented a tank. In 1942, Marine staff officers composed several combat simulations and the Navajo translated it and transmitted it in their dialect to another Navajo on the other line. This Navajo then translated it back into English faster than any other cryptographic facility, which demonstrated their efficacy. As a result, General Vogel recommended their recruitment into the USMC code talker program.

Each Navajo went through a basic boot camp at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego before being assigned to Field Signal Battalion training at Camp Pendleton. Once the code talkers completed training in the States, they were sent to the Pacific for assignment to the Marine combat divisions. With that said, there was never a crack in the Navajo language, it was never deciphered. It is known that many more Navajos volunteered to become code talkers than could be accepted; however, an undetermined number of other Navajos served as Marines in the war, but not as code talkers.

These achievements of the Navajo Code Talkers have resulted in an honorable chapter in USMC history. Their patriotism and honor inevitably earned them the respect of all Americans.[37]

After 1945 edit

Culture edit

 
Dibé (sheep) remain an important aspect of Navajo culture.

The name "Navajo" comes from the late 18th century via the Spanish (Apaches de) Navajó "(Apaches of) Navajó", which was derived from the Tewa navahū "farm fields adjoining a valley". The Navajos call themselves Diné.[38]

Like other Apacheans, the Navajos were semi-nomadic from the 16th through the 20th centuries. Their extended kinship groups had seasonal dwelling areas to accommodate livestock, agriculture, and gathering practices. As part of their traditional economy, Navajo groups may have formed trading or raiding parties, traveling relatively long distances.

There is a system of clans that defines relationships between individuals and families. The clan system is exogamous: people can only marry (and date) partners outside their own clans, which for this purpose include the clans of their four grandparents. Some Navajos favor their children to marry into their father's clan. While clans are associated with a geographical area, the area is not for the exclusive use of any one clan. Members of a clan may live hundreds of miles apart but still have a clan bond.[15]: xix–xxi 

Historically, the structure of the Navajo society is largely a matrilineal system, in which the family of the women owned livestock, dwellings, planting areas, and livestock grazing areas. Once married, a Navajo man would follow a matrilocal residence and live with his bride in her dwelling and near her mother's family. Daughters (or, if necessary, other female relatives) were traditionally the ones who received the generational property inheritance. In cases of marital separation, women would maintain the property and children. Children are "born to" and belong to the mother's clan, and are "born for" the father's clan. The mother's eldest brother has a strong role in her children's lives. As adults, men represent their mother's clan in tribal politics.[38]

Neither sex can live without the other in the Navajo culture. Men and women are seen as contemporary equals as both a male and females are needed to reproduce. Although women may carry a bigger burden, fertility is so highly valued that males are expected to provide economic resources (known as bridewealth). Corn is a symbol of fertility in Navajo culture as they eat white corn in the wedding ceremonies. It is considered to be immoral and/or stealing if one does not provide for the other in that premarital or marital relationship.[39]

Ethnobotany edit

Traditional dwellings edit

 
Hogan at Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park

A hogan, the traditional Navajo home, is built as a shelter for either a man or a woman. Male hogans are square or conical with a distinct rectangular entrance, while a female hogan is an eight-sided house.[citation needed] Hogans are made of logs and covered in mud, with the door always facing east to welcome the sun each morning. Navajos also have several types of hogans for lodging and ceremonial use. Ceremonies, such as healing ceremonies or the kinaaldá, take place inside a hogan. [40] According to Kehoe, this style of housing is distinctive to the Navajos. She writes, "Even today, a solidly constructed, log-walled Hogan is preferred by many Navajo families." Most Navajo members today live in apartments and houses in urban areas. [41]

Those who practice the Navajo religion regard the hogan as sacred. The religious song "The Blessingway" (hózhǫ́ǫ́jí) describes the first hogan as being built by Coyote with help from Beavers to be a house for First Man, First Woman, and Talking God. The Beaver People gave Coyote logs and instructions on how to build the first hogan. Navajos traditionally made their hogans until the 1900s, when they started to make them in hexagonal and octagonal shapes. Hogans continue to be used as dwellings, especially by older Navajos, although they tend to be made with modern construction materials and techniques. Some are maintained specifically for ceremonial purposes.[citation needed]

Spiritual and religious beliefs edit

 
Navajo Yebichai (Yei Bi Chei) dancers. Edward S. Curtis. USA, 1900. The Wellcome Collection, London
 
Hastobíga, a Hataałii photographed in 1904 by Edward S. Curtis

Navajo spiritual practice is about restoring balance and harmony to a person's life to produce health and is based on the ideas of Hózhóójí. The Diné believed in two classes of people: Earth People and Holy People. The Navajo people believe they passed through three worlds before arriving in this world, the Fourth World or the Glittering World. As Earth People, the Diné must do everything within their power to maintain the balance between Mother Earth and man.[42] The Diné also had the expectation of keeping a positive relationship between them and the Diyin Diné. In the Diné Bahaneʼ (Navajo beliefs about creation), the First, or Dark World is where the four Diyin Diné lived and where First Woman and First Man came into existence. Because the world was so dark, life could not thrive there and they had to move on. The Second, or Blue World, was inhabited by a few of the mammals' Earth People know today as well as the Swallow Chief, or Táshchózhii. The First World beings had offended him and were asked to leave. From there, they headed south and arrived in the Third World or Yellow World. The four sacred mountains were found here, but due to a great flood, First Woman, First Man, and the Holy People were forced to find another world to live in. This time, when they arrived, they stayed in the Fourth World. In the Glittering World, true death came into existence, as well as the creation of the seasons, the moon, stars, and the sun.[43]

The Holy People, or Diyin Diné, had instructed the Earth People to view the four sacred mountains as the boundaries of the homeland (Dinétah) they should never leave: Blanca Peak (Sisnaajiní — Dawn or White Shell Mountain) in Colorado; Mount Taylor (Tsoodził — Blue Bead or Turquoise Mountain) in New Mexico; the San Francisco Peaks (Dookʼoʼoosłííd — Abalone Shell Mountain) in Arizona; and Hesperus Mountain (Dibé Nitsaa — Big Mountain Sheep) in Colorado.[44] Times of day, as well as colors, are used to represent the four sacred mountains. Throughout religions, the importance of a specific number is emphasized and in the Navajo religion, the number four appears to be sacred to their practices. For example, there were four original clans of Diné, four colors and times of day, four Diyin Diné, and for the most part, four songs sung for a ritual.[44]

Navajos have many different ceremonies. For the most part, their ceremonies are to prevent or cure diseases.[45] Corn pollen is used as a blessing and as an offering during prayer.[42] One half of the major Navajo song ceremonial complex is the Blessing Way (Hózhǫ́ǫ́jí) and the other half is the Enemy Way (Anaʼí Ndááʼ). The Blessing Way ceremonies are based on establishing "peace, harmony, and good things exclusively" within the Dine. The Enemy Way, or Evil Way ceremonies are concerned with counteracting influences that come from outside the Dine.[45] Spiritual healing ceremonies are rooted in Navajo traditional stories. One of them, the Night Chant ceremony, is conducted over several days and involves up to 24 dancers. The ceremony requires the dancers to wear buckskin masks, as do many of the other Navajo ceremonies, and they all represent specific gods.[45] The purpose of the Night Chant is to purify the patients and heal them through prayers to the spirit beings. Each day of the ceremony entails the performance of certain rites and the creation of detailed sand paintings. One of the songs describes the home of the thunderbirds:

In Tsegihi [White House],
In the house made of the dawn,
In the house made of the evening light[46]

The ceremonial leader proceeds by asking the Holy People to be present at the beginning of the ceremony, then identifying the patient with the power of the spirit-being, and describing the patient's transformation to renewed health with lines such as, "Happily I recover."[47]

Ceremonies are used to correct curses that cause some illnesses or misfortunes. People may complain of witches who do harm to the minds, bodies, and families of innocent people,[38] though these matters are rarely discussed in detail with those outside of the community.[48]

Oral stories/Works of literature edit

The Navajo Tribe relied on oral tradition to maintain beliefs and stories. Examples would include the traditional creation story Diné Bahaneʼ.[42] Some Navajo Indian legends are staples in literature, including The First Man and First Woman [49] as well as The Sun, Moon, and Stars.[50] The First Man and Woman is the story about the creation of the world, and The Sun, Moon, and Stars is the story about the origin of heavenly bodies.

Music edit

Visual arts edit

Silverwork edit

 
Squash blossom necklace
 
19th-century Navajo jewelry with the popular concho and dragonfly designs

Silversmithing is an important art form among Navajos. Atsidi Sani (c. 1830–c. 1918) is considered to be the first Navajo silversmith. He learned silversmithing from a Mexican man called Nakai Tsosi ("Thin Mexican") around 1878 and began teaching other Navajos how to work with silver.[51] By 1880, Navajo silversmiths were creating handmade jewelry including bracelets, tobacco flasks, necklaces, and bracers. Later, they added silver earrings, buckles, bolos, hair ornaments, pins, and squash blossom necklaces for tribal use, and to sell to tourists as a way to supplement their income.[52]

The Navajos' hallmark jewelry piece called the "squash blossom" necklace first appeared in the 1880s. The term "squash blossom" was apparently attached to the name of the Navajo necklace at an early date, although its bud-shaped beads are thought to derive from Spanish-Mexican pomegranate designs.[53] The Navajo silversmiths also borrowed the "naja" (najahe in Navajo)[54] symbol to shape the silver pendant that hangs from the "squash blossom" necklace.

