The Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe of Washington held a healing ceremony at the site of an ancient village that was uncovered by a state construction project.
About 300 people, including members of other tribes and non-Natives, attended the ceremony on Sunday. It was meant to bring the community together.
The state halted work at the Tse-whit-zen village last month but the tribe has endured criticism for opposing work there. Fliers are being passed around urging a boycott of the tribe's fishing business.
The 22-acre site site dates back 2,700 years and was occupied up until the early 1900s. More than 300 tribal ancestors have been found.
Get the Story:
A ceremony of healing
(The Seattle Times 1/16)
300 attend `healing' at former graving yard construction site (The Peninsula Daily News 1/16)
Fliers urging Elwha Fish boycott legal, federal prosecutors say (The Peninsula Daily News 1/16)
Peninsula's legislative delegation puts graving yard at top of priority list (The Peninsula Daily News 1/16)
Relevant Links:
Tse-Whit-Zen Village News - http://tse-whit-zen.elwha.nsn.us
Lower
Elwha Klallam Tribe - http://www.elwha.org
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Editorial: Work at Klallam tribal village should
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Washington tribe wants
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Healing ceremony held at Klallam village
Monday, January 17, 2005
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