Modoc Nation taking steps
forward
Group declared independence from Klamath Tribes
earlier this year
By LEE
JUILLERAT
H&N Regional
Editor
The recently created Modoc
Nation, a group of Modoc Indians attempting to break away from the
Klamath Tribes, is working to create its legitimacy among other
Indian tribes and government agencies.
“How we become recognized is
that we begin acting and behaving as what we truly are, a nation,”
said Perry Chesnut, the Modocs’ secretary of state. “We’re going to
end up with a brighter future for our people.”
Earlier this summer, Modocs —
including several who are enrolled members of the Klamath Tribes,
which includes Klamaths, Modocs and Yahooskins — declared their
independence from the Klamath Tribes. Chesnut said nearly 100
adults, including 30 enrolled Klamaths, have obtained voting
memberships.
Until the Modoc Nation is
formally recognized and receives federal benefits, Chesnut said,
Modocs are being instructed not to withdraw as members of the
Klamath Tribes.
Chesnut said the split reflects
146 years of oppression by the Klamaths, including events that
caused Modocs led by Captain Jack to leave the Klamath Reservation
and begin the spiral of events that led to the Modoc War in 1872-73.
He said differences between Modocs and Klamaths have persisted since
then.
“There was no hope,” he said of
divisions between Klamaths and Modocs. “The Modocs are just a
captive group.”
Spokesmen for the Klamath Tribes
declined to comment.
Efforts preparing for the split
have been ongoing for about two years. In declaring their
independence, Modoc Nation leaders said they are already a federally
recognized tribe but claimed they have been under the “oppressive
yoke of the Klamath government.”
Unlike the Klamaths, who require
enrollees be at least one-quarter Klamath, Modoc or Yahooskin,
Chesnut said the Modoc Nation has other standards, primarily based
on lineal descent from a Modoc.
“That’s a road to extinction as
a tribe,” he said of the one-quarter qualification, noting the
Modocs will provide a genealogist and three-member citizenship
committee to help determine eligibility.
M. Sean Manion will head an
economic development committee to develop a selfsufficiency plan.
During a meeting to discuss creating a separate tribe last fall,
several said the Klamaths — who have historically significantly
outnumbered Modocs — refused to pursue viable economic development
programs.
Chesnut said a goal of the Modoc
Nation is to become completely self-sufficient in 15 years and end
any reliance on federal funding. He said the only desired long range
relationship will be to ensure the Modocs’ hunting, fishing,
gathering and trapping rights are recognized.
“We want to be independent,” he
said. “We don’t mind working for what we get.”
Chesnut said the Modocs have
already established diplomatic relationships with other tribes,
including the Pit River and Yahooskin, and are actively pursing
recognition from other tribes.
Efforts are also being made to
have the Modoc Nation recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs,
and the Modoc’s have made contact with environmental agencies and
sent in comments to federal and state agencies on matters affecting
Indian tribes.
The Modocs’
legislative members tentatively plan to meet in Klamath Falls in
September and, Chesnut said, will request to meet with Klamath
Tribes leaders “so we can both move forward in harmony and without
conflict. We don’t have to have an adversarial relationship with the
Klamaths.”