Turquoise has been part of jewelry for centuries, but Navajo artists did not use inlay techniques to insert turquoise into silver designs until the late 19th century.

Weaving edit

 
Navajo weaver with sheep
 
Navajo Germantown Eye Dazzler Rug, Science History Institute
 
Probably Bayeta-style Blanket with Terrace and Stepped Design, 1870–1880, 50.67.54, Brooklyn Museum

Navajos came to the southwest with their own weaving traditions; however, they learned to weave cotton on vertical looms from the Pueblo peoples. The first Spaniards to visit the region wrote about seeing Navajo blankets. By the 18th century, the Navajos had begun to import Bayeta red yarn to supplement local black, gray, and white wool, as well as wool dyed with indigo. Using an upright loom, the Navajos made extremely fine utilitarian blankets that were collected by Ute and Plains Indians. These Chief's Blankets, so called because only chiefs or very wealthy individuals could afford them, were characterized by horizontal stripes and minimal patterning in red. First Phase Chief's Blankets have only horizontal stripes, Second Phase feature red rectangular designs, and Third Phase features red diamonds and partial diamond patterns.

The completion of the railroads dramatically changed Navajo weaving. Cheap blankets were imported, so Navajo weavers shifted their focus to weaving rugs for an increasingly non-Native audience. Rail service also brought in Germantown wool from Philadelphia, commercially dyed wool which greatly expanded the weavers' color palettes.

Some early European-American settlers moved in and set up trading posts, often buying Navajo rugs by the pound and selling them back east by the bale. The traders encouraged the locals to weave blankets and rugs into distinct styles. These included "Two Gray Hills" (predominantly black and white, with traditional patterns); Teec Nos Pos (colorful, with very extensive patterns); "Ganado" (founded by Don Lorenzo Hubbell[55]), red-dominated patterns with black and white; "Crystal" (founded by J. B. Moore); oriental and Persian styles (almost always with natural dyes); "Wide Ruins", "Chinlee", banded geometric patterns; "Klagetoh", diamond-type patterns; "Red Mesa" and bold diamond patterns.[56] Many of these patterns exhibit a fourfold symmetry, which is thought to embody traditional ideas about harmony or hózhǫ́.

In the media edit

In 2000 the documentary The Return of Navajo Boy was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. It was written in response to an earlier film, The Navajo Boy which was somewhat exploitative of those Navajos involved. The Return of Navajo Boy allowed the Navajos to be more involved in the depictions of themselves.[57]

In the final episode of the third season of the FX reality TV show 30 Days, the show's producer Morgan Spurlock spends thirty days living with a Navajo family on their reservation in New Mexico. The July 2008 show called "Life on an Indian Reservation", depicts the dire conditions that many Native Americans experience living on reservations in the United States.[citation needed]

Tony Hillerman wrote a series of detective novels whose detective characters were members of the Navajo Tribal Police. The novels are noted for incorporating details about Navajo culture, and in some cases expanding the focus to include nearby Hopi and Zuni characters and cultures, as well.[citation needed] Some of the novels have been adapted for film/TV, including the series Dark Winds. His daughter has continued the novel series after his death.

In 1997, Welsh author Eirug Wyn published the Welsh-language novel "I Ble'r Aeth Haul y Bore?" ("Where did the Morning Sun go?" in English) which tells the story of Carson's misdoings against the Navajo people from the point of view of a fictional young Navajo woman called "Haul y Bore" ("Morning Sun" in English).[58]

Notable people with Navajo ancestry edit

 
Jacoby Ellsbury, pictured in a Boston Red Sox uniform, is a Navajo (from his mother's side) baseball player for the New York Yankees.

Artists edit

Performers edit

Politicians edit

  • Chris Deschene, veteran, attorney, engineer, and a community leader. One of few Native Americans to be accepted into the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis. Upon graduation, he was commissioned as a 2nd Lt. in the U.S. Marine Corps. He made an unsuccessful attempt to run for Navajo Nation President.
  • Henry Chee Dodge, last Head Chief of the Navajo and first Chairman of the Navajo Tribe, (1922–1928, 1942–1946).
  • Annie Dodge Wauneka, former Navajo Tribal Councilwoman and advocate.
  • Thomas Dodge, former Chairman of the Navajo Tribe and first Diné attorney.
  • Albert Hale, former President of the Navajo Nation. He served in the Arizona Senate from 2004 to 2011 and in the Arizona House of Representatives from 2011 to 2017.
  • Christina Haswood, member of the Kansas House of Representatives since 2021.
  • Peter MacDonald, Navajo Code Talker and former Chairman of the Navajo Tribe.
  • Mark Maryboy (Aneth/Red Mesa/Mexican Water), former Navajo Nation Council Delegate, working in Utah Navajo Investments.
  • Lilakai Julian Neil, the first woman elected to Navajo Tribal Council.
  • Jonathan Nez, Former President of the Navajo Nation. He served three terms as Navajo Council Delegate representing the chapters of Shonto, Oljato, Tsah Bi Kin and Navajo Mountain. Served two terms as Navajo County Board of Supervisors for District 1.
  • Buu Nygren, Current President of the Navajo Nation.
  • Ben Shelly, former President of the Navajo Nation.
  • Joe Shirley, Jr., former President of the Navajo Nation.
  • Chris Stearns, member of the Washington House of Representatives since 2022.
  • Peterson Zah, first President of the Navajo Nation and last Chairman of the Navajo Tribe.[60]

