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Ysleta del Sur Pueblo

Ysleta del Sur Pueblo (also Tigua Pueblo) is a Native American Pueblo and federally recognized tribe in the Ysleta section of El Paso, Texas. Its members are Southern Tiwa people who had been displaced from Spanish New Mexico from 1680 to 1681 during the Pueblo Revolt against the Spaniards.

Ysleta del Sur Pueblo
Tiqua
El Paso
Young members of Ysleta del Sur Pueblo perform a traditional dance at summer festival, June 2022.
Location in Texas
Sovereign TribeYsleta del Sur Pueblo
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
CountyEl Paso
Government
 • BodyTribal council
 • GovernorE. Michael Silvas
 • Lt. GovernorAdam Torres
 • CaciqueJose Sierra Sr.
Population
 (2022)[2]
 • Total400+
Websitewww.ysletadelsurpueblo.org

The people and language are called Tigua (pronounced tiwa). They have maintained a tribal identity and lands in Texas.[3] Spanish mostly replaced the indigenous language in the early 1900s, and today, English is increasingly gaining ground in the community. Today there are efforts to revive the indigenous language.[4]

They are one of three federally recognized tribes in Texas.[5]

Tribal government

As of 2022, E. Michael Silvas is the governor of Ysleta del Sur Pueblo.[1] The 2021 Tribal Council consists of Sheriff Bernardo Gonzales, Councilman Rudy Cruz Jr., Councilman Rafael Gomez Jr., Governor E. Michael Silvas, Cacique Jose Sierra Sr., Lt. Governor Adam Torres, War Captain Javier Loera, Councilman Raul Candelaria, and Councilman Andrew Torrez.[1]

In 2020, the tribal government employed 293 individuals, of which 58% were tribal citizens.[6]

Population

In April 2008, the Tribal Census Department reported 1,615 enrolled members.[7] By 2020, there were 4,696 enrolled members of Ysleta del Sur Pueblo.[6]

Economic development

For almost 40 years, the Pueblo has owned and operated tribal businesses that provide employment for its members and the El Paso community. These businesses include the Speaking Rock Entertainment Center, Big Bear Oil Co., Inc., and the Tigua Indian Cultural Center.[3]

History

17th century

 
Old Ysleta del Sur Pueblo, c. 1876

The Ysleta del Sur Pueblo ("the Pueblo") is a U.S. federally recognized Native American tribe and sovereign nation. The Tribal community known as "Tigua" established Ysleta del Sur in 1682. After leaving the homelands of Quarai Pueblo due to drought the Tigua sought refuge at Isleta Pueblo and were later captured by the Spanish during the 1680 Pueblo Revolt and forced to walk south for over 400 miles.

The Tigua settled and built the Ysleta del Sur Pueblo and soon after built the acequia (canal) system that sustained a thriving agricultural-based community. The tribe's early economic and farming efforts helped pave the way for the development of the region.[8]

19th century

Throughout the 19th century and into the first half of the 20th century, the Tiguas maintained the syncretic Spanish-Indigenous political and religious offices introduced by the Spanish in the 16th century. Like other Pueblos, the Tiguas had offices that included Cacique (chief), who served for life as well as in spiritual matters, Lieutenant-cacique, Governor, Lieutenant-governor, War Captain, and subordinate captains. Local newspapers regularly reported on tribal elections and the Tiguas' primary religious celebration on St. Anthony's Day honoring St. Anthony the patron saint of their mission church and community. Lacking a well-bounded and defined federal Indian reservation, the Tiguas intermarried extensively with Mexican Americans and assimilated many cultural and material traits of their Hispanic neighbors. Over time, many lost the Tiwa language and many Isleta Pueblo customs and traditions.[9]

