November 23, 2024

How a Native Californian Tribe Is Fighting to Reclaim Its History and Presence in Los Angeles

Reclaim #Reclaim

“As Gabrieleno-Tongva people, we see ourselves as caretakers of our relatives and that includes the plants, the animals, the water, the land, the rocks.”

Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Every Wednesday on the Lost Cultures: Living Legacies podcast, host Alisha Prakash, Travel + Leisure’s associate editorial director, explores a unique cultural identity around the world and shares how you can learn more about it on your travels, too.

Long before California became the 31st state and well before the Spanish stepped foot there, the region was vibrant with life with the Tipai and Quechan peoples to the south, and the Tolowa, Karok, Shasta, and Modoc peoples, among others, to the north. And in between were dozens more indigenous groups, including the Gabrielino-Tongva people thriving in what is now the Los Angeles basin. Though if you haven’t heard of the Gabrielino-Tongva, you’re not alone, as this was by design, through hundreds of years of oppression, discrimination, and forced assimilation.

“In fourth grade, here in California, we learned about the California missions and the native people that were in the missions. And we took a trip to the Southwest Museum, which was one of the only institutions that describe California native peoples. And during that visit, the docent was telling us about Mission Indians and that was a catchall term for native people that are associated with a particular mission. And I had a friend of mine raise her hand and asked the docent, ‘Are there any more, are Mission Indians still alive?’ And the docent said, ‘No, they’re extinct.’ And by then, I had already told everybody in my class that I was Gabrielino. And so they looked at me like, ‘Well, she says that they no longer exist, so how can you be Gabrielino,’” Desiree Martinez, a member of the Gabrielino-Tongva community, archaeologist, and president of Cogstone Resource Management, told Travel + Leisure. “And of course, I knew that we weren’t extinct, and so trying to figure out, ‘How can I combat this?’”

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From that moment on, Martinez dedicated her life to finding and sharing her ancestral truth, navigating her way through oral histories, and gathering together others from the community.

“The way that the Gabrielino-Tongva organized themselves was that there was no overarching chief of every single person that was Gabrielino-Tongva. Instead, you had a leader at the village level and the village was basically an extended family,” Martinez explained. Though that “family,” Martinez explained, extended to the plant and animal kingdom too. “As Gabrieleno-Tongva people, [we] see ourselves as caretakers of our relatives and those relatives include the plants, the animals, the water, the land, the rocks. We have a responsibility, a reciprocal responsibility to them.”

However, by the mid-18th century, the community had already begun to collapse following Spanish colonization, only to further erode during Mexican occupation and finally at the hands of the U.S. government. But, the Gabrielino-Tongva people are both still here and fighting harder than ever for the recognition they deserve.

“We continue to be a part of the greater Los Angeles community, but again, a lot of our history and a lot of our contributions are silenced,” Martinez said. “One of the things that we’re trying to do is to rectify that silencing by working with cultural institutions in state, local, and federal agencies to tell that story. “

To learn more about the Gabrielino-Tongva, listen to Martinez and Prakash dive deep into the culture in Lost Cultures: Living Legacies, available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and everywhere podcasts are available.

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Editor’s Note: Please be mindful that this transcript does not go through our standard editorial process and may contain inaccuracies and grammatical errors.

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