Writers edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Becenti, Arlyssa. Diné enrolled population increases to 399,494 2021-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, Navajo Times, 26 April 2021
  2. ^ "Aboriginal Population Profile, 2016 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca/. Statistics Canada. 21 June 2018. from the original on 30 January 2022. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Arizona's Native American Tribes: Navajo Nation", 2012-01-01 at the Wayback Machine University of Arizona, Tucson Economic Development Research Program (retrieved: 19 January 2011)
  4. ^ American Factfinder, United States Census Bureau
  5. ^ Haile, Berard (1949). "Navaho or Navajo?". The Americas. 6 (1): 85–90. doi:10.2307/977783. ISSN 0003-1615. JSTOR 977783. S2CID 144292342. from the original on 2021-04-21. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
  6. ^ Watkins, Thayer. "Discovery of the Athabascan Origin of the Apache and Navajo Language" 2014-11-12 at the Wayback Machine, San Jose State University (retrieved: 28 November 2010)
  7. ^ Samuel J. Supalla (1992). The Book of Name Signs, p. 22 (retrieved: 28 November 2010)
  8. ^ Iverson 2006, p. 19, 62.
  9. ^ Hosteen Klah, page 102 and others[full citation needed]
  10. ^ a b c d Correll, J. Lee (1976). Through White Men's Eyes: A contribution to Navajo History (Book). Window Rock, AZ: The Navajo Times Publishing Company. ISBN 9780894172922.
  11. ^ Sides 2006, p. 133–140, 152–154.
  12. ^ Stat. 974
  13. ^ Simpson, James H, edited and annotated by Frank McNitt, foreword by Durwood Ball, Navaho Expedition: Journal of a Military Reconnaissance from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the Navajo Country, Made in 1849, University of Oklahoma Press (1964), trade paperback (2003), 296 pages, ISBN 0-8061-3570-0
  14. ^ Thompson, Gerald (1976). The Army and the Navajo: The Bosque Redondo Reservation Experiment 1863–1868. Tucson, Arizona: The University of Arizona Press. ISBN 9780816504954.
  15. ^ a b Compiled (1973). Roessel, Ruth (ed.). Navajo Stories of the Long Walk Period. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College Press. ISBN 0-912586-16-8.
  16. ^ George Bornstein, "The Fearing Time: Telling the tales of Indian slavery in American history", Times Literary Supplement, 20 October 2017 p. 29 (review of Andrés Reséndez, The Other Slavery: The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, ISBN 9780547640983).
  17. ^ Marei Bouknight and others, Guide to Records in the Military Archives Division Pertaining to Indian-White Relations, GSA National Archives, 1972
  18. ^ Ford, "September 30, 1887 Letter to Acting Assistant General," District of New Mexico, National Archive Materials, Navajo Tribal Museum, Window Rock, Arizona
  19. ^ Kerr, "February 18, 1887 letter to Acting Assistant General," District of New Mexico, National Archive Materials, Navajo Tribal Museum, Window Rock, Arizona.
  20. ^ Scott," June 22, 1887 letter to Acting Assistant General," District of New Mexico, National Archive Materials, Navajo Tribal Museum, Window Rock, Arizona
  21. ^ "Fort Defiance Chapter". FORT DEFIANCE CHAPTER. from the original on 23 May 2017. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
  22. ^ a b McCarty, T.L.; Bia, Fred (2002). A Place to be Navajo: Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self-Determination in Indigenous Schooling. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. p. 42. ISBN 0-8058-3760-4.
  23. ^ McCarty, T.L.; Bia, Fred (2002). A Place to be Navajo: Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self-Determination in Indigenous Schooling. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. pp. 44–5. ISBN 0-8058-3760-4.
  24. ^ McCarty, T.L.; Bia, Fred (2002). A Place to be Navajo: Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self-Determination in Indigenous Schooling. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. p. 48. ISBN 0-8058-3760-4.
  25. ^ McCarty, T.L.; Bia, Fred (2002). A Place to be Navajo: Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self-Determination in Indigenous Schooling. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. pp. 50–1. ISBN 0-8058-3760-4.
  26. ^ a b Spolsky, Bernard (July 2014). "Language Documentation and Description" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  27. ^ Peter Iverson, Dine: A History of the Navajos, 2002, University of New Mexico Press, Chapter 5, "our People Cried": 1923–1941.
  28. ^ a b Compiled (1974). Roessel, Ruth (ed.). Navajo Livestock Reduction: A National Disgrace. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College Press. ISBN 0-912586-18-4.
  29. ^ Peter Iverson (2002). "For Our Navajo People": Diné Letters, Speeches & Petitions, 1900-1960. U of New Mexico Press. p. 250. ISBN 9780826327185.
  30. ^ Weisiger, Marsha (2007). "Gendered Injustice: Navajo Livestock Reduction in the New Deal Era". Western Historical Quarterly. 38 (4): 437–455. doi:10.2307/25443605. JSTOR 25443605. S2CID 147597303.
  31. ^ Richard White, ch 13: "The Navajos become Dependent" (1988). The Roots of Dependency: Subsistence, Environment, and Social Change Among the Choctaws, Pawnees, and Navajos. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 300ff. ISBN 0803297246.
  32. ^ Brian W. Dippie, The Vanishing American: White Attitudes and U.S. Indian Policy (1991) pp 333–336, quote p 335
  33. ^ Donald A. Grinde Jr, "Navajo Opposition to the Indian New Deal." Integrated Education (1981) 19#3–6 pp: 79–87.
  34. ^ Alison R. Bernstein, American Indians and World War II: Toward a New Era in Indian Affairs, (University of Oklahoma Press, 1999) pp 40, 67, 132, 152
  35. ^ Bernstein, American Indians and World War II pp 46–49
  36. ^ Judy Pasternak, Yellow Dirt- An American Story of a Poisoned Land and a People Betrayed, Free Press, New York, 2010.
  37. ^ Marine Corps. University, NAVAJO CODE TALKERS IN WORLD WAR II, USMC History Division, 2006.
  38. ^ a b c Kluckhohn, Clyde; Leighton, Dorothea (1974). The Navaho. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-6060-3-5.
  39. ^ Lauren Del Carlo, Between the Sacred Mountains: A Cultural History of the Dineh, Essai, Volume 5: Article 15, 2007.
  40. ^ Iverson 2006, p. 23.
  41. ^ Kehoe 1992, p. 133.
  42. ^ a b c . www.navajovalues.com. Archived from the original on 2016-04-18. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  43. ^ "The Story of the Emergence". www.sacred-texts.com. from the original on 2016-05-25. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  44. ^ a b "Navajo Culture". www.discovernavajo.com. from the original on 2016-05-28. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  45. ^ a b c Wyman, Leland (1983). (PDF). Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  46. ^ Sandner 1991, p. 88.
  47. ^ Sandner 1991, p. 90.
  48. ^ Keene, Dr. Adrienne, "Magic in North America Part 1: Ugh. 2016-04-06 at the Wayback Machine" at Native Appropriations", 8 March 2016. Accessed 9 April 2016: "What happens when Rowling pulls this in, is we as Native people are now opened up to a barrage of questions about these beliefs and traditions ... but these are not things that need or should be discussed by outsiders. At all. I'm sorry if that seems "unfair," but that's how our cultures survive."
  49. ^ "Creation of First Man and First Woman - A Navajo Legend". www.firstpeople.us. from the original on 2021-10-28. Retrieved 2021-10-13.
  50. ^ "The Sun, Moon and Stars". www.hanksville.org. from the original on 2021-09-03. Retrieved 2021-10-13.
  51. ^ Adair 1989, p. 4.
  52. ^ Adair 1989, p. 135.
  53. ^ Adair 1989, p. 44.
  54. ^ Adair 1989, p. 9.
  55. ^ "Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site" 2010-08-24 at the Wayback Machine White Mountains Online. (retrieved 28 Nov 2010)
  56. ^ Denver Art Museum. "Blanket Statements" 2010-12-07 at the Wayback Machine, Traditional Fine Arts Organization (retrieved 28 Nov 2010)
  57. ^ . navajoboy.com. Archived from the original on February 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-26.
  58. ^ "I Ble'r Aeth Haul y Bore? (9780862434359) | Eirug Wyn | Y Lolfa". www.ylolfa.com. from the original on 2019-08-01. Retrieved 2019-08-01.
  59. ^ . Nativenetworks.si.edu. Archived from the original on 2011-12-11. Retrieved 2012-01-31.
  60. ^ Peterson Zah Summary. from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2016-04-02 – via www.bookrags.com.

References edit

  • Adair, John (1989) [1944]. The Navajo and Pueblo Silversmiths (paperback ed.). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-2215-1.
  • Iverson, Peter (2006). The Navajo. Jennifer Denetdale (additional text), Ada E. Deer (foreword). New York: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 0-7910-8595-3.
  • Kehoe, Alice Beck (1992). North American Indians: A Comprehensive account (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River (NJ): Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0136243625. (3rd edition, 2006, ISBN 978-0131928763)
  • Newcomb, Franc Johnson (1964). Hosteen Klah: Navajo Medicine Man and Sand Painter. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. LCCN 64020759.
  • Pritzker, Barry M. (2000). A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-513877-1.
  • Sandner, Donald (1991). Navaho symbols of healing: a Jungian exploration of ritual, image, and medicine. Rochester (VT): Healing Arts Press. ISBN 978-0-89281-434-3.
  • Sides, Hampton (2006). Blood and Thunder: An Epic of the American West (2nd ed.). Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-50777-6.

Further reading edit

  • Bailey, L. R. (1964). The Long Walk: A History of the Navaho Wars, 1846–1868.
  • Bighorse, Tiana (1990). Bighorse the Warrior. Ed. Noel Bennett, Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Brugge, David M. (1968). Navajos in the Catholic Church Records of New Mexico 1694–1875. Window Rock, Arizona: Research Section, The Navajo Tribe.
  • Clarke, Dwight L. (1961). Stephen Watts Kearny: Soldier of the West. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Downs, James F. (1972). The Navajo. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
  • Left Handed (1967) [1938]. Son of Old Man Hat. recorded by Walter Dyk. Lincoln, Nebraska: Bison Books & University of Nebraska Press. LCCN 67004921.
  • Forbes, Jack D. (1960). Apache, Navajo and Spaniard. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. LCCN 60013480.
  • Hammond, George P. and Rey, Agapito (editors) (1940). Narratives of the Coronado Expedition 1540–1542. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
  • Kelly, Lawrence (1970). Navajo Roundup Pruett Pub. Co., Colorado.
  • Linford, Laurence D. (2000). Navajo Places: History, Legend, Landscape. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. ISBN 978-0-87480-624-3
  • McNitt, Frank (1972). Navajo Wars. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
  • Plog, Stephen Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest. Thames and London, LTD, London, England, 1997. ISBN 0-500-27939-X.
  • Roessel, Ruth (editor) (1973). Navajo Stories of the Long Walk Period. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College Press.
  • Roessel, Ruth, ed. (1974). Navajo Livestock Reduction: A National Disgrace. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College Press. ISBN 0-912586-18-4.
  • Voyles, Traci Brynne (2015). Wastelanding: Legacies of Uranium Mining in Navajo Country. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Warren (January 27, 1875). "The Navajoes.—The Party Returning from Washington and Who They Are.—About Gov. Arny and His Views of the Indian Question.—What Kind of People the Navajoes area and What Their Country". Daily Journal of Commerce (Kansas City, Missouri). p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  • Witherspoon, Gary (1977). Language and Art in the Navajo Universe. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • Witte, Daniel. Removing Classrooms from the Battlefield: Liberty, Paternalism, and the Redemptive Promise of Educational Choice, 2008 BYU Law Review 377 The Navajo and Richard Henry Pratt 2012-09-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Zaballos, Nausica (2009). Le système de santé navajo. Paris: L'Harmattan.

