Can national parks tourists help compensate displaced tribes?


The rocky trail crunched and crackled under Chase Iron Eyes’ shoes as he traced a path earlier this week through Bear Butte State Park in South Dakota, a place to which he’s regularly returned since he was a young boy raised on the Standing Rock Reservation.

Iron Eyes, a 46-year-old lawyer and Indigenous rights activist, was 9 when a medicine man taught him traditions he’s maintained since, in the wake of the tribe’s annual sun dance ceremony at the park. Distinguished by its towering igneous rock formation, the site remains sacred to multiple tribal nations, including the Lakota and Cheyenne.

“A lot of different tribal nations conduct their fasting ceremony or vision-questing ceremony here,” Iron Eyes said by phone as he walked. “My grandmother used to bring me here when I was tiny.”

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