Fighting for the Puyallup Tribe Fighting for the Puyallup Tribe

Fighting for the Puyallup Tribe Fighting for the Puyallup Tribe A Memoir

Hardback (28 Jan 2025)

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Publisher's Synopsis

A compelling on-the-ground accountof Native activism in the Northwest

A relentless advocate for Native rights, Ramona Bennett Bill has been involved in the battles waged by the Puyallup and other Northwest tribes around fishing rights, land rights, health, and education for over six decades. This invaluable firsthand account includes stories of the takeover of Fort Lawton as well as events from major Red Power struggles, including Alcatraz, Wounded Knee, and the Trail of Broken Treaties. She shares her experiences at the Puyallup fishing camp established during the Fish War of the 1960s and 1970s, which led to the federal intervention that eventually resulted in the Boldt Decision. She also covers the 1976 occupation of a state-run facility on reservation land and the lobbying that led to the property's return to the tribe.

Bennett Bill served for nearly a dozen years as a Puyallup Tribal Council member and ten as chairwoman, organizing social welfare, education, and enrollment initiatives and championing Native religious freedom. Her advocacy for Native children, especially those who had been adopted out of their community, helped pave the way for the Indian Child Welfare Act. Now in her mid-eighties, she continues to organize for Native rights and environmental justice. The book is full of vivid stories of her fearless testimony in courtrooms and press conferences on issues affecting Indian Country, and of the many friends and comrades she made along the way.

Book information

ISBN: 9780295753508
Publisher: Puyallup Tribe of Indians
Imprint: Puyallup Tribe of Indians
Pub date:
Language: English
Weight: -1g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm