Racist Phrase Found Etched on Native American Petroglyphs in Utah

 


Long before the establishment of Utah’s tourist-magnet Arches and Canyonlands National Parks, Native American groups such as the Ancestral Puebloans, Fremont and Utes lived in and passed through the area, adorning its red sandstone with pictographs and petroglyphs. In the mere 15 percent of the region they’ve formally documented, archaeologists have identified hundreds of rock art sites.

After enduring for about a millennium a four-panel collection of petroglyphs known as the “Birthing Rock” was damaged earlier this week, when vandals scrawled a white supremacist phrase and other obscene graffiti on it.

Birthing Rock, also known as the “Birthing Scene,” is a boulder off of a popular recreational road outside of the city of Moab. Petroglyphs are images that are scratched or otherwise carved into rock, as opposed to painted pictographs.

According to an interpretive sign at the site, images inscribed on the rock include a woman giving birth, anthropomorphic figures, bear tracks, centipedes and bighorn sheep, as well as abstract designs. Dating petroglyphs is difficult, but archaeologists estimate that they were etched by the region’s Indigenous inhabitants between 700 and 2,500 years ago.

According to Fox 13 news, late Sunday or early Monday, vandals wrote “white power” across Birthing Rock’s triangle-shaped anthropomorphic figures, misspelling and crossing out their first attempt at the word “white”. They also drew graphic images above a snakelike line and scribbled sexual vulgarities on the rock. A scratched-on slang term for women’s genitals now appears on a section with depictions of four-legged creatures and circular designs. Per KSL.com’s Carter Williams, only one panel escaped unscathed.

“It was very disturbing,” Dorena Martineau, cultural resource director for the Paiute Tribe of Utah, tells Smithsonian magazine. “We don’t call it art—it’s a [form of] writing. It’s what our people put out there, in the past, even though we can’t read it anymore.”

The vandalism of this childbirth scene, he explains, is another act of all-too-prevalent violence against Native women, albeit in a slightly different form.

According to the National Park Service, ‘Between 500 and 1300 A.D., during what’s known as the Formative Era, the Fremont people lived in what is now Utah and western Colorado, hunting and gathering as well as practicing agriculture. Around the same time, the Ancestral Puebloans, whom white archaeologists labeled the Anasazi, built pueblos and farmed in the Four Corners region (Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico). For reasons that remain mysterious, the Ancestral Puebloans and forebears of today’s Pueblo tribes, abandoned sites like Mesa Verde about 700 years ago. By 1500 A.D., “all traces of Fremont culture” had vanished from the archaeological records.

The first physical traces of the Ute people who still reside in the region as the Paiute, Shoshone and Ute tribes date to around the time of the Formative Era tribes’ departure.

The damage to Birthing Rock isn’t an isolated incident. Instead, it falls into a nationwide pattern of disrespect for Native American cultural heritage sites. In recent months, vandals have defaced pictographs in Oregon and Cherokee and Creek rock carvings in Georgia. Such damage is “shockingly common” around Utah, too, Elizabeth Hora, an archaeologist at the state’s historic preservation office, tells Seth Boster of the Colorado Springs Gazette.

In late March, Colorado rock climber Richard Gilbert damaged another set of Moab petroglyphs by drilling bolts into the face of an area called the “Sunshine Wall.” He recorded the new route on a popular climbing site, dismissing the millennium-old markings as “graffiti.” After other climbers publicly exposed the damage he’d done to the carvings, Gilbert filled the bolt holes and met with BLM authorities.

Gilbert’s drilled holes and the racist words at the Birthing Rock are “both examples of how power, privilege, and access can be used against Indigenous peoples and their land,” says Baca. “One might have been malicious, the other [Gilbert’s route] might have been well-intentioned, but they still, regardless, have yielded results in this kind of violence.”

Both incidents, Baca says, reflect an insidious colonial idea:

Many people have no idea that one, we exist - Native people are still here; we’re still in our land - and two, that we are disproportionally affected by violence of all kinds, including this kind of offensive and insulting action. But taken to its logical extreme, it is an objectification of Indigenous people. They are seeing us as things of the past, not people of the present. So historically, everything that was done to Indigenous people, things like genocide, removal, dispossession, warfare and just plain old invisibility, has been due to the objectification of Indigenous people. We haven’t been seen as full human beings—so when you’re seen as a thing, it’s [really] easy for people to break and damage it and not have a second thought on it.

 

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