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Professor Johnson Featured in ThinkProgress Article

Professor Johnson Featured in ThinkProgress Article聽

Professor Greg Johnson lent his expertise to recent article on ThinkProgress about the events occuring at Standing Rock in North Dakota. 聽

Religion has long been a part of Native American protest movements, as has its connection to the environmentalist struggle. But religious scholars say they鈥檙e also seeing something unusual this year: demonstrators are actively creating聽苍别飞听religious expressions. Greg Johnson, a Hawaiian religion expert and an associate professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder, said these indigenous protests are increasingly led by young, creative organizers who are 鈥済enerating鈥 religion through their activism.

鈥淭he kids of today鈥檚 generation know a new set of chants, a new set of prayers because of those who came before them,鈥 Johnson said. He noted that Native Hawaiian schoolchildren are already singing songs written in the protest camps of Mauna Kea just a year before. 鈥淚n this moment of crisis, the religious tradition is catalyzed, activated, but most of all articulated鈥娾斺妕his is when it happens.鈥

While this groundswell of religious generation is rooted in old traditions, it sometimes reawakens ancient elements that can challenge elders.

鈥淭o introduce another spiritual element鈥娾斺奍 am a two spirit,鈥 Gonzales said, referencing a Native American term used to describe gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people in their communities. Although traditionally聽celebrated聽in many tribes, two-spirit people have not always been welcomed by modern indigenous people. Yet when Gonzales and others formed the International Indigenous Youth Council at Standing Rock, the majority of the leadership identified as two-spirit鈥娾斺奱 designation they link to their faith.

鈥淢y sacredness as a human is part of my tradition鈥娾斺妋yself as a protector, as a sacred protector,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here are a lot of two-sprits at [the Standing Rock] camp, and that is sacred too鈥 We see that as integral to our activism.鈥

Faith is a core mobilizing and stabilizing force for the movement, but it鈥檚 also central to the legal arguments used by Native groups to defend their land. In addition to other claims, both the聽Oak Flat聽and聽Standing Rock聽lawsuits contend that the federal government鈥娾斺妎r the companies it employs鈥娾斺妚iolated the National Historic Preservation Act, which requires agencies to 鈥渃onsult with any Indian tribe鈥 that attaches religious and cultural significance to properties with the area of potential effects.鈥 The聽Hawaii case聽is similarly rooted in disputes over sacred land, although the lawsuit currently focuses on state laws, not the federal statutes.

Native groups can also lean on the聽American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978, which compels the federal government to 鈥減rotect and preserve for American Indians their inherent right of freedom to believe, express, and exercise [their] traditional religions鈥ncluding but not limited to access to sites, use and possession of sacred objects, and the freedom to worship through ceremonials and traditional rites.鈥

But according to Johnson, an expert on sacred land disputes, the law is often not enough to guarantee indigenous groups a win.

鈥淭here is very little track record of sacred land victories,鈥 he said. 鈥淢ore likely what they will generate is allegiances, attention鈥娾斺妕he secondary effects of having made the case for their tradition.鈥

Read the entire article .