Community Corner

Pink Floyd Icon Champions Shinnecock Nation In Quest For Rights

"I'm onboard for this and will be for as long as there is breath in my body." Roger Waters of Pink Floyd vows to support Shinnecock Nation.

Roger Waters of Pink Floyd toured the Shinnecock Nation and vowed to support efforts to stop a lawsuit over a monument sign that has sparked ire.
Roger Waters of Pink Floyd toured the Shinnecock Nation and vowed to support efforts to stop a lawsuit over a monument sign that has sparked ire. (Courtesy Matthew Ballard.)

SOUTHAMPTON, NY — Members of the Shinnecock Nation had a special guest Tuesday when Roger Waters of Pink Floyd dropped by to show his support for their fight to attain economic advancement.

Waters, Tela Troge of the Shinnecock Nation said, "has been interested in assisting Rebecca Genia in her Shinnecock advocacy work for some time. Mr. Waters made an extremely generous donation towards sponsoring Sovereignty Camp 2020. Today he spent the day with the Warriors of the Sunrise, toured the Shinnecock Territory, saw our beautiful beaches, and visited Ma's House BIPOC Art Studio."

During "Sovereignty Camp 2020," members of the Shinnecock Nation are holding a month-long occupation of original aboriginal territory on Sunrise Highway in Hampton Bays to shine a light on the need for the tribe's economic advancement.

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"Ma's House," is a Shinnecock family home being transformed into a creative space for artists.

The Sovereignty camp event is taking place at the unbuilt large monument sign on Sunrise Highway in Hampton Bays — across the highway, the first large electronic sign sparked controversy when initially erected — and begins officially on Sunday at sunrise.

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Waters, Troge said, "has promised to help the Warriors of the Sunrise in their request that New York State drop its baseless lawsuit against the Shinnecock monument sign."

Waters, who has a home on the South Fork, spoke to members of the Shinnecock Nation during a recent virtual teach-in for Sovereignty Camp held on Zoom.

"If I come to the Sovereignty Camp and you look me in the eyes and you ask me how I would feel I can speak for every single person here . . ." Waters said to the group participating in the event. "We would be so angry, and it's an anger that obviously the Shinnecock Nation has been living with for hundreds of years. And so the fact that it's not simmering over and exploding is a kind of miracle of self-restraint upon your part."

Times are changing, Waters said; it's no longer 1940, 1950, 1870 or 1880. "There is a global movement now taking place where people are beginning to take the relationship of the Colonial settlers, which is us, with the Indigenous people whose lands we settled over those hundreds of years, seriously. . . " The Shinnecock Nation and slaves, too, were treated poorly, he said. "It sickens us all. But these are new days. Each fresh day that dawns now, there are a few more of us and our voice is growing, thank goodness."

Waters thanked Genia for the documentary, "Conscience Point," which chronicles the struggles of the Shinnecock Indian Nation to preserve ancient burial grounds in the shadow of towering mega-mansions, golf clubs and wrecking balls.

"I will support Sovereignty Camp and we will do whatever we can to help you," Waters said. "I'm not going anywhere. I'm onboard for this and will be for as long as there is breath in my body."

The Warriors of the Sunrise was formed "in response to the Shinnecock Nation's struggle to provide resources to its tribal members due to hundreds of years of violent settler colonization and land theft, are in need of supplies and camp allies for a month-long occupation of our aboriginal territory at Canoe Place. We are sick of New York State standing in the way of our economic development. We need to feed our people!" organizers said.

Troge and Matthew Ballard have also organized a GoFundMe, with a goal of raising $25,000 help purchase supplies needed for the month-long stay.

Donations will be used for items including a generator, recreational vehicles, and all-terrain vehicles. The ATVs are necessary for elders to travel the camp, and the intention for the RV is to use it on an ongoing basis to support other Indigenous land struggles across Turtle Island, especially since the launch of the #LandBack campaign by the NDN Collective, organizers said.

