A new national park to reclaim Indigenous land | Tracie Revis

Episode Summary

In her TED Women 2023 talk, Tracy Rivas, a cultural preservation advocate and member of the Muscogee Creek Nation, shared her profound connection to her ancestral lands in Georgia, highlighting the complex emotions tied to these lands due to the history of colonization and forced removal experienced by Indigenous peoples. Rivas recounted her journey back to Georgia, specifically to the Otmulgee Mounds, an area rich in over 17,000 years of human history and significant to her tribe. Despite the deep-rooted hurt associated with the forced displacement of her ancestors, Rivas spoke of the resilience and enduring presence of Indigenous peoples in the area, as evidenced by the continued use of their language and names throughout the state. Rivas detailed the traumatic impact of the Indian Removal Act and the government-run Indian boarding schools on her family and community, emphasizing the generational trauma that persists to this day. However, her narrative took a hopeful turn as she described her transformative experience at the Otmulgee Mounds, where the presence of a traditional medicine plant reaffirmed her connection to her ancestors and inspired her to envision a future where Indigenous peoples could reclaim their relationship with their ancestral lands. As the director of advocacy for the Otmogi National Park and Preserve Initiative, Rivas is actively working towards this vision by advocating for the creation of Georgia's first national park and preserve, which would involve the Muscogee Creek Nation as a co-manager. She shared a significant moment with Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, the first Indigenous secretary, during a visit to the Otmulgee Mounds, highlighting the sacredness of the land and the mutual understanding of its importance for healing and reclaiming Indigenous heritage. Rivas concluded her talk by emphasizing the healing power of the land and the progress made in Macon, Georgia, where the tribal flag now permanently flies over City Hall. This act symbolizes the reclamation of Indigenous presence and culture in an area from which they were once forcibly removed, underscoring the ongoing journey towards healing and empowerment for Indigenous communities.