External links edit

  • Navajo Nation, official site
  • Navajo Tourism Department
  • of Northern Colorado University with images of U.S. documents of treaties and reports 1846–1931
  • Navajo Silversmiths, by Washington Matthews, 1883 from Project Gutenberg
  • Navajo Institute for Social Justice 2021-04-18 at the Wayback Machine
  • Navajo Arts Information on authentic Navajo Art, Rugs, Jewelry, and Crafts
  • The Navajo Navajo expert, Doctor Sarah Davis, about the Navajo
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Navajo Indians" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

navajo, other, uses, disambiguation, diné, redirects, here, dene, people, native, northern, canada, dene, ɑː, also, spelled, navaho, diné, naabeehó, native, american, people, southwestern, united, states, dinémanuelito, 1818, 1893, chief, during, long, walktot. For other uses see Navajo disambiguation Dine redirects here For the Dene people native to northern Canada see Dene The Navajo ˈ n ae v e h oʊ ˈ n ɑː v e also spelled Navaho Navajo Dine or Naabeeho are a Native American people of the Southwestern United States NavajoDineManuelito Navajo 1818 1893 a chief during the Long WalkTotal population399 690 enrolled tribal members 1 2021 Regions with significant populationsUnited States Navajo Nation Arizona Colorado New Mexico Utah Canada 700 Residents of Canada identified as having Navajo ancestry in the 2016 Canadian Census 2 LanguagesNavajo English SpanishReligionIndigenous Religion Native American Church ChristianityRelated ethnic groupsApachean Southern Athabascan peoples Dene Northern Athabascan peoplesPeopleDineLanguageDine Bizaad Hand TalkCountryDinetahWith more than 399 494 enrolled tribal members as of 2021 update 1 3 the Navajo Nation is the largest federally recognized tribe in the United States additionally the Navajo Nation has the largest reservation in the country The reservation straddles the Four Corners region and covers more than 27 325 square miles 70 000 square km of land in Arizona Utah and New Mexico The Navajo Reservation is slightly larger than the state of West Virginia The Navajo language is spoken throughout the region and most Navajos also speak English The states with the largest Navajo populations are Arizona 140 263 and New Mexico 108 306 More than three quarters of the enrolled Navajo population resides in these two states 4 Besides being enrolled in the Navajo Nation some Navajo people are citizens of the federally recognized Colorado River Indian Tribes Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Territory of New Mexico 1846 1863 1 3 Long Walk 1 4 Reservation era 1 5 Boarding schools and education 1 6 Livestock Reduction 1930s 1950s 1 7 Navajo Code Talkers in World War II 1 8 Uranium mining 1 9 U S Marine Corps Involvement 1 10 After 1945 2 Culture 2 1 Ethnobotany 2 2 Traditional dwellings 2 3 Spiritual and religious beliefs 2 4 Oral stories Works of literature 2 5 Music 3 Visual arts 3 1 Silverwork 3 2 Weaving 4 In the media 5 Notable people with Navajo ancestry 5 1 Artists 5 2 Performers 5 3 Politicians 5 4 Writers 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editEarly history edit nbsp A 19th century hogan nbsp Navajos spinning and weaving on vertical loomThe Navajos are speakers of a Na Dene Southern Athabaskan language which they call Dine bizaad lit People s language They refer to themselves as the Dine meaning the people 5 The language comprises two geographic mutually intelligible dialects The Apache languages are closely related to the Navajo Language the Navajos and Apaches migrated from northwestern Canada and eastern Alaska where the majority of Athabaskan speakers reside 6 Additionally some Navajos speak Navajo Sign Language which is either a dialect or a daughter of Plains Sign Talk Some also speak Plains Sign Talk itself 7 Archaeological and historical evidence suggests the Athabaskan ancestors of the Navajos and Apaches arrived in the Southwest around 1400 AD The Navajo oral tradition is transcribed to retain references to this migration citation needed Initially the Navajos were largely hunters and gatherers Later they learned farming from Pueblo peoples growing mainly the traditional Native American Three Sisters of corn beans and squash They adopted herding sheep and goats from the Spaniards as a main source of trade and food Meat became essential in the Navajo diet Sheep became a form of currency and family status 8 Women began to spin and weave wool into blankets and clothing after learning this from Pueblo Indians they created items of highly valued artistic expression which were also traded and sold Oral history indicates a fraught relationship with the Pueblo people 9 and a willingness to incorporate Puebloan ideas There were long established trading practices between the groups and ongoing conflict that led to the Pueblo people closing many traditions altering ceremonial timing to avoid Navajo raids and restricting access to information regarding traditional practices and imagery Mid 16th century Spanish records recount that the Pueblo traded maize and woven cotton goods for bison meat hides and stone from Athabaskans migrating around the Pueblos or settling nearby In the 18th century the Spanish reported that the Navajos maintained large herds of livestock and cultivated large crop areas citation needed Western historians believe that the Spanish before 1600 referred to the Navajos as Apaches or Quechos 10 2 4 Fray Geronimo de Zarate Salmeron who was in Jemez in 1622 used Apachu de Nabajo in the 1620s to refer to the people in the Chama Valley region east of the San Juan River and northwest of present day Santa Fe New Mexico It is unclear from Navajo sources when they became more distinct from their Apache relatives Navahu comes from the Tewa language 10 7 8 By the 1640s the Spanish began using the term Navajo to refer to the Dine During the 1670s the Spanish wrote that the Dine lived in a region the Navajo called Dinetah about 60 miles 97 km west of the Rio Chama Valley region In the 1770s the Spanish sent military expeditions against the Navajos in the Mount Taylor and Chuska Mountain regions of New Mexico 10 43 50 The Spanish Navajos and Hopis who are a Pueblo people continued to trade with each other and formed a loose alliance that changed often to occasionally fight Apache and Comanche bands for the next 20 years During this time there were relatively minor raids by Navajo bands and Spanish citizens against each other In 1800 Governor Fernando Chacon led 500 men to the Tunicha Mountains against the Navajo Twenty Navajo chiefs asked for peace In 1804 and 1805 the Navajo and Spaniards mounted major expeditions against each other s settlements In May 1805 another peace was established Similar patterns of peace making raiding and trading among the Navajo Spaniards Apache Comanche Hopi and Pueblo people continued until the arrival of Americans in 1846 10 Territory of New Mexico 1846 1863 edit The Navajos encountered the United States Army in 1846 when General Stephen W Kearny invaded Santa Fe with 1 600 men during the Mexican American War On November 21 1846 following an invitation from a small party of American soldiers under the command of Captain John Reid who journeyed deep into Navajo country and contacted him Narbona and other Navajos negotiated a treaty of peace with Colonel Alexander Doniphan at Bear Springs Ojo del Oso later the site of Fort Wingate This agreement was not honored by some Navajo nor by some New Mexicans The Navajos raided New Mexican livestock and New Mexicans took women children and livestock from the Navajo 11 In 1849 the military governor of New Mexico Colonel John MacRae Washington accompanied by John S Calhoun an Indian agent led 400 soldiers into the Navajo country penetrating Canyon de Chelly He signed a treaty with two Navajo leaders Mariano Martinez as Head Chief and Chapitone as Second Chief The treaty acknowledged the transfer of jurisdiction from the United Mexican States to the United States The treaty allowed forts and trading posts to be built on Navajo land In exchange the United States promised such donations and such other liberal and humane measures as it may deem meet and proper 12 While en route to sign this treaty the prominent Navajo peace leader Narbona was killed causing hostility between the treaty parties 13 During the next 10 years the U S established forts on traditional Navajo territory Military records cite this development as a precautionary measure to protect citizens and the Navajos from each other However the Spanish Mexican Navajo pattern of raids and expeditions continued Over 400 New Mexican militia conducted a campaign against the Navajo against the wishes of the Territorial Governor in 1860 61 They killed Navajo warriors captured women and children for slaves and destroyed crops and dwellings The Navajos call this period Naahondzood the fearing time In 1861 Brigadier General James H Carleton Commander of the Federal District of New Mexico initiated a series of military actions against the Navajos and Apaches Colonel Kit Carson was at the new Fort Wingate with Army troops and volunteer New Mexico militia Carleton ordered Carson to kill Mescalero Apache men and destroy any Mescalero property he could find Carleton believed these harsh tactics would bring any Indian Tribe under control The Mescalero surrendered and were sent to the new reservation called Bosque Redondo In 1863 Carleton ordered Carson to use the same tactics on the Navajo Carson and his force swept through Navajo land killing Navajos and destroying crops and dwellings fouling wells and capturing livestock Facing starvation and death Navajo groups came to Fort Defiance for relief On July 20 1863 the first of many groups departed to join the Mescalero at Bosque Redondo Other groups continued to come in through 1864 14 However not all the Navajos came in or were found Some lived near the San Juan River some beyond the Hopi villages and others lived with Apache bands 15 Long Walk edit Main article Long Walk of the Navajo nbsp Manuelito Navajo 1818 1893 a chief during the Long WalkBeginning in the spring of 1864 the Army forced around 9 000 Navajo men women and children to walk over 300 miles 480 km to Fort Sumner New Mexico for internment at Bosque Redondo The internment was disastrous for the Navajo as the government failed to provide enough water wood provisions and livestock for the 4 