The Warriors of the Sunrise explained why they decided to organize: "The Shinnecock people have always been hospitable to the colonizers and as a result have faced genocide, land theft, loss of language, poisoned water, and an attack on the inherent right to free trade."

Today, the Shinnecock Nation consists of approximately 1,200 members who live across the world, organizers said.

"Members of the Shinnecock Nation come in every color and have long faced discrimination due to having shared Black ancestry. That discrimination led to an illegal and racist policy decision in the 1930s by the United States Government not to hold an Indian Reorganization Act election at Shinnecock," organizers said.

Since the United States failed to hold an election, under the 2009 United States Supreme Court case Carcieri v. Salazar, the Shinnecock Nation is not eligible to obtain trust land because it was not brought in under the IRA — "for the above reasons of racist policy rather than law," organizers maintain. "Because Shinnecock can not obtain trust land, it can not meaningfully engage in economic development."

The land that the Shinnecock Nation does hold is known as West Woods and the Shinnecock Neck. Separating the two territories is the Shinnecock Hills, "which was stolen by the State of New York and the Town of Southampton from the Shinnecock in 1859," organizers said.

According to Troge: "In 1959, the State of New York granted itself a permanent easement over a portion of the land at West Woods for the purposes of constructing Sunrise Highway. This easement was an illegal taking in violation of the Non-Intercourse Act absent any expressed permission of the United States Congress."

In 2019, the Shinnecock Nation announced plans to build two 61-foot monuments to the Shinnecock Nation in the highway easement area on land known to be Indian land. In response, town and state officials blocked efforts, Troge said.

"At that time, the Warriors of the Sunrise formed in order to create a protective circle around the Shinnecock workers to protect them from harassment and deportation," organizers said.
The Warriors of the Sunrise were successful in the efforts to construct the first of the two monument signs. Upon completion of the first sign, the State of New York sought a temporary restraining order against the Shinnecock Nation.

The State requested that the judge order the monument to be removed; the Judge denied the request, Troge said.

"Despite this, New York maintains its baseless lawsuit against the Shinnecock Nation in an attempt to strangle the Nation's attempts to engage in economic development in order to meet the basic housing, education, and food needs of its tribal members," organizers of the Sovereignty Camp said. "At a time of global pandemic, while the Shinnecock Nation struggles to ensure their people have food, New York State engages in meritless litigation in an attempt to make the Shinnecock Monument unprofitable due to exuberant legal defense fees. The Shinnecock Nation has the right to engage in economic development in order to meet the basic needs of its people."

And, Warriors of the Sunrise said: "Times are bad at Shinnecock due to the Town of Southampton and the State of New York. The grandmothers have no choice but to take action. We do not have adequate housing, food, education or health care."

The group of has demands. On a state level, they are asking for New York to drop its lawsuit against the Shinnecock Nation over the monument; they would like to meet with Gov. Andrew Cuomo at the camp; they want New York State to recognize the Shinnecock Nation's trade and fishing rights; and they want New York State to pass the unmarked Grave Protection legislation.

Townwide, they want officials to utilize Community Preservation Funds to prioritize purchase of land in the Shinnecock Hills; recognize and respect Shinnecock land boundaries; and meet with members of the Shinnecock Nation to discuss paths to "restitution regarding illegal land sales and transfers."

Both the town and state must recognize the rights of the Sovereign Shinnecock Nation to pursue economic advancement, organizers said.

On a national level, the group wants Shinnecock territory declared "Indian Country"; litigation assistance against New York State for "the theft of Shinnecock Hills in 1859"; and they want the government to assist the Shinnecock Nation in acquiring trust land and to "reconcile racist 1930s policies against Shinnecock people."

Southampton Town Supervisor Jay Scheiderman said the town is working to address "substandard housing conditions on the reservation. We are already assisting with addressing food insecurity there. We are also working with Shinnecock leaders on meaningful economic development on the land where the encampment is planned."

"We demand more. Shinnecock Hills Golf Club — You're next!" organizers said.

Those wishing to donate can go to GoFundMe, PayPal or Venmo to @warriorsofthesunrise.

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