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'It's not my walk. It's the souls that survived this'

'It's not my walk. It's the souls that survived this'

Yahoo19-05-2025

Kevin AbourezkICT
GENOA, Neb. – It took three years, but Nathan Phillips finally is fulfilling his dream. In the dream, he floated above the earth and looked down upon the many places he's visited in his life, places he had traveled in order to help people in their struggles. After a life spent devoted to social justice, Phillips marveled at his own accomplishments.
Then something slapped in the back of the head, much like an auntie or grandma might do to a child whose head has gotten too big, he said. And then he heard a voice.
'We need you to come home and create these things here. We're waiting for you.'
And so on Monday, May 12, the Omaha elder stood before elders of his tribe and others and talked of his dream and why he had brought them to this painful place – the site of the former U.S. Indian Industrial School at Genoa.
'It's taken me two years from those dreams to now to make it here,' he said. 'It's not my walk. It's the souls that survived this. That's what this is about, those survivors, and those that didn't make it home.'
The Genoa Indian School Walk began Monday at the Genoa U.S. Indian School Foundation Museum. The walk was held as a way to honor those students who attended the school, which opened in 1884 and closed in 1934 and was home to as many as 600 students at its peak. Genoa was but one of more than 400 boarding schools that were designed to assimilate Indigenous people into White culture by separating students from their families and cutting them off from their culture. The walk is expected to end this week.
Today, little remains of the once sprawling 640-acre campus besides the museum.
Phillips' mother, Dorothy Hastings, attended the school in northeast Nebraska and later returned home to Macy. Many others weren't as fortunate, and some died while attending the school.
In 2023, the Nebraska state archaeologist and the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs began searching for a gravesite where they believe as many as 80 students were buried. The former cemetery's location was lost after the school's closure.
At least 86 students are believed to have died at the school, according to newspaper clippings, records and a student's letter. Students usually died of diseases such as tuberculosis and typhoid, but at least one death was blamed on an accidental shooting.
In 2022, the U.S. Interior Department released a report on federal-run boarding schools and then-Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, Laguna Pueblo, traveled to sites where boarding schools were located to gather oral testimonies from survivors and descendants of survivors. On Oct. 25, 2024, then-President Joe Biden delivered an apology to Native people for the failed boarding school era.
One of the most devastating impacts of the boarding schools was its impact on Indigenous languages. In the schools, children were whipped and slapped for speaking their Native languages. Many of those who came out of the schools became convinced that their tribal languages and cultures were impediments to their people's survival in American society. Many decided to not teach their languages to their children and grandchildren, and within just a few years, many Indigenous languages began to fade away as few young people learned those languages and fluent speakers died.
One of those who chose to not teach her son the language was Dorothy Hastings, and so Nathan Phillips never learned to speak Omaha. He has since spent much of his life trying to learn his Native culture and language and teach his daughter what he's learned.
'To see that dramatic loss of language just in that one generation from my grandmother to my father, and how that's impacting me in the way that I learn the language now is something that's really difficult,' his daughter, Alethea Phillips, said.
She spoke about her dad being taken from his family at the age of 5 and placed in a series of foster homes before running away as a teenager. He eventually joined the U.S. Marines. On Jan. 20, 2019, he gained fame after a confrontation with Nicholas Sandmann, a White Catholic student, during competing political rallies before the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. In photos and videos that went viral, the teenager, who was taking part in an anti-abortion rally, stood face-to-face before the Omaha elder as Phillips sang and used a Native drum.
Many accused Sandmann of sparking the confrontation and ridiculing Phillips, though later videos and news coverage showed the two met on the steps as Phillips attempted to walk up the steps and Sandmann stood still facing him and smiling. The teenager later received death threats, but later sued many of the news companies who reported on the incident, eventually settling many of the lawsuits.
Nathan Phillips did not speak about the incident during the boarding school memorial walk, instead focusing on the children who attended the Genoa school and their troubled lives afterward.
Alethea Phillips thanked her father for helping his tribe and others who have needed his help with social justice efforts.
'I just want to take this as an opportunity to express how proud I am of my father for doing the work he's done to reconnect with our tribe, with our family and with our community so that I know my culture in a way that he didn't growing up,' she said.
As they departed from the Genoa boarding school museum, Nathan Phillips led the procession of nearly a dozen walkers and three horse riders. The sun was hot and the march snaked slowly through the small village of Genoa before turning onto a gravel road and heading east.
Walkers were mostly silent. The riders laughed. Cars drove slowly past as morning became afternoon, and the riders – all from the Omaha Tribe – ended their leg of the journey and loaded their horses into a trailer. Walkers who had joined from the Omaha Tribe and many who came from Lincoln, Nebraska, also loaded into their cars and drove away.
From there, Nathan and Alethea Phillips continued walking alone.