000 to 5 000 people Large scale crop failure and disease were also endemic during this time as were raids by other tribes and white civilians Some Navajos froze in the winter because they could make only poor shelters from the few materials they were given This period is known among the Navajos as The Fearing Time 16 In addition a small group of Mescalero Apache longtime enemies of the Navajos had been relocated to the area which resulted in conflicts In 1868 the Treaty of Bosque Redondo was negotiated between Navajo leaders and the federal government allowing the surviving Navajos to return to a reservation on a portion of their former homeland Reservation era edit See also Navajo trading posts nbsp Navajo woman and child circa 1880 1910The United States military continued to maintain forts on the Navajo reservation in the years after the Long Walk From 1873 to 1895 the military employed Navajos as Indian Scouts at Fort Wingate to help their regular units 17 During this period Chief Manuelito founded the Navajo Tribal Police It operated from 1872 to 1875 as an anti raid task force working to maintain the peaceful terms of the 1868 Navajo treaty By treaty the Navajos were allowed to leave the reservation for trade with permission from the military or local Indian agent Eventually the arrangement led to a gradual end in Navajo raids as the tribe was able to increase their livestock and crops Also the tribe gained an increase in the size of the Navajo reservation from 3 5 million acres 14 000 km2 5 500 sq mi to 16 million acres 65 000 km2 25 000 sq mi as it stands today But economic conflicts with non Navajos continued for many years as civilians and companies exploited resources assigned to the Navajo The US government made leases for livestock grazing took land for railroad development and permitted mining on Navajo land without consulting the tribe In 1883 Lt Parker accompanied by 10 enlisted men and two scouts went up the San Juan River to separate the Navajos and citizens who had encroached on Navajo land 18 In the same year Lt Lockett with the aid of 42 enlisted soldiers was joined by Lt Holomon at Navajo Springs Evidently citizens of the surnames Houck and or Owens had murdered a Navajo chief s son and 100 armed Navajo warriors were looking for them In 1887 citizens Palmer Lockhart and King fabricated a charge of horse stealing and randomly attacked a dwelling on the reservation Two Navajo men and all three whites died as a result but a woman and a child survived Capt Kerr with two Navajo scouts examined the ground and then met with several hundred Navajos at Houcks Tank Rancher Bennett whose horse was allegedly stolen told Kerr that his horses were stolen by the three whites to catch a horse thief 19 In the same year Lt Scott went to the San Juan River with two scouts and 21 enlisted men The Navajos believed Scott was there to drive off the whites who had settled on the reservation and had fenced off the river from the Navajo Scott found evidence of many non Navajo ranches Only three were active and the owners wanted payment for their improvements before leaving Scott ejected them 20 In 1890 a local rancher refused to pay the Navajos a fine for livestock The Navajos tried to collect it and whites in southern Colorado and Utah claimed that 9 000 of the Navajos were on a warpath A small military detachment out of Fort Wingate restored white citizens to order citation needed In 1913 an Indian agent ordered a Navajo and his three wives to come in and then arrested them for having a plural marriage A small group of Navajos used force to free the women and retreated to Beautiful Mountain with 30 or 40 sympathizers They refused to surrender to the agent and local law enforcement and military refused the agent s request for an armed engagement General Scott arrived and with the help of Henry Chee Dodge a leader among the Navajo defused the situation citation needed Boarding schools and education edit Main article American Indian boarding schools During the time on the reservation the Navajo tribe was forced to assimilate into white society Navajo children were sent to boarding schools within the reservation and off the reservation The first Bureau of Indian Affairs BIA school opened at Fort Defiance in 1870 21 and led the way for eight others to be established 22 Many older Navajos were against this education and would hide their children to keep them from being taken Once the children arrived at the boarding school their lives changed dramatically European Americans taught the classes under an English only curriculum and punished any student caught speaking Navajo 22 The children were under militaristic discipline run by the Silao clarification needed In multiple interviews subjects recalled being captured and disciplined by the Silao if they tried to run away Other conditions included inadequate food overcrowding required manual labor in kitchens fields and boiler rooms and military style uniforms and haircuts 23 Change did not occur in these boarding schools until after the Meriam Report was published in 1929 by the Secretary of Interior Hubert Work This report discussed Indian boarding schools as being inadequate in terms of diet medical services dormitory overcrowding undereducated teachers restrictive discipline and manual labor by the students to keep the school running 24 This report was the precursor to education reforms initiated under President Franklin D Roosevelt under which two new schools were built on the Navajo reservation But Rough Rock Day School was run in the same militaristic style as Fort Defiance and did not implement educational reforms Navajo accounts of the Evangelical Missionary School portray it as having a family like atmosphere with home cooked meals new or gently used clothing humane treatment and a Navajo based curriculum Educators found the Evangelical Missionary School curriculum to be much more beneficial for Navajo children 25 nbsp Untitled Ansel Adams 1941 Taken near Canyon de ChellyIn 1937 Boston heiress Mary Cabot Wheelright and Navajo singer and medicine man Hastiin Klah founded the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe It is a repository for sound recordings manuscripts paintings and sandpainting tapestries of the Navajos It also featured exhibits to express the beauty dignity and logic of the Navajo religion When Klah met Cabot in 1921 he witnessed decades of efforts by the US government and missionaries to assimilate the Navajos into mainstream society The museum was founded to preserve the religion and traditions of the Navajo which Klah was sure would otherwise soon be lost forever The result of these boarding schools led to much language loss within the Navajo Nation After the Second World War the Meriam Report funded more children to attend these schools with six times as many children attending boarding school than before the War 26 English as the primary language spoken at these schools as well as the local towns surrounding the Navajo reservations contributed to residents becoming bilingual however Navajo was still the primary language spoken at home 26 Livestock Reduction 1930s 1950s edit See also Navajo Livestock Reduction The Navajo Livestock Reduction was imposed upon the Navajo Nation by the federal government starting in 1933 during the Great Depression 27 Under various forms it continued into the 1950s Worried about large herds in the arid climate at a time when the Dust Bowl was endangering the Great Plains the government decided that the land of the Navajo Nation could support only a fixed number of sheep goats cattle and horses The Federal government believed that land erosion was worsening in the area and the only solution was to reduce the number of livestock In 1933 John Collier was appointed commissioner of the BIA In many ways he worked to reform government relations with the Native American tribes but the reduction program was devastating for the Navajo for whom their livestock was so important The government set land capacity in terms of sheep units In 1930 the Navajos grazed 1 100 000 mature sheep units 28 These sheep provided half the cash income for the individual Navajo 29 Collier s solution was to first launch a voluntary reduction program which was made mandatory two years later in 1935 The government paid for part of the value of each animal but it did nothing to compensate for the loss of future yearly income for so many Navajo In the matrilineal and matrilocal world of the Navajo women were especially hurt as many lost their only source of income with the reduction of livestock herds 30 The Navajos did not understand why their centuries old practices of raising livestock should change 28 They were united in opposition but they were unable to stop it 31 Historian Brian Dippie notes that the Indian Rights Association denounced Collier as a dictator and accused him of a near reign of terror on the Navajo reservation Dippie adds that He became an object of burning hatred among the very people whose problems so preoccupied him 32 The long term result was strong Navajo opposition to Collier s Indian New Deal 33 Navajo Code Talkers in World War II edit nbsp General Douglas MacArthur meeting Navajo Pima Pawnee and other Native American troopsMany Navajo young people moved to cities to work in urban factories during World War II Many Navajo men volunteered for military service in keeping with their warrior culture and they served in integrated units The War Department in 1940 rejected a proposal by the BIA that segregated units be created for the Indians The Navajos gained firsthand experience with how they could assimilate into the modern world and many did not return to the overcrowded reservation which had few jobs 34 Four hundred Navajo code talkers played a famous role during World War II by relaying radio messages using their own language The Japanese were unable to understand or decode it 35 Uranium mining edit In the 1940s large quantities of uranium were discovered in Navajo land From then into the early 21st century the U S allowed mining without sufficient environmental protection for workers waterways and land The Navajos have claimed high rates of death and illness from lung disease and cancer resulting from environmental contamination Since the 1970s legislation has helped to regulate the industry and reduce the toll but the government has not yet offered holistic and comprehensive