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*The expression is in Ichishkiin, a Sahaptin language dialect of the Pacific Northwest.
“Water takes care of everything upon the land: the land itself, the people, us, our foods, our medicines, our roots, our berries, the animals, and the very fish that swim in the waters.”
Clear-cutting of timber damages salmon habitat in numerous ways. Without the shade and root systems provided by trees, the water of spawning grounds overheats and silt and runoff damage or destroy spawning areas.
A Kelly-Springfield logging truck hauls a large fir log along a track-like wooden logging road. Behind the truck are acres of cutover land, ca. 1925. Photograph by J. Wilbur Sandison, courtesy of the PEMCO Webster and Stevens Collection, Museum of History and Industry, Seattle 1983.10.3675.10
The Treaty of Medicine Creek, like others negotiated in the Pacific Northwest in the mid-1850s, guarantees the right to harvest fish, game, and other foods in “usual and accustomed” grounds located outside reservation boundaries.
Medicine Creek Treaty, 1854 National Archives, Washington, D.C.; digitized by Oklahoma State University.
The late Billy Frank Jr. (Nisqually) often said of the depleting salmon runs and the treaty right to half of the harvestable salmon, “Fifty per cent of nothing is nothing.” Unless salmon habitat is restored and protected, the availability of salmon diminishes for everyone.
The clash of cultural values has never been more apparent in how tribal and non-tribal communities view natural resources.