L.A. mayor joins Native Americans in solstice celebration and prayer for COVID dead

Chatsworth, CA - December 21: Alan Salazar, a Chumash and Tataviam elder, blows sacred tobacco smoke at a Native American prayers held in honor of winter solstice, the shortest day of the year, at Chatsworth Nature Reserve in Chatsworth, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Alan Salazar, an elder in the Fernandeño Tataviam tribe, blows sacred tobacco smoke Tuesday during Native American prayers to honor the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year, at Chatsworth Nature Reserve. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

The earthy smell of burning sage filled the air Tuesday morning as dozens of Native Americans and city officials led by Mayor Eric Garcetti gathered at a west San Fernando Valley nature preserve to honor the winter solstice and pray for those who perished in the COVID-19 pandemic.

During a blessing ceremony held in a glade of century-old oaks at the Chatsworth Nature Preserve, Garcetti stood with hands clasped and eyes closed at the edge of a prayer circle as Alan Salazar, an elder in the Fernandeño Tataviam tribe, wafted sage smoke over him with a fan of eagle feathers.

“This is a day to give thanks to Mother Earth,” Salazar said, “and a day to pay off debts and make amends to people you’re angry with.”

Later, Garcetti shared a prayer of his own with those in attendance. “We’ve lost 27,000 souls — more than that now,” he said, referring to the number of people who have died in Los Angeles County due to the ongoing pandemic. “So, my prayer is for this city to be safe. I don’t want to bury one more Angeleno.”

Bernice Cooke, a Fernandeño Tataviam tribal elder, makes a sacred tobacco offering at Chatsworth Nature Reserve.
Los Angeles officials led by Mayor Eric Garcetti, left, and Native American leaders watch as Bernice Cooke, a Fernandeño Tataviam tribal elder, makes a sacred tobacco offering in honor of the winter solstice at Chatsworth Nature Reserve in Chatsworth. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

The unusual, hastily organized event was billed as a “community wellness gathering” co-hosted by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, which owns the 1,325-acre property, and the Fernandeño Tataviam Band of Mission Indians and Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians.

The winter solstice, the shortest day of the year, is when the Northern Hemisphere of the Earth is tilted as far away from the sun as possible during the year. In Los Angeles, it was at 7:59 a.m. Tuesday.

The event was not just about sacred celestial phenomena, however. It came at a time when Los Angeles is formally developing strategies to increase diversity and compensation equity at all levels of the city workforce, and correct harms that its educational systems have perpetrated against minority students including Native Americans.

In October, Garcetti announced the beginning of a process to rename downtown’s La Plaza Park, which has been informally known as Father Serra Park. In collaboration with Councilmember Mitch O’Farrell, an Indigenous cultural easement will also be created to give local tribal communities priority access to the park for the practice of traditional ceremonies.

The Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education earlier this year unanimously voted to dedicate $10 million to support tribal organizations. The money is intended to help address critical student service needs related to academic achievement in the district’s coronavirus recovery effort and to ensure that schools are places that affirm their unique linguistic, cultural, and historical backgrounds.

Miguel Luna and his daughters attend a Native American winter solstice prayer ceremony.
Miguel Luna with his two daughters Jairo Luna, 8, and Olivia Luna, 10, attend a Native American winter solstice prayer ceremony Tuesday at the Chatsworth Nature Preserve. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Against a backdrop of rocky hills and twisted oaks, political leaders including state Sen. Henry Stern, chairman of the Natural Resources and Water Committee; O’Farrell; Los Angeles City Councilmember John Lee; and DWP Board President Cynthia McClain-Hill each suggested, in turns at a podium, that the time had come to return at least some of the land and water taken from Native Americans whose ancestors occupied Los Angeles County since time immemorial.

For Rudy Ortega Jr., president of the Fernandeño Tataviam tribe, which has 860 members, that kind of talk was long overdue. His ancestors fought to retain their family lineages within geographic regions until the lands were overtaken by Anglo American expansion.

Now, the tribal members are facing the long and expensive process of gaining federal recognition of their Native American status — a step needed to establish a land base, a measure of sovereignty and to qualify for assistance with healthcare, education and protection of sacred sites.

With that goal in mind, the tribe has been actively identifying various parcels it might one day seek to call its own again. Among them is Chatsworth Reservoir.

“The notion of taking back land that was once ours is not new,” Ortega said, “but it is new to this administration, and its leadership seems open to it.”

Beyond that, he said, “My father, on behalf of the tribe, in 1970 asked for the Chatsworth preserve area.”

The tribe’s inquiries about gaining control of the preserve have stirred concern among some locals who fear the acquisition might be a back door to building a casino.

Ortega wouldn’t rule that out under certain conditions at some future date. “Whatever the tribal leaders decide to do to improve our economy is up to them.”

But Marty Adams, general manager and chief engineer at the DWP, said handing over control of the preserve is out of the question.

“There’s a general sense of interest on the part of the city in finding open spaces that we could return to the tribes,” he said. “Here at Chatsworth preserve, however, we’re not talking about transferring ownership.”

“The discussions have been more along the line of, perhaps, providing them with an easement,” he added, “designed to provide them with greater access, or setting aside space for a fire pit for traditional ceremonies.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.