20th century

Important for their later federal tribal recognition, in 1901 noted anthropologist Jesse Walter Fewkes (later famous for his excavations of Mesa Verde) visited Ysleta del Sur as part of a trip to study the New Mexico Pueblos. While noting their assimilation or "Mexicanization," Fewkes published a short ethnographic article detailing the Tiguas' surviving Pueblo customs and traditions. He found that twenty-five could still speak the Tiwa language while many more could understand it. He noted that the Tiguas still performed several indigenous dances, including the scalp dance and a rattle dance. Ceremonies were accompanied by chants in the Tiwa language. Tiguas still called their community by a Tigua name, "Chiawipia." The group continued to hold elections for tribal officers. At the time, Fewkes wrote that José Piarote served as Cacique, Mariano Manero served as Governor, and Tomal Granillo was War Captain. Significantly, Manero still carried a baton or staff of office that Fewkes concluded was just like those carried by leaders at the New Mexico Pueblos.[10]

During the 1930s the Tiguas did not seek aid from the federal government during President Franklin Roosevelt's important Indian New Deal like many unrecognized Indian tribes. They were still recognized, however, as indigenous people by local and state officials. The tribe was invited to take part in the 1936 Texas Centennial Celebration in Dallas. Donning Plains Indian regalia, Tigua officials rode in the opening ceremony parade. Tigua leaders made Franklin Roosevelt "Honorary Cacique" and Eleanor Roosevelt "Honorary Squaw" at the time.[11]

By the 1950s the Tigua community was in dire circumstances. Having lost their valuable tribal lands, most members lived in poverty near the old mission church while others moved to other parts of El Paso for better economic opportunities. That decade the community was threatened when the City of El Paso annexed Ysleta, imposing new taxes. Tigua leaders reached out for aid. In 1961, the Mayor of El Paso wrote to the Bureau of Indian Affairs asking for assistance for the group. As this was during the Termination Era when the U.S. government was "getting out of the Indian business" and terminating tribal governments and reservations, the government denied any responsibility for the Tiguas. As part of the Tiguas' outreach for assistance, the University of Arizona Anthropology Department sent a graduate student to study the group in 1966. He took a census, finding that 166 individuals served as the core of the Tigua community while others were more peripherally involved. The War Captain, Trinidad Granillo, still maintained the tribe's ceremonial center (kiva) in his home. He also kept the tribes' sacred drum or tombe that was revered for its spiritual power. The scholar also reported that the Tiguas still maintained their St. Anthony's Day ceremonials, tribal dances, and indigenous chants.[12]

The 1960s were important years for the Tigua community. With the aid of a Latino friend, the Tiguas reached out to a young attorney, Tom Diamond, to aid them in their economic struggles. Diamond, a vocal supporter of the liberal agenda of Democratic Presidents John F. Kennedy and his successor Lyndon Johnson, agreed to aid the group. Diamond helped the Tiguas reconnect with their relatives at Isleta Pueblo in New Mexico. Its governor, Andy Abieta, visited the Tiguas and was surprised at the level of Isleta traditions the band still maintained. He became a staunch advocate for the band. Under Diamond, the Tiguas pursued a significant lands claims case through the post-war Indian Claims Commission, an effort that generated considerable documentation on the tribal survival of the Tiguas, as well as the consequences that stemmed from the federal government's failure to fulfill its trust responsibilities to the band.[13]

In 1966, Diamond helped introduce the Tiguas to Vine Deloria, Jr., a noted Lakota scholar who was then serving as Executive Director of the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI). The NCAI lobbied to have the Tiguas recognized as a federally recognized Indian tribe. Deloria also featured the Tiguas prominently in his seminal book, Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto, highlighting the band as an important symbol of the survival of indigenous values in modern American society. As part of the effort to secure status and aid for the band, Diamond gained the support of the Texas delegation to Congress and the Senate for Tigua tribal recognition. Due to termination sentiment in Congress, federal officials were not willing to grant full federal tribal acknowledgment at the time.[14] The Ysleta band as a result only was recognized as the Tigua Indians of El Paso in 1967 as a Texas Indian tribe; House Bill 888 was passed during the 60th Legislature, Regular Session, transferring all trust responsibilities for the Tigua Indians to the Texas Indian Commission. On 12 April 1968, under Public Law 90–287 82 Stat. 93 the United States Congress relinquished all responsibility for the Tiwa Indians of Ysleta, Texas to the State of Texas. The Tiwa Indians Act, borrowing word-for-word from the Lumbee Indian Act of the mid-1950s, specified that tribal members would be ineligible for any services, claims or demands from the United States as Indians.[15]

