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Click here to buy this shirt: Nice king Hasbulla 2023 T-shirt, hoodie, v-neck tee
“It has been passed down to some of the strongest women in my family. Now, I have the honor to wear it. On the top is a woodpecker symbolizing the strength of our people.” Photographed by Carlos Jaramillo; Designed by Marcus Correa. But in fact Frank has been protesting all her life because her people’s water and traditional way of life are threatened. Since the Central Valley Project was enacted in the 1930s, 18 dams and reservoirs have been built on major rivers—including Hoopa’s Trinity River—to generate electricity and transport water to the crops are thirsty in neighboring cities. This has caused water shortages in their communities and severely reduced the amount of water remaining in quality. “For the past four or five years, the river has been very bad,” says Frank. “At the end of August, our local news channel posted all these warnings that we must not let our kids or our dogs down there, because drinking that water could kill you.” She considers protecting Hoopa’s primary water source crucial to the survival of her people—and also key to the next generations’ growth: “We are part of the land. , and that’s part of us; When it hurts, we are hurt.
The Trinity River Bridge features a mural painted with a traditional design that represents friendship and family ties. Photographed by Carlos Jaramillo.Frank credits matriarchs in her community for helping her get involved in water conservation at a very young age. At the age of 11, she met Margo Robbins, now chair of the Cultural Fire Management Board at the Hoopa reserve. Together they worked to grow her Hoopa Valley High School Water Defenders Club. In high school, she met Melodie George-Moore, a Hoopa female medicine and language teacher who served as her mentor and cultural educator, along with her aunt Deborah McConnell. Pollution accumulation in the Trinity River. Frank shows that algae growth affects oxygen levels in river water, a symptom of elevated water temperatures. Photographed by Carlos Jaramillo.Frank currently works for Save California Salmon as its youth coordinator, where her current boss, Regina Chichizola, has served as a mentor. is different. She joined the organization when she was 16 years old. “We created a curriculum called ‘Advocating for Water in Californian Indigenous Peoples.’ It’s really a standardized curriculum that’s being taught in about 30 public schools in California,” Frank said. In her new role, she’s also working in the production of events like Hoopa’s Fish Fair, where she will travel to schools and educate young people about the cultural importance of salmon. However, Frank’s most impressive work to date is fighting with her community to remove the Hoopa Valley Reserve’s Trinity and Klamath dams. “This will be the largest dam decommissioning project in American history,” Frank said. “The permits are now in the hands of the tribe; we have local engineers designing the demolition of dams.” Removing the dams will help restore healthy fish populations and is expected to improve the health of the lower river, which is part of the route Chinook salmon take from the ocean to their upstream spawning grounds. their source. Melodie Moore, Hoopa Medicine Woman.
Photographed by Carlos Jaramillo; Styled by Marcus Correa.Danielle Rey Frank has understood from an early age that the water in her community matters. It was her cultural lifeline. “The Trinity River flows through the heart of the Hoopa Indian Reservation and our house was beautiful—it was built around the river,” says Frank. Frank grew up catching salmon in the river and performing the boat dance rituals of her Hoopa culture, where “we performed our boat dances across the river in canoes wearing regal dress,” Frank said. “It was a world renewal ceremony. It aims to balance the good and the bad in the world.” “My great-grandmother made this hat for her daughter. It is made of willow sticks and witch hazel sticks. The willow tree is actually found along the [Trinity River]. The hat is really special to me, because it is a family heirloom.”
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