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Indian Rock
Students at Indian
Rock/Native Garden
Indian Rock
Restoration
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Restoration
Text by Deborah Small
Images by Dave Fleishman and Deborah Small
Rogets Thesaurus: restoration
N. restoration, returning, giving back, retrocession 787n. restitution;
redress, amends reparation, reparations 941n. atonement; finding
again, getting back, retrieval, recovery 786n. taking; refoundation,
reestablishment, reinstallation, reinvestment, restauration, recall,
replacement, reinstatement, reinstallment, rehabilitation, replanting,
reforestation, reclamation, rescue, salvage, redemption, ransom,
salvation 668n. deliverance; reconstitution, reerection, rebuilding,
reformation, reconstruction, reorganization, readjustment, remodeling
654n. reformism
There is a sense of urgency to the Indian Rock Native Garden Project,
as I imagine there must be with all cultural preservation projects:
record the language before the last native speaker dies; document
the medicinal uses of plants before the knowledge disappears with
the passing of a particularly gifted healer; record the stories
that teach us how to live with dignity and grace, in balance rather
than at war with ourselves and the environment that sustains us.
This urgency for many of us, I imagine, is compounded by the recognition
that NO region is safe from development. The Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge, for example, which sits on reserves of oil, has been a continuous
target the the past and current Bush administrations.
As we learn to care about the loss of habitats and the endangerment
of species, we also begin to comprehend the tenuousness and fragility
of all environmental protections. As we learn to care about the
diminution of languages and the diminishment of cultures, we comprehend
that cultural preservaton is about preserving the vitality of all
cultures.
The IRNG project helps us learn to celebrate the canyon sunflower
and to deplore its immanent destruction, to hold, simultaneously,
a sense of wonder and a sense of outrage.
The Indian Rock Native Garden Project is about creating the possibilities
for change, and thereby, the possibilities for hope. With our many
mentors and consultants, we have witnessed the San Luis Rey Bands
profound affinity for the land. We have observed the specificity
and sophistication of indigenous land management practicestheir
use of controlled burns, the pruning of plant stands, the coppicing
of plant limbs to encourage straight growthall of which reflect
a deep understanding of the ecology.
The Indian Rock Native Garden Project is now a part of a growing
network of indigenous elders and band members, linguists, rock art
specialists, native garden landscapers, Pendleton archaeologists,
all working to insure the preservation, restoration, and continuity
of Luiseño and other indigenous biocultural traditions.
As a part of this vital network, the Indian Rock Native Garden Project
is an acknowledgement of our responsibility to ALL species with
whom we share this particular part of the planet.
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