Episode Show Notes

In a part of the United States with more than 17,000 years of human history, cultural preservation advocate Tracie Revis is working to turn the Ocmulgee Mounds into Georgia's first national park and preserve. This park would be co-managed by the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, bringing the tribal voice back to an area they were forcibly removed from 200 years ago. Revis explores the complex feelings of caring for this land and shows how it's fostering healing in return.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_02: TED Audio Collective. You're listening to TED Talks Daily.I'm Elise Hugh.When Tracy Rivas spoke at TED Women 2023, she was standing on the land of her ancestors, a comforting and complicated feeling.In her talk, the cultural preservation advocate reflects on what it means for Indigenous people to walk on and care for the land that has nurtured them and how we can all nurture the land in return.After the break. Support for TED Talks Daily comes from Capital One Bank.With no fees or minimums, banking with Capital One is the easiest decision in the history of decisions.Even easier than deciding to listen to another episode of your favorite podcast.And with no overdraft fees, is it even a decision? That's banking reimagined.What's in your wallet?Terms apply.See CapitalOne.com slash bank.Capital One N.A.Member FDIC. Support for TED Talks Daily comes from Talking Transitions, a new podcast series brought to you by the EY organization and Foresight Climate and Energy.Talking Transitions looks at how the shift to a decarbonized economy holds within it several transitions across sectors, geographies and timelines and the effects on three key areas, energy, financial services and government. The Talking Transitions podcast is out now.Download today from wherever you get your podcasts or visit TalkingTransitions.com to find out more. Support for TED Talks Daily is from Progressive, home of the Name Your Price tool.You can say how much you want to pay for car insurance and they'll show you coverage options that fit your budget.It's easy to start a quote.Visit Progressive.com to get started.Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates.Price and coverage match limited by state law. SPEAKER_01: Hey everyone, I'm Dan Kortler, the host of TED Climate, where we unpack the problems and solutions of climate change.This season on the show, we get into some big ideas that make us optimistic about the future.Next up, how optimism itself can empower us to take on climate change. SPEAKER_00: I don't believe we will solve this crisis until we mobilize mindsets. SPEAKER_01: Check out TED Climate on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. SPEAKER_04: In February of 2021, I landed in Atlanta, Georgia.To be back in Georgia, the ancestral homelands of my people gave me very mixed emotions.At that time, I was living in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where I was serving as chief of staff to the principal chief of the Muscogee Creek Nation, the tribe who's indigenous to this area. And we were in Georgia that day for a meeting in Macon at the Otmulgee Mounds.This area of Macon grew up along the beautiful Otmulgee River.This area has over 17,000 years of human history and was the former capital city of our tribal towns, the Atlanta of its day. Now, you would think that to be back in the homelands would bring feelings of peace and joy.But for many of us, there is still a deep-rooted hurt connected to this land, a hurt that comes from knowing that your family were forcibly required to leave their homes.Yet everywhere you go in this state, you see our words, our language, that serve as a blueprint to this state, etched on this landscape. Words like Tawalaiga or Dawalaigata, Taibi or Dabi, Kawita, Muskogee, Otmulgee. They serve as a whisper from our ancestors who were once here. Good morning.My name is Tracy Rivas.I am a Yuchi woman and of the Muscogee Creek Nation.My Yuchi name is Sahe Safani.I'm Dathla, a wolf clan, and come from the Polkat Ceremonial Ground.And you are all on my family's ancestral lands.Lands that I and others are working to reclaim. Now, all too often, indigenous stories often have stories of colonization and forced removal. The Trail of Tears, or the Road of Misery, removed tens of thousands of indigenous people from their ancestral lands. The violence of the 1830s Indian Removal Act did not end when we made it into Oklahoma.And for many of us, removal is not that far removed.Its impact has stretched throughout generations. My grandmother, my father, my aunts and uncles were all sent to the government-run Indian boarding schools.My grandmother, whose first language was Yuchi, was only allowed to speak English in these schools and had to relearn her native tongue as an adult.Now, to be clear, we call these buildings schools, but they really serve as a place to silence the community and to steal the future culture from generations. And as the first generation in my family to not have been sent to these government-run schools, I still did not escape the impacts of this trauma.But back to Georgia. So that day, we were at the Otmulgee Mounds National Historical Park, and we began to walk out to one of the mound sites.And as we cross a bridge, immediately, my heart skips a beat, and I smell a medicine or a plant that we still use today in our annual ceremonies, our iyapane, or our green corn. And immediately, I am transformed, because I know in that moment that my ancestors are still here. And it was like taking a black-and-white photo and turning it into color.It was vibrant and real, and it was now. And as we begin to walk out to another mound site, I hear a voice inside of me that says, what would it feel like to ever live back in these lands, to be here in the homeland?And as we walk a little further into another mound site, I hear another voice that says, we need to create a relationship with this community, and we need to heal together.Fast forward one year later, I am now living in Macon, Georgia. I proudly serve as the director of advocacy to the Otmogi National Park and Preserve Initiative.I work every day to bring the tribal voice back to these lands and to make my nation, my tribe, a co-manager, all while creating Georgia's first national park and preserve. In September of 2022, the Otmulgee Mounds had its first visit ever from a Secretary of the Interior, who happened to be Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Indigenous secretary. And that day, she's in Georgia to look at some land that we had just acquired, and we were donating toward the expansion of the park. And as we go to look at this piece of land that is a very sacred piece of land, it was slated for industrialization.This land that was very sacred had been raped, overmined, stripped all the way down to the silt. And that day, I watched the secretary bend down and place her hand on the ground on an erosion scar.And it was in that moment that I knew that she understood what I had come to understand.And as we began to walk back, she says, they are still here.Your ancestors are still here.And the land will bring back who and what it needs to heal it.To which I can only reply, yes, ma'am.Yes, ma'am. If my journey has taught me anything, it's that if you take care of this land, it will take care of you. this land that brought me home.In the state of Georgia, we have zero federally recognized tribes.But in the city of Macon, where we have now created a relationship, we are seeing ourselves beyond the landscape.As we reclaim our names and our words, we are seeing ourselves in a part of the culture.Recently, we passed legislation in the city that requires that our tribal flag, our sovereign flag, permanently fly over City Hall.Thank you. and a land that we were never meant to return, this is extremely powerful.Today, as we continue to heal a community, this land is healing us.And with that, I say thank you. 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