compensation 36 U S Marine Corps Involvement edit The Navajo Code Talkers played a significant role in USMC history Using their own language they utilized a military code for example the Navajo word turtle represented a tank In 1942 Marine staff officers composed several combat simulations and the Navajo translated it and transmitted it in their dialect to another Navajo on the other line This Navajo then translated it back into English faster than any other cryptographic facility which demonstrated their efficacy As a result General Vogel recommended their recruitment into the USMC code talker program Each Navajo went through a basic boot camp at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego before being assigned to Field Signal Battalion training at Camp Pendleton Once the code talkers completed training in the States they were sent to the Pacific for assignment to the Marine combat divisions With that said there was never a crack in the Navajo language it was never deciphered It is known that many more Navajos volunteered to become code talkers than could be accepted however an undetermined number of other Navajos served as Marines in the war but not as code talkers These achievements of the Navajo Code Talkers have resulted in an honorable chapter in USMC history Their patriotism and honor inevitably earned them the respect of all Americans 37 After 1945 edit See also Indian termination policy Black Mesa Peabody Coal controversy and American Indian Movement This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2016 Culture edit nbsp Dibe sheep remain an important aspect of Navajo culture The name Navajo comes from the late 18th century via the Spanish Apaches de Navajo Apaches of Navajo which was derived from the Tewa navahu farm fields adjoining a valley The Navajos call themselves Dine 38 Like other Apacheans the Navajos were semi nomadic from the 16th through the 20th centuries Their extended kinship groups had seasonal dwelling areas to accommodate livestock agriculture and gathering practices As part of their traditional economy Navajo groups may have formed trading or raiding parties traveling relatively long distances There is a system of clans that defines relationships between individuals and families The clan system is exogamous people can only marry and date partners outside their own clans which for this purpose include the clans of their four grandparents Some Navajos favor their children to marry into their father s clan While clans are associated with a geographical area the area is not for the exclusive use of any one clan Members of a clan may live hundreds of miles apart but still have a clan bond 15 xix xxi Historically the structure of the Navajo society is largely a matrilineal system in which the family of the women owned livestock dwellings planting areas and livestock grazing areas Once married a Navajo man would follow a matrilocal residence and live with his bride in her dwelling and near her mother s family Daughters or if necessary other female relatives were traditionally the ones who received the generational property inheritance In cases of marital separation women would maintain the property and children Children are born to and belong to the mother s clan and are born for the father s clan The mother s eldest brother has a strong role in her children s lives As adults men represent their mother s clan in tribal politics 38 Neither sex can live without the other in the Navajo culture Men and women are seen as contemporary equals as both a male and females are needed to reproduce Although women may carry a bigger burden fertility is so highly valued that males are expected to provide economic resources known as bridewealth Corn is a symbol of fertility in Navajo culture as they eat white corn in the wedding ceremonies It is considered to be immoral and or stealing if one does not provide for the other in that premarital or marital relationship 39 Ethnobotany edit Main article Navajo ethnobotany Traditional dwellings edit nbsp Hogan at Monument Valley Navajo Tribal ParkA hogan the traditional Navajo home is built as a shelter for either a man or a woman Male hogans are square or conical with a distinct rectangular entrance while a female hogan is an eight sided house citation needed Hogans are made of logs and covered in mud with the door always facing east to welcome the sun each morning Navajos also have several types of hogans for lodging and ceremonial use Ceremonies such as healing ceremonies or the kinaalda take place inside a hogan 40 According to Kehoe this style of housing is distinctive to the Navajos She writes Even today a solidly constructed log walled Hogan is preferred by many Navajo families Most Navajo members today live in apartments and houses in urban areas 41 Those who practice the Navajo religion regard the hogan as sacred The religious song The Blessingway hozhǫ ǫ ji describes the first hogan as being built by Coyote with help from Beavers to be a house for First Man First Woman and Talking God The Beaver People gave Coyote logs and instructions on how to build the first hogan Navajos traditionally made their hogans until the 1900s when they started to make them in hexagonal and octagonal shapes Hogans continue to be used as dwellings especially by older Navajos although they tend to be made with modern construction materials and techniques Some are maintained specifically for ceremonial purposes citation needed Spiritual and religious beliefs edit See also Dine Bahaneʼ Navajo creation beliefs nbsp Navajo Yebichai Yei Bi Chei dancers Edward S Curtis USA 1900 The Wellcome Collection London nbsp Hastobiga a Hataalii photographed in 1904 by Edward S CurtisNavajo spiritual practice is about restoring balance and harmony to a person s life to produce health and is based on the ideas of Hozhooji The Dine believed in two classes of people Earth People and Holy People The Navajo people believe they passed through three worlds before arriving in this world the Fourth World or the Glittering World As Earth People the Dine must do everything within their power to maintain the balance between Mother Earth and man 42 The Dine also had the expectation of keeping a positive relationship between them and the Diyin Dine In the Dine Bahaneʼ Navajo beliefs about creation the First or Dark World is where the four Diyin Dine lived and where First Woman and First Man came into existence Because the world was so dark life could not thrive there and they had to move on The Second or Blue World was inhabited by a few of the mammals Earth People know today as well as the Swallow Chief or Tashchozhii The First World beings had offended him and were asked to leave From there they headed south and arrived in the Third World or Yellow World The four sacred mountains were found here but due to a great flood First Woman First Man and the Holy People were forced to find another world to live in This time when they arrived they stayed in the Fourth World In the Glittering World true death came into existence as well as the creation of the seasons the moon stars and the sun 43 The Holy People or Diyin Dine had instructed the Earth People to view the four sacred mountains as the boundaries of the homeland Dinetah they should never leave Blanca Peak Sisnaajini Dawn or White Shell Mountain in Colorado Mount Taylor Tsoodzil Blue Bead or Turquoise Mountain in New Mexico the San Francisco Peaks Dookʼoʼoosliid Abalone Shell Mountain in Arizona and Hesperus Mountain Dibe Nitsaa Big Mountain Sheep in Colorado 44 Times of day as well as colors are used to represent the four sacred mountains Throughout religions the importance of a specific number is emphasized and in the Navajo religion the number four appears to be sacred to their practices For example there were four original clans of Dine four colors and times of day four Diyin Dine and for the most part four songs sung for a ritual 44 Navajos have many different ceremonies For the most part their ceremonies are to prevent or cure diseases 45 Corn pollen is used as a blessing and as an offering during prayer 42 One half of the major Navajo song ceremonial complex is the Blessing Way Hozhǫ ǫ ji and the other half is the Enemy Way Anaʼi Ndaaʼ The Blessing Way ceremonies are based on establishing peace harmony and good things exclusively within the Dine The Enemy Way or Evil Way ceremonies are concerned with counteracting influences that come from outside the Dine 45 Spiritual healing ceremonies are rooted in Navajo traditional stories One of them the Night Chant ceremony is conducted over several days and involves up to 24 dancers The ceremony requires the dancers to wear buckskin masks as do many of the other Navajo ceremonies and they all represent specific gods 45 The purpose of the Night Chant is to purify the patients and heal them through prayers to the spirit beings Each day of the ceremony entails the performance of certain rites and the creation of detailed sand paintings One of the songs describes the home of the thunderbirds In Tsegihi White House In the house made of the dawn In the house made of the evening light 46 The ceremonial leader proceeds by asking the Holy People to be present at the beginning of the ceremony then identifying the patient with the power of the spirit being and describing the patient s transformation to renewed health with lines such as Happily I recover 47 Ceremonies are used to correct curses that cause some illnesses or misfortunes People may complain of witches who do harm to the minds bodies and families of innocent people 38 though these matters are rarely discussed in detail with those outside of the community 48 Oral stories Works of literature edit See also Dine Bahaneʼ Creation Story Black God and Coyote notable traditional characters The Navajo Tribe relied on oral tradition to maintain beliefs and stories Examples would include the traditional creation story Dine Bahaneʼ 42 Some Navajo Indian legends are staples in literature including The First Man and First Woman 49 as well as The Sun Moon and Stars 50 The First Man and Woman is the story about the creation of the world and The Sun Moon and Stars is the story about the origin of heavenly bodies Music edit Main article Navajo musicVisual arts editSilverwork edit nbsp Squash blossom necklace nbsp 19th century Navajo jewelry with the popular concho and dragonfly designsSilversmithing is an important art form