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Climate United is still awaiting the outcome of that appeal. While they do, the $6.97 billion remains inaccessible. Climate United's money was intended to support a range of projects from Hawai'i to the East Coast, everything from utility-scale solar to energy-efficient community centers — and a renewable energy initiative in Port Heiden. The coalition had earmarked $6 million for the first round of a pre-development grant program aimed at nearly two dozen Native communities looking to adopt or expand renewable energy power sources. 'We made investments in those communities, and we don't have the capital to support those projects,' said Climate United's Chief Community Officer Krystal Langholz. In response to an inquiry from Grist, an EPA spokesperson noted that 'Unlike the Biden-Haris administration, this EPA is committed to being an exceptional steward of taxpayer dollars.' 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The community also envisioned channeling hydropower to run a local greenhouse, where they could expand what crops they raise and the growing season, further boosting local food access and sovereignty. In even that short period of whiplash — from being awarded the grant to watching it vanish — the village's needs have become increasingly urgent. Meeting the skyrocketing cost of diesel, according to Christensen, is no longer feasible. The community's energy crisis and ensuing cost of living struggle have already started prompting an exodus, with the population declining at a rate of little over 3 percent every year — a noticeable loss when the town's number rarely exceeds a hundred residents to begin with. 'It's really expensive to live out here. And I don't plan on moving anytime soon. And my kids, they don't want to go either. So I have to make it better, make it easier to live here,' Christensen said. Janine Bloomfield, grants specialist at 10Power, the organization that Port Heiden partnered with to help write their grant application, said they are currently waiting for a decision to be made in the lawsuit 'that may lead to the money being unfrozen.' In the interim, she said, recipients have been asked to work with Climate United on paperwork 'to be able to react quickly in the event that the funds are released.' For its part, Climate United is also now exploring other funding strategies. The coalition is rehauling the structure of the money going to Port Heiden and other Native communities. Rather than awarding it as a grant, where recipients would have to pay the costs upfront and be reimbursed later, Climate United will now issue loans to the communities originally selected for the pre-development grants that don't require upfront costs and will be forgiven upon completion of the agreed-upon deliverables. Their reason for the transition, according to Langholz, was 'to increase security, decrease administrative burden on our partners, and create credit-building opportunities while still providing strong programmatic oversight.' Still, there are downsides to consider with any loan, including being stuck with debt. In many cases, said Chéri Smith, a Mi'Kmaq descendant who founded and leads the nonprofit Alliance for Tribal Clean Energy, replacing a federal grant with a loan, even a forgivable one, 'adds complexity and risk for Tribal governments.' Forgivable loans 'become a better option' in later stages of development or for income-generating infrastructure, said Smith, who is on the advisory board of Climate United, but are 'rarely suitable for common pre-development needs.' That's because pre-feasibility work, such as Port Heiden's hydropower project, 'is inherently speculative, and Tribes should not be expected to risk even conditional debt to validate whether their own resources can be developed.' This is especially true in Alaska, she added, where costs and logistical challenges are exponentially higher for the 229 federally recognized tribes than in the lower 48, and outcomes much less predictable. Raina Thiele, Dena'ina Athabascan and Yup'ik, who formerly served in the Biden administration as senior adviser for Alaska affairs to Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland and former tribal liaison to President Obama, said the lending situation is particularly unique when it comes to Alaska Native communities, because of how Congress historically wrote legislation relating to a land claim settlement which saw tribes deprived of control over resources and land. Because of that, it's been incredibly difficult for communities to build capacity, she noted, making even a forgivable loan 'a bit of a high-risk endeavor.' The question of trust also shows up — the promise of loan forgiveness, in particular, is understandably difficult for communities who have long faced exploitation and discrimination in public and privatized lending programs. 'Grant programs are a lot more familiar,' she said. Even so, the loan from Climate United would only be possible if the court rules in its favor and compels the EPA to release the money. If the court rules against Climate United, Langholz told Grist, the organization plans to pursue damage claims in another court and may seek philanthropic fundraising to help Port Heiden come up with the $300,000, in addition to the rest of the $6 million promised to the nearly two dozen Native communities originally selected for the grant program. 'These cuts can be a matter of life or death for many of these communities being able to heat their homes, essentially,' said Thiele. While many different stakeholders wait to see how the federal funding crisis will play out, Christensen doesn't know what to make of the proposed grant-to-loan shift for Port Heiden's hydropower project. The landscape has changed so quickly and drastically, it has, however, prompted him to lose what little faith he had left in federal funding. He has already begun to brainstorm other ways to ditch diesel. 'We'll figure it out,' he said. 'I'll find the money, if I have to. I'll win the lottery, and spend the money on cheaper power.' This story was originally published by Grist with the headline This Alaska Native fishing village was trying to power their town. Then came Trump's funding cuts. on Jun 12, 2025.

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