Under Texas jurisdiction, the state created a reservation for the Tiguas. Tiguas and state officials created economic development programs. The most important was a tourism venture on the reservation. Here Tiguas were hired to demonstrate indigenous crafts and lifeways. During the 1970s there was great public interest in indigenous Americans, and for a time, this program was successful. It became apparent to Tiguas and their non-indigenous supporters, however, that limited state aid and economic development programs were not sufficient for tribal survival. Without federal tribal status, the Tiguas did not have access to federal programs of the Bureau of Indian Affairs; they could not exercise true self-government without federal tribal recognition.[16]

Public Law 100-89, 101 STAT. 666 was enacted 18 August 1987 and restored the federal relationship with the tribe simultaneously with those of the Alabama-Coushatta Tribe. The restoration act renamed the tribe to the Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo,[17] repealed the Tiwa Indians Act, and specifically prohibited all gaming activities prohibited by the laws of the state of Texas.[18] The Tigua have maintained a federal relationship continuously since 1987.

The legislation of the United States Congress restored eligibility to receive services from the federal government to this group, the southernmost tribe of the Pueblo peoples.[19]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c "Tribal Council". Ysleta del Sur Pueblo. Retrieved February 24, 2022.
  2. ^ "Ysleta del Sur Pueblo and Off-Reservation Trust Land, TX". 2015-2019 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved February 24, 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Ysleta del Sur Pueblo". Ysleta del Sur Pueblo. from the original on March 17, 2008. Retrieved March 9, 2008.
  4. ^ Wesley, Lashay. "Tiguas revive language word by word". KDBC-TV. from the original on April 24, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  5. ^ "Federally recognized tribes: Texas". National Conference of State Legislatures. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  6. ^ a b "2020 Year-end Report". Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo. Retrieved February 24, 2022.
  7. ^ . Ysleta del Sur Pueblo. Archived from the original on September 27, 2008.
  8. ^ Ibid, 214.
  9. ^ Ibid, 215.
  10. ^ Ibid, 216-217.
  11. ^ Ibid, 218.
  12. ^ Ibid, 219-222.
  13. ^ Ibid, 220-229.
  14. ^ Ibid, 225-2229, 210-211.
  15. ^ "Stats". from the original on December 7, 2014. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  16. ^ Miller, 231-235.
  17. ^ "Stats 666". from the original on December 17, 2014. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  18. ^ "Stats 668". from the original on December 17, 2014. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  19. ^ "Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs: Notice, Part IV" (PDF). Federal Register. Department of Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs. July 12, 2002. (PDF) from the original on 24 August 2009. Retrieved December 6, 2017.

Bibliography

  • Bartlett, John R. (1909). The language of the Piro. American Anthropologist, 11 (3), 426–433.
  • Diamond, Tom. (1966). The Tigua Indians of El Paso. Denver: National Congress of American Indian Funds.
  • Fewkes, J. Walter. (1902). The Pueblo settlements near El Paso, Texas. American Anthropologist, 4 (1), 57–75.
  • Harrington, John P. (1909). Notes on the Piro language. American Anthropologist, 11 (4), 563–594.
  • Houser, Nicholas P. (1970). The Tigua settlement of Ysleta del Sur. The Kiva, 36 (2), 23–39.
  • Houser, Nicholas P. (1979). Tigua Pueblo. In A. Ortiz (Ed.), Handbook of North American Indians: Southwest (Vol. 9, pp. 336–342). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.
  • Miller, Mark Edwin. (2004). Forgotten Tribes: Unrecognized Indians and the Federal Acknowledgment Process. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

