AlaskaUS navy to apologize for razing of Native Alaska...

US navy to apologize for razing of Native Alaska community in late 1800s

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The US navy will apologize to the Alaska village of Kake on Saturday afternoon, in the first of two apologies planned by the military for bombardments of Alaska Native communities in the late 1800s.

During Saturday’s ceremony, R Adm Mark B Sucato will express the military’s regret for firing upon and torching the Lingít (often known as the Tlingit) village of Kake in 1869. The event will also include remarks from tribal leaders and elders, a blessing from the tribe and a navy chaplain, as well as performances by the Keex Kwaan Dancers and the navy band, navy environmental public affairs specialist Julianne Leinenveber said.

A second ceremony is planned for 26 October, the 142nd anniversary of the navy’s 1882 bombardment of the nearby village of Angoon.

The apologies are “a long time coming”, said Joel Jackson, the president of the Organized Village of Kake. “Hopefully, through this apology, we can start healing from the wrongs that were committed against us.”

The bombardments of Kake and Angoon occurred just a few years after the United States bought the territory of Alaska from Russia in 1867. During those early years, the US army and navy patrolled the region, including from a fort in Sitka where, in 1869, a sentry killed two Lingít men. To settle the ensuing dispute, an army general dispatched the USS Saginaw, a warship, to Kake to “seize a few of their chiefs as hostages till [the accused] are given up” and then to “burn their villages”.

“They burned everything. All the shelters, all the food caches, the canoes,” Jackson told the Washington Post. Although no one was killed during the winter bombardment, he said the destruction of the community and its supplies and canoes then led to many deaths.

Thirteen years later the military bombarded a second village after another dispute – this time over the death of a Lingít medicine man. Although the elder’s death onboard a whaling ship was an accident, the tribe sought customary recompense of 200 blankets. Edgar Merriman, the naval commander of the department of Alaska at the time, denied the request and instead demanded 400 blankets from the tribe. When the Lingít only partly fulfilled the request, Merriman ordered US forces to bomb the settlement in Angoon.

Federal officials would later praise Merriman for the assault. “As long as the native tribes … do not feel the force of the government and are not punished for flagrant outrages, so much the more dangerous do they become”, William Morris, the region’s federal revenue collector, wrote in one letter in 1882.

Today, the US military recently deployed to a remote island in response to a spike in nearby Russian military activity.

The navy’s apologies this fall “will mean a lot”, said Garfield George, who as house master of Deishú Hít, or End of the Trail House, in Angoon is known as Kaaxooutch. He will help lead the ceremony there in October. Although the community of Angoon received a $90,000 settlement from the Department of the Interior in 1973, it has long sought a formal apology.

Jackson hopes the navy’s apology Saturday in Kake will encourage further healing of the intergenerational trauma caused by military violence. “A lot of our people don’t even talk about it. We need to start talking about it, because we need to start healing,” he said.

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