AP/ November 30, 2012, 5:41 PM

Tribes raise $9M to buy sacred South Dakota land

This 2007 file photo provided by South Dakota Magazine shows Reynolds Prairie in the Black Hills of South Dakota.

This 2007 file photo provided by South Dakota Magazine shows Reynolds Prairie in the Black Hills of South Dakota. / File,AP Photo/courtesy South Dakota Magazine, Bernie Hunhoff

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. After months of high-profile fundraising that drew celebrities' attention and dollars, a group of Native American tribes has raised $9 million to buy a piece of land in South Dakota's Black Hills that they consider sacred, an official with an Indian land foundation said Friday.

The Indian Land Tenure Foundation president Cris Stainbrook told The Associated Press that the tribes raised enough money to purchase the land from its current owners. The foundation was one of several groups and organizations leading the effort to buy the land.

Stainbrook said the deal should be finalized Friday, which was the deadline for the tribes to raise the money.

The land, known as Pe' Sla, went up for sale after being privately owned. Members of the Great Sioux Nation have been allowed to gather there every year to perform rituals. The site plays a key role in the tribes' creation story, and members fear new owners would develop it.

"This marks the culmination of four months of a worldwide outpouring of support for the protection of Pe' Sla. The Great Sioux Nation came together to show the world it is paramount for human beings to respect our living mother earth and sacred sites," Standing Rock Sioux tribal member Chase Iron Eyes said in a statement. Iron Eyes' company, Last Real Indians, helped raised more than $900,000 for the purchase through online donations.

Earlier this year, landowners Leonard and Margaret Reynolds canceled a public auction of the property after tribal members expressed outrage. The Reynolds' then accepted the tribes' bid to purchase the land for $9 million, should they raise enough money by Nov. 30.

The couple has repeatedly said they will not speak publicly about the land sale.

The fundraising effort drew support from several celebrities. P. Diddy tweeted about it, as did Bette Midler, who also donated. Midler said she was "happy and proud" to have helped out with the purchase.

"I've been talking about it to my friends, tweeting to the world and donating through my foundation because I think it's important for the soul of our nation," she said in a statement Friday.

Actor Ezra Miller, who appeared in the recently released film "The Perks of Being a Wallflower," and music producer Sol Guy flew to South Dakota last month to film a nine-minute documentary-style video about the land that was used as part of an online campaign to raise funds.

"I think this represents a massive shift for people standing up for what they believe in and the people who are originally from this land. We have a lot to learn and we as a community our stronger together. It's super inspiring," said Sol Guy, whose TV show "4Real" on MTV Canada and the National Geographic Channel takes celebrities to places like Peru and the Amazon.

The fundraising effort has been a monumental and controversial undertaking for the Sioux tribes. An 1868 treaty set aside the Black Hills and other land for the Sioux, but Congress passed a law in 1877 seizing the land following the discovery of gold in western South Dakota.

A 1980 U.S. Supreme Court ruling awarded more than $100 million to the Sioux tribes for the Black Hills, but the tribes have refused to accept the money, saying the land has never been for sale. There are Sioux tribes in the Dakotas, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska and Canada.

Some members of the Sioux tribes didn't agree with trying to purchase the land. Bryan Brewer, president-elect of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, said his tribe did not allocate any money to the land purchase.

"I'm still against buying something we own, but I'm thrilled the tribes are buying it. I'm very happy about it," he said.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
6 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
anahuak1 says:
Sacred land is where our story begins,in its perennial cycle
of renewel and desolation it becomes tribal, mythological, spiritual and Nature. It is this place where our true faces are born.It is one path running
together like two streams of water one historical/linear the other
cyclic in Nature.

Huichol
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
johnlockesghost says:
To come full circle and to do the transfer of land justice, the federal government should have purchased the land and given it back to the Indians.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
lillyhorton says:
Do they own the land or do they have to pay taxs on it like everyone else? How deep do they own that property?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
rememberwhatbushdid says:
We have forced the Sioux to do something they don't believe, buy land, in order to return to them something that was theirs. And today we continue to do essentially the same thing in the Middle East, for oil, and then we wonder why there are terrorists trying to get back at us. In the very beginning we struck first. Where we had no right. So, let's not look down on our forefathers for what they did to the Sioux while we are doing essentially the same thing in the Middle East and calling it "protecting our national interest".
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
hawkvet1 says:
It is a shame on America that the LDN peoples had to buy land the American government stole from them in 1877. Best wishes LRI. Pilamaya.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Henri_Rochard says:
The Sioux raised the money and bought the land fair and square.

Nicely done.
reply