External links

  • Ysleta del Sur Pueblo, Official Website

Coordinates: 31°41′09″N 106°19′32″W / 31.68583°N 106.32556°W / 31.68583; -106.32556

ysleta, pueblo, also, tigua, pueblo, native, american, pueblo, federally, recognized, tribe, ysleta, section, paso, texas, members, southern, tiwa, people, been, displaced, from, spanish, mexico, from, 1680, 1681, during, pueblo, revolt, against, spaniards, ti. Ysleta del Sur Pueblo also Tigua Pueblo is a Native American Pueblo and federally recognized tribe in the Ysleta section of El Paso Texas Its members are Southern Tiwa people who had been displaced from Spanish New Mexico from 1680 to 1681 during the Pueblo Revolt against the Spaniards Ysleta del Sur Pueblo TiquaEl PasoYoung members of Ysleta del Sur Pueblo perform a traditional dance at summer festival June 2022 Location in TexasSovereign TribeYsleta del Sur PuebloCountryUnited StatesStateTexasCountyEl PasoGovernment 1 BodyTribal council GovernorE Michael Silvas Lt GovernorAdam Torres CaciqueJose Sierra Sr Population 2022 2 Total400 Websitewww wbr ysletadelsurpueblo wbr orgThe people and language are called Tigua pronounced tiwa They have maintained a tribal identity and lands in Texas 3 Spanish mostly replaced the indigenous language in the early 1900s and today English is increasingly gaining ground in the community Today there are efforts to revive the indigenous language 4 They are one of three federally recognized tribes in Texas 5 Contents 1 Tribal government 2 Population 3 Economic development 4 History 4 1 17th century 4 2 19th century 4 3 20th century 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Bibliography 8 External linksTribal government EditAs of 2022 E Michael Silvas is the governor of Ysleta del Sur Pueblo 1 The 2021 Tribal Council consists of Sheriff Bernardo Gonzales Councilman Rudy Cruz Jr Councilman Rafael Gomez Jr Governor E Michael Silvas Cacique Jose Sierra Sr Lt Governor Adam Torres War Captain Javier Loera Councilman Raul Candelaria and Councilman Andrew Torrez 1 In 2020 the tribal government employed 293 individuals of which 58 were tribal citizens 6 Population EditIn April 2008 the Tribal Census Department reported 1 615 enrolled members 7 By 2020 there were 4 696 enrolled members of Ysleta del Sur Pueblo 6 Economic development EditFor almost 40 years the Pueblo has owned and operated tribal businesses that provide employment for its members and the El Paso community These businesses include the Speaking Rock Entertainment Center Big Bear Oil Co Inc and the Tigua Indian Cultural Center 3 History Edit17th century Edit Old Ysleta del Sur Pueblo c 1876 The Ysleta del Sur Pueblo the Pueblo is a U S federally recognized Native American tribe and sovereign nation The Tribal community known as Tigua established Ysleta del Sur in 1682 After leaving the homelands of Quarai Pueblo due to drought the Tigua sought refuge at Isleta Pueblo and were later captured by the Spanish during the 1680 Pueblo Revolt and forced to walk south for over 400 miles The Tigua settled and built the Ysleta del Sur Pueblo and soon after built the acequia canal system that sustained a thriving agricultural based community The tribe s early economic and farming efforts helped pave the way for the development of the region 8 19th century Edit Throughout the 19th century and into the first half of the 20th century the Tiguas maintained the syncretic Spanish Indigenous political and religious offices introduced by the Spanish in the 16th century Like other Pueblos the Tiguas had offices that included Cacique chief who served for life as well as in spiritual matters Lieutenant cacique Governor Lieutenant governor War Captain and subordinate captains Local newspapers regularly reported on tribal elections and the Tiguas primary religious celebration on St Anthony s Day honoring St Anthony the patron saint of their mission church and community Lacking a well bounded and defined federal Indian reservation the Tiguas intermarried extensively with Mexican Americans and assimilated many cultural and material traits of their Hispanic neighbors Over time many lost the Tiwa language and many Isleta Pueblo customs and traditions 9 20th century Edit Important for their later federal tribal recognition in 1901 noted anthropologist Jesse Walter Fewkes later famous for his excavations of Mesa Verde visited Ysleta del Sur as part of a trip to study the New Mexico