among Navajos Atsidi Sani c 1830 c 1918 is considered to be the first Navajo silversmith He learned silversmithing from a Mexican man called Nakai Tsosi Thin Mexican around 1878 and began teaching other Navajos how to work with silver 51 By 1880 Navajo silversmiths were creating handmade jewelry including bracelets tobacco flasks necklaces and bracers Later they added silver earrings buckles bolos hair ornaments pins and squash blossom necklaces for tribal use and to sell to tourists as a way to supplement their income 52 The Navajos hallmark jewelry piece called the squash blossom necklace first appeared in the 1880s The term squash blossom was apparently attached to the name of the Navajo necklace at an early date although its bud shaped beads are thought to derive from Spanish Mexican pomegranate designs 53 The Navajo silversmiths also borrowed the naja najahe in Navajo 54 symbol to shape the silver pendant that hangs from the squash blossom necklace Turquoise has been part of jewelry for centuries but Navajo artists did not use inlay techniques to insert turquoise into silver designs until the late 19th century Weaving edit Main article Navajo weaving nbsp Navajo weaver with sheep nbsp Navajo Germantown Eye Dazzler Rug Science History Institute nbsp Probably Bayeta style Blanket with Terrace and Stepped Design 1870 1880 50 67 54 Brooklyn MuseumNavajos came to the southwest with their own weaving traditions however they learned to weave cotton on vertical looms from the Pueblo peoples The first Spaniards to visit the region wrote about seeing Navajo blankets By the 18th century the Navajos had begun to import Bayeta red yarn to supplement local black gray and white wool as well as wool dyed with indigo Using an upright loom the Navajos made extremely fine utilitarian blankets that were collected by Ute and Plains Indians These Chief s Blankets so called because only chiefs or very wealthy individuals could afford them were characterized by horizontal stripes and minimal patterning in red First Phase Chief s Blankets have only horizontal stripes Second Phase feature red rectangular designs and Third Phase features red diamonds and partial diamond patterns The completion of the railroads dramatically changed Navajo weaving Cheap blankets were imported so Navajo weavers shifted their focus to weaving rugs for an increasingly non Native audience Rail service also brought in Germantown wool from Philadelphia commercially dyed wool which greatly expanded the weavers color palettes Some early European American settlers moved in and set up trading posts often buying Navajo rugs by the pound and selling them back east by the bale The traders encouraged the locals to weave blankets and rugs into distinct styles These included Two Gray Hills predominantly black and white with traditional patterns Teec Nos Pos colorful with very extensive patterns Ganado founded by Don Lorenzo Hubbell 55 red dominated patterns with black and white Crystal founded by J B Moore oriental and Persian styles almost always with natural dyes Wide Ruins Chinlee banded geometric patterns Klagetoh diamond type patterns Red Mesa and bold diamond patterns 56 Many of these patterns exhibit a fourfold symmetry which is thought to embody traditional ideas about harmony or hozhǫ In the media editIn 2000 the documentary The Return of Navajo Boy was shown at the Sundance Film Festival It was written in response to an earlier film The Navajo Boy which was somewhat exploitative of those Navajos involved The Return of Navajo Boy allowed the Navajos to be more involved in the depictions of themselves 57 In the final episode of the third season of the FX reality TV show 30 Days the show s producer Morgan Spurlock spends thirty days living with a Navajo family on their reservation in New Mexico The July 2008 show called Life on an Indian Reservation depicts the dire conditions that many Native Americans experience living on reservations in the United States citation needed Tony Hillerman wrote a series of detective novels whose detective characters were members of the Navajo Tribal Police The novels are noted for incorporating details about Navajo culture and in some cases expanding the focus to include nearby Hopi and Zuni characters and cultures as well citation needed Some of the novels have been adapted for film TV including the series Dark Winds His daughter has continued the novel series after his death In 1997 Welsh author Eirug Wyn published the Welsh language novel I Ble r Aeth Haul y Bore Where did the Morning Sun go in English which tells the story of Carson s misdoings against the Navajo people from the point of view of a fictional young Navajo woman called Haul y Bore Morning Sun in English 58 Notable people with Navajo ancestry editSee also Category Navajo people nbsp Jacoby Ellsbury pictured in a Boston Red Sox uniform is a Navajo from his mother s side baseball player for the New York Yankees Fred Begay nuclear physicist and a Korean War veteran Notah Begay III Navajo Isleta San Felipe Pueblo American professional golfer Klee Benally musician and documentary filmmaker 59 Jacoby Ellsbury New York Yankees outfielder enrolled Colorado River Indian Tribes Rickie Fowler American professional golfer Joe Kieyoomia captured by the Imperial Japanese Army after the fall of the Philippines in 1942 Nicco Montano former women s UFC flyweight champion Chester Nez the last original Navajo code talker who served in the United States Marine Corps during World War II Krystal Tsosie geneticist and bioethicist known for promoting Indigenous data sovereignty and studying genetics within Indigenous communities Cory Witherill first full blooded Native American in NASCAR Aaron Yazzie mechanical engineer at NASA s Jet Propulsion LaboratoryArtists edit See also Category Navajo artists Beatien Yazz born 1928 painter Apie Begay fl 1902 first Navajo artist to use European drawing materials Harrison Begay 1914 2012 Studio painter Joyce Begay Foss weaver educator and museum curator Mary Holiday Black born c 1934 basket maker Raven Chacon born 1977 conceptual artist Lorenzo Clayton born 1940 artist Carl Nelson Gorman also known as Kin Ya Onny Beyeh 1907 1998 painter printmaker illustrator and Navajo code talker with the U S Marine Corp during World War II R C Gorman 1932 2005 painter and printmaker Hastiin Klah weaver and co founder of the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian David Johns born 1948 painter Yazzie Johnson contemporary silversmith Betty Manygoats Tachiiʼnii contemporary ceramicist Christine Nofchissey McHorse 1948 2021 ceramicist Gerald Nailor Sr 1917 1952 studio painter Barbara Teller Ornelas born 1954 master Navajo weaver cultural ambassador of the U S State Department Atsidi Sani c 1828 1918 first known Navajo silversmith Clara Nezbah Sherman weaver Ryan Singer painter illustrator screen printer Tommy Singer silversmith and jeweler Quincy Tahoma 1920 1956 studio painter Tyrrell Tapaha 21st century weaver and printmaker Klah Tso mid 19th century early 20th century pioneering easel painter Emmi Whitehorse contemporary painter Melanie Yazzie contemporary print maker and educator Teresa Montoya film makerPerformers edit Jeremiah Bitsui actor Blackfire punk alternative rock band Raven Chacon composer Radmilla Cody traditional singer James and Ernie comedy duo R Carlos Nakai musician Jock Soto ballet dancerPoliticians edit Chris Deschene veteran attorney engineer and a community leader One of few Native Americans to be accepted into the U S Naval Academy in Annapolis Upon graduation he was commissioned as a 2nd Lt in the U S Marine Corps He made an unsuccessful attempt to run for Navajo Nation President Henry Chee Dodge last Head Chief of the Navajo and first Chairman of the Navajo Tribe 1922 1928 1942 1946 Annie Dodge Wauneka former Navajo Tribal Councilwoman and advocate Thomas Dodge former Chairman of the Navajo Tribe and first Dine attorney Albert Hale former President of the Navajo Nation He served in the Arizona Senate from 2004 to 2011 and in the Arizona House of Representatives from 2011 to 2017 Christina Haswood member of the Kansas House of Representatives since 2021 Peter MacDonald Navajo Code Talker and former Chairman of the Navajo Tribe Mark Maryboy Aneth Red Mesa Mexican Water former Navajo Nation Council Delegate working in Utah Navajo Investments Lilakai Julian Neil the first woman elected to Navajo Tribal Council Jonathan Nez Former President of the Navajo Nation He served three terms as Navajo Council Delegate representing the chapters of Shonto Oljato Tsah Bi Kin and Navajo Mountain Served two terms as Navajo County Board of Supervisors for District 1 Buu Nygren Current President of the Navajo Nation Ben Shelly former President of the Navajo Nation Joe Shirley Jr former President of the Navajo Nation Chris Stearns member of the Washington House of Representatives since 2022 Peterson Zah first President of the Navajo Nation and last Chairman of the Navajo Tribe 60 Writers edit Freddie Bitsoie author and chef Sherwin Bitsui author and poet Luci Tapahonso poet and lecturer Elizabeth Woody author educator and environmentalistSee also edit nbsp United States portalNavajo Churro sheep Navajo pueblitos Navajo Nation Long Walk of the Navajo NavajoceratopsNotes edit a b Becenti Arlyssa Dine enrolled population increases to 399 494 Archived 2021 05 12 at the Wayback Machine Navajo Times 26 April 2021 Aboriginal Population Profile 2016 Census www12 statcan gc ca Statistics Canada 21 June 2018 Archived from the original on 30 January 2022 Retrieved 31 December 2021 Arizona s Native American Tribes Navajo Nation Archived 2012 01 01 at the Wayback Machine University of Arizona Tucson Economic Development Research Program retrieved 19 January 2011 American Factfinder United States Census Bureau Haile Berard 1949 Navaho or Navajo The Americas 6 1 85 90 doi 10 2307 977783 ISSN 0003 1615 JSTOR 977783 S2CID 144292342 Archived from the original on 2021 04 21 Retrieved 2020 12 14 Watkins Thayer Discovery of the Athabascan Origin of the Apache and Navajo Language Archived 2014 11 12 at the Wayback Machine San Jose State University retrieved 28 November 2010 Samuel J Supalla 1992 The Book of Name Signs p 22 retrieved 28 November 2010 Iverson 2006 p 19 62 Hosteen Klah page 102 and others full citation needed a b c d Correll J Lee 1976 Through White Men s Eyes A contribution to Navajo History Book Window Rock AZ The Navajo