U.S. and Canadian Natives Join Forces to Protect The Grizzlies!

“U.S. and Canada-based Native American tribes are expected to sign a treaty on Friday that urges protections be maintained for grizzly bears in and around Yellowstone National Park. The Canada-based tribes are signing the measure to show solidarity with tribes based in the United States, as they are all united by cultural and religious ties to grizzlies. The treaty is the latest sign of growing American Indian activism tied to tribal rights and the environment and just the third such cross-border agreement in 150 years.” L. Zuckerman, Reuters

Grizzly-mom-and-cubs

Grizzly-mom-and-cubs

treaty-signing October 2, 2016.

treaty-signing October 2, 2016.

Excerpt: Native American tribes in Canada, U.S. to sign treaty to protect Yellowstone grizzlies L. Zuckerman, Reuters

“The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said earlier this year that Yellowstone-area grizzlies had come back from the brink of extinction and it proposed stripping U.S. Endangered Species Act protections from the population of about 700 bears. The move would open the way for hunting bears that roam outside the park’s borders in Wyoming, Montana and Idaho.

crow-prayer-for-bear

crow-prayer-for-bear

The treaty, expected to be signed by Piikani Nation and other tribes in the western Canadian province of Alberta on Friday, declares support by more than 50 tribes for protecting grizzlies from random killing and preserving their habitat against development.

zuni-bear-fetish

zuni-bear-fetish

The planned ceremony comes two days before representatives of other tribes mostly in and around the U.S. Rocky Mountain West are expected to sign the same treaty during a ceremony in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.

Grizzly family in yellowstone-

Grizzly family in yellowstone-

photo-chief-stanley-grier-piikani-nation

photo-chief-stanley-grier-piikani-nation

Chief Stanley Grier of the Piikani Nation and representatives from such tribes as the Blackfeet Nation in Montana and the Shoshone-Bannock of eastern Idaho, argue grizzlies are too sacred and culturally important to be killed by hunters.”

“There should be no doubt that delisting and trophy hunting the grizzly bear on ancestral tribal and treaty lands threatens irreparable harm to those sites and to tribal sovereignty and religious freedom.” ~Chief Stanley Grier, member of the Piikani Nation~

Category: Animals