Pueblos While noting their assimilation or Mexicanization Fewkes published a short ethnographic article detailing the Tiguas surviving Pueblo customs and traditions He found that twenty five could still speak the Tiwa language while many more could understand it He noted that the Tiguas still performed several indigenous dances including the scalp dance and a rattle dance Ceremonies were accompanied by chants in the Tiwa language Tiguas still called their community by a Tigua name Chiawipia The group continued to hold elections for tribal officers At the time Fewkes wrote that Jose Piarote served as Cacique Mariano Manero served as Governor and Tomal Granillo was War Captain Significantly Manero still carried a baton or staff of office that Fewkes concluded was just like those carried by leaders at the New Mexico Pueblos 10 During the 1930s the Tiguas did not seek aid from the federal government during President Franklin Roosevelt s important Indian New Deal like many unrecognized Indian tribes They were still recognized however as indigenous people by local and state officials The tribe was invited to take part in the 1936 Texas Centennial Celebration in Dallas Donning Plains Indian regalia Tigua officials rode in the opening ceremony parade Tigua leaders made Franklin Roosevelt Honorary Cacique and Eleanor Roosevelt Honorary Squaw at the time 11 By the 1950s the Tigua community was in dire circumstances Having lost their valuable tribal lands most members lived in poverty near the old mission church while others moved to other parts of El Paso for better economic opportunities That decade the community was threatened when the City of El Paso annexed Ysleta imposing new taxes Tigua leaders reached out for aid In 1961 the Mayor of El Paso wrote to the Bureau of Indian Affairs asking for assistance for the group As this was during the Termination Era when the U S government was getting out of the Indian business and terminating tribal governments and reservations the government denied any responsibility for the Tiguas As part of the Tiguas outreach for assistance the University of Arizona Anthropology Department sent a graduate student to study the group in 1966 He took a census finding that 166 individuals served as the core of the Tigua community while others were more peripherally involved The War Captain Trinidad Granillo still maintained the tribe s ceremonial center kiva in his home He also kept the tribes sacred drum or tombe that was revered for its spiritual power The scholar also reported that the Tiguas still maintained their St Anthony s Day ceremonials tribal dances and indigenous chants 12 The 1960s were important years for the Tigua community With the aid of a Latino friend the Tiguas reached out to a young attorney Tom Diamond to aid them in their economic struggles Diamond a vocal supporter of the liberal agenda of Democratic Presidents John F Kennedy and his successor Lyndon Johnson agreed to aid the group Diamond helped the Tiguas reconnect with their relatives at Isleta Pueblo in New Mexico Its governor Andy Abieta visited the Tiguas and was surprised at the level of Isleta traditions the band still maintained He became a staunch advocate for the band Under Diamond the Tiguas pursued a significant lands claims case through the post war Indian Claims Commission an effort that generated considerable documentation on the tribal survival of the Tiguas as well as the consequences that stemmed from the federal government s failure to fulfill its trust responsibilities to the band 13 In 1966 Diamond helped introduce the Tiguas to Vine Deloria Jr a noted Lakota scholar who was then serving as Executive Director of the National Congress of American Indians NCAI The NCAI lobbied to have the Tiguas recognized as a federally recognized Indian tribe Deloria also featured the Tiguas prominently in his seminal book Custer Died for Your Sins An Indian Manifesto highlighting the band as an important symbol of the survival of indigenous values in modern American society As part of the effort to secure status and aid for the band Diamond gained the support of the Texas delegation to Congress and the Senate for Tigua tribal recognition Due to termination sentiment in Congress federal officials were not willing to grant full federal tribal acknowledgment at the time 14 The Ysleta band as a result only was recognized as the Tigua Indians of El Paso