Times Publishing Company ISBN 9780894172922 Sides 2006 p 133 140 152 154 9 Stat 974 Simpson James H edited and annotated by Frank McNitt foreword by Durwood Ball Navaho Expedition Journal of a Military Reconnaissance from Santa Fe New Mexico to the Navajo Country Made in 1849 University of Oklahoma Press 1964 trade paperback 2003 296 pages ISBN 0 8061 3570 0 Thompson Gerald 1976 The Army and the Navajo The Bosque Redondo Reservation Experiment 1863 1868 Tucson Arizona The University of Arizona Press ISBN 9780816504954 a b Compiled 1973 Roessel Ruth ed Navajo Stories of the Long Walk Period Tsaile Arizona Navajo Community College Press ISBN 0 912586 16 8 George Bornstein The Fearing Time Telling the tales of Indian slavery in American history Times Literary Supplement 20 October 2017 p 29 review of Andres Resendez The Other Slavery The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 9780547640983 Marei Bouknight and others Guide to Records in the Military Archives Division Pertaining to Indian White Relations GSA National Archives 1972 Ford September 30 1887 Letter to Acting Assistant General District of New Mexico National Archive Materials Navajo Tribal Museum Window Rock Arizona Kerr February 18 1887 letter to Acting Assistant General District of New Mexico National Archive Materials Navajo Tribal Museum Window Rock Arizona Scott June 22 1887 letter to Acting Assistant General District of New Mexico National Archive Materials Navajo Tribal Museum Window Rock Arizona Fort Defiance Chapter FORT DEFIANCE CHAPTER Archived from the original on 23 May 2017 Retrieved 31 May 2017 a b McCarty T L Bia Fred 2002 A Place to be Navajo Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self Determination in Indigenous Schooling Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates p 42 ISBN 0 8058 3760 4 McCarty T L Bia Fred 2002 A Place to be Navajo Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self Determination in Indigenous Schooling Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates pp 44 5 ISBN 0 8058 3760 4 McCarty T L Bia Fred 2002 A Place to be Navajo Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self Determination in Indigenous Schooling Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates p 48 ISBN 0 8058 3760 4 McCarty T L Bia Fred 2002 A Place to be Navajo Rough Rock and the Struggle for Self Determination in Indigenous Schooling Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates pp 50 1 ISBN 0 8058 3760 4 a b Spolsky Bernard July 2014 Language Documentation and Description PDF Archived PDF from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Peter Iverson Dine A History of the Navajos 2002 University of New Mexico Press Chapter 5 our People Cried 1923 1941 a b Compiled 1974 Roessel Ruth ed Navajo Livestock Reduction A National Disgrace Tsaile Arizona Navajo Community College Press ISBN 0 912586 18 4 Peter Iverson 2002 For Our Navajo People Dine Letters Speeches amp Petitions 1900 1960 U of New Mexico Press p 250 ISBN 9780826327185 Weisiger Marsha 2007 Gendered Injustice Navajo Livestock Reduction in the New Deal Era Western Historical Quarterly 38 4 437 455 doi 10 2307 25443605 JSTOR 25443605 S2CID 147597303 Richard White ch 13 The Navajos become Dependent 1988 The Roots of Dependency Subsistence Environment and Social Change Among the Choctaws Pawnees and Navajos U of Nebraska Press pp 300ff ISBN 0803297246 Brian W Dippie The Vanishing American White Attitudes and U S Indian Policy 1991 pp 333 336 quote p 335 Donald A Grinde Jr Navajo Opposition to the Indian New Deal Integrated Education 1981 19 3 6 pp 79 87 Alison R Bernstein American Indians and World War II Toward a New Era in Indian Affairs University of Oklahoma Press 1999 pp 40 67 132 152 Bernstein American Indians and World War II pp 46 49 Judy Pasternak Yellow Dirt An American Story of a Poisoned Land and a People Betrayed Free Press New York 2010 Marine Corps University NAVAJO CODE TALKERS IN WORLD WAR II USMC History Division 2006 a b c Kluckhohn Clyde Leighton Dorothea 1974 The Navaho Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 6060 3 5 Lauren Del Carlo Between the Sacred Mountains A Cultural History of the Dineh Essai Volume 5 Article 15 2007 Iverson 2006 p 23 Kehoe 1992 p 133 a b c Navajo Cultural History and Legends www navajovalues com Archived from the original on 2016 04 18 Retrieved 2016 05 31 The Story of the Emergence www sacred texts com Archived from the original on 2016 05 25 Retrieved 2016 05 31 a b Navajo Culture www discovernavajo com Archived from the original on 2016 05 28 Retrieved 2016 05 31 a b c Wyman Leland 1983 Navajo Ceremonial System PDF Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 31 May 2016 Sandner 1991 p 88 Sandner 1991 p 90 Keene Dr Adrienne Magic in North America Part 1 Ugh Archived 2016 04 06 at the Wayback Machine at Native Appropriations 8 March 2016 Accessed 9 April 2016 What happens when Rowling pulls this in is we as Native people are now opened up to a barrage of questions about these beliefs and traditions but these are not things that need or should be discussed by outsiders At all I m sorry if that seems unfair but that s how our cultures survive Creation of First Man and First Woman A Navajo Legend www firstpeople us Archived from the original on 2021 10 28 Retrieved 2021 10 13 The Sun Moon and Stars www hanksville org Archived from the original on 2021 09 03 Retrieved 2021 10 13 Adair 1989 p 4 Adair 1989 p 135 Adair 1989 p 44 Adair 1989 p 9 Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site Archived 2010 08 24 at the Wayback Machine White Mountains Online retrieved 28 Nov 2010 Denver Art Museum Blanket Statements Archived 2010 12 07 at the Wayback Machine Traditional Fine Arts Organization retrieved 28 Nov 2010 Synopsis navajoboy com Archived from the original on February 8 2009 Retrieved 2009 02 26 I Ble r Aeth Haul y Bore 9780862434359 Eirug Wyn Y Lolfa www ylolfa com Archived from the original on 2019 08 01 Retrieved 2019 08 01 Klee Benally Nativenetworks si edu Archived from the original on 2011 12 11 Retrieved 2012 01 31 Peterson Zah Summary Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2016 04 02 via www bookrags com References editAdair John 1989 1944 The Navajo and Pueblo Silversmiths paperback ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 2215 1 Iverson Peter 2006 The Navajo Jennifer Denetdale additional text Ada E Deer foreword New York Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 0 7910 8595 3 Kehoe Alice Beck 1992 North American Indians A Comprehensive account 2nd ed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0136243625 3rd edition 2006 ISBN 978 0131928763 Newcomb Franc Johnson 1964 Hosteen Klah Navajo Medicine Man and Sand Painter Norman University of Oklahoma Press LCCN 64020759 Pritzker Barry M 2000 A Native American Encyclopedia History Culture and Peoples Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513877 1 Sandner Donald 1991 Navaho symbols of healing a Jungian exploration of ritual image and medicine Rochester VT Healing Arts Press ISBN 978 0 89281 434 3 Sides Hampton 2006 Blood and Thunder An Epic of the American West 2nd ed Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 50777 6 Further reading editBailey L R 1964 The Long Walk A History of the Navaho Wars 1846 1868 Bighorse Tiana 1990 Bighorse the Warrior Ed Noel Bennett Tucson University of Arizona Press Brugge David M 1968 Navajos in the Catholic Church Records of New Mexico 1694 1875 Window Rock Arizona Research Section The Navajo Tribe Clarke Dwight L 1961 Stephen Watts Kearny Soldier of the West Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press Downs James F 1972 The Navajo New York Holt Rinehart and Winston Left Handed 1967 1938 Son of Old Man Hat recorded by Walter Dyk Lincoln Nebraska Bison Books amp University of Nebraska Press LCCN 67004921 Forbes Jack D 1960 Apache Navajo and Spaniard Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press LCCN 60013480 Hammond George P and Rey Agapito editors 1940 Narratives of the Coronado Expedition 1540 1542 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press Kelly Lawrence 1970 Navajo Roundup Pruett Pub Co Colorado Linford Laurence D 2000 Navajo Places History Legend Landscape Salt Lake City University of Utah Press ISBN 978 0 87480 624 3 McNitt Frank 1972 Navajo Wars Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press Plog Stephen Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest Thames and London LTD London England 1997 ISBN 0 500 27939 X Roessel Ruth editor 1973 Navajo Stories of the Long Walk Period Tsaile Arizona Navajo Community College Press Roessel Ruth ed 1974 Navajo Livestock Reduction A National Disgrace Tsaile Arizona Navajo Community College Press ISBN 0 912586 18 4 Voyles Traci Brynne 2015 Wastelanding Legacies of Uranium Mining in Navajo Country Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press Warren January 27 1875 The Navajoes The Party Returning from Washington and Who They Are About Gov Arny and His Views of the Indian Question What Kind of People the Navajoes area and What Their Country Daily Journal of Commerce Kansas City Missouri p 1 via newspapers com Witherspoon Gary 1977 Language and Art in the Navajo Universe Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press Witte Daniel Removing Classrooms from the Battlefield Liberty Paternalism and the Redemptive Promise of Educational Choice 2008 BYU Law Review 377 The Navajo and Richard Henry Pratt Archived 2012 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Zaballos Nausica 2009 Le systeme de sante navajo Paris L Harmattan External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Navajo Navajo Nation official site Navajo Tourism Department Navajo people history culture language art Middle Ground Project of Northern Colorado University with images of U S documents of treaties and reports 1846 1931 Navajo Silversmiths by Washington Matthews 1883 from Project Gutenberg Navajo Institute for Social Justice Archived 2021 04 18 at the Wayback Machine Navajo Arts Information on authentic Navajo Art Rugs Jewelry and Crafts The Navajo Navajo expert Doctor Sarah Davis about the Navajo Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Navajo Indians Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Navajo amp oldid 1186526402, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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