in 1967 as a Texas Indian tribe House Bill 888 was passed during the 60th Legislature Regular Session transferring all trust responsibilities for the Tigua Indians to the Texas Indian Commission On 12 April 1968 under Public Law 90 287 82 Stat 93 the United States Congress relinquished all responsibility for the Tiwa Indians of Ysleta Texas to the State of Texas The Tiwa Indians Act borrowing word for word from the Lumbee Indian Act of the mid 1950s specified that tribal members would be ineligible for any services claims or demands from the United States as Indians 15 Under Texas jurisdiction the state created a reservation for the Tiguas Tiguas and state officials created economic development programs The most important was a tourism venture on the reservation Here Tiguas were hired to demonstrate indigenous crafts and lifeways During the 1970s there was great public interest in indigenous Americans and for a time this program was successful It became apparent to Tiguas and their non indigenous supporters however that limited state aid and economic development programs were not sufficient for tribal survival Without federal tribal status the Tiguas did not have access to federal programs of the Bureau of Indian Affairs they could not exercise true self government without federal tribal recognition 16 Public Law 100 89 101 STAT 666 was enacted 18 August 1987 and restored the federal relationship with the tribe simultaneously with those of the Alabama Coushatta Tribe The restoration act renamed the tribe to the Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo 17 repealed the Tiwa Indians Act and specifically prohibited all gaming activities prohibited by the laws of the state of Texas 18 The Tigua have maintained a federal relationship continuously since 1987 The legislation of the United States Congress restored eligibility to receive services from the federal government to this group the southernmost tribe of the Pueblo peoples 19 See also EditAwelo Piro PuebloNotes Edit a b c Tribal Council Ysleta del Sur Pueblo Retrieved February 24 2022 Ysleta del Sur Pueblo and Off Reservation Trust Land TX 2015 2019 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Retrieved February 24 2022 a b Ysleta del Sur Pueblo Ysleta del Sur Pueblo Archived from the original on March 17 2008 Retrieved March 9 2008 Wesley Lashay Tiguas revive language word by word KDBC TV Archived from the original on April 24 2017 Retrieved December 13 2020 Federally recognized tribes Texas National Conference of State Legislatures Retrieved 1 May 2022 a b 2020 Year end Report Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo Retrieved February 24 2022 About Us Ysleta del Sur Pueblo Archived from the original on September 27 2008 Ibid 214 Ibid 215 Ibid 216 217 Ibid 218 Ibid 219 222 Ibid 220 229 Ibid 225 2229 210 211 Stats Archived from the original on December 7 2014 Retrieved January 4 2015 Miller 231 235 Stats 666 Archived from the original on December 17 2014 Retrieved January 4 2015 Stats 668 Archived from the original on December 17 2014 Retrieved January 4 2015 Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Notice Part IV PDF Federal Register Department of Interior Bureau of Indian Affairs July 12 2002 Archived PDF from the original on 24 August 2009 Retrieved December 6 2017 Bibliography EditBartlett John R 1909 The language of the Piro American Anthropologist 11 3 426 433 Diamond Tom 1966 The Tigua Indians of El Paso Denver National Congress of American Indian Funds Fewkes J Walter 1902 The Pueblo settlements near El Paso Texas American Anthropologist 4 1 57 75 Harrington John P 1909 Notes on the Piro language American Anthropologist 11 4 563 594 Houser Nicholas P 1970 The Tigua settlement of Ysleta del Sur The Kiva 36 2 23 39 Houser Nicholas P 1979 Tigua Pueblo In A Ortiz Ed Handbook of North American Indians Southwest Vol 9 pp 336 342 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Miller Mark Edwin 2004 Forgotten Tribes Unrecognized Indians and the Federal Acknowledgment Process Lincoln University of Nebraska Press External links EditYsleta del Sur Pueblo Official Website Coordinates 31 41 09 N 106 19 32 W 31 68583 N 106 32556 W 31 68583 106 32556 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ysleta del Sur Pueblo amp oldid 1140666789, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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