E-Book Overview
For generations, the Ojibwe bands of northern Wisconsin have spearfished spawning walleyed pike in the springtime. The bands reserved hunting, fishing, and gathering rights on the lands that would become the northern third of Wisconsin in treaties signed with the federal government in 1837, 1842, and 1854. Those rights, however, would be ignored by the state of Wisconsin for more than a century. When a federal appeals court in 1983 upheld the bands' off-reservation rights, a deep and far-reaching conflict erupted between the Ojibwe bands and some of their non-Native neighbors. Starting in the mid-1980s, protesters and supporters flocked to the boat landings of lakes being spearfished; Ojibwe spearfisher-men were threatened, stoned, and shot at. Peace and protest rallies, marches, and ceremonies galvanized and rocked the local communities and reservations, and individuals and organizations from across the country poured into northern Wisconsin to take sides in the spearfishing dispute.From the front lines on lakes to tense, behind-the-scenes maneuvering on and off reservations, The Walleye War tells the riveting story of the spearfishing conflict, drawing on the experiences and perspectives of the members of the Lac du Flambeau reservation and an anthropologist who accompanied them on spearfishing expeditions. We learn of the historical roots and cultural significance of spearfishing and off-reservation treaty rights and we see why many modern Ojibwes and non-Natives view them in profoundly different ways. We also come to understand why the Flambeau tribal council and some tribal members disagreed with the spearfishermen and pursued a policy of negotiation with the state to lease the off-reservation treaty rights for fifty million dollars. Fought with rocks and metaphors, The Walleye War is the story of a Native people's struggle for dignity, identity, and self-preservation in the modern world.
E-Book Content
The Walleye War
The Walleye War The Struggle for Ojibwe Spearfishing and Treaty Rights
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larry nesper
University of Nebraska Press : Lincoln and London
䉷 2002 by the University of Nebraska Press. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Nesper, Larry, 1951– The Walleye War : the struggle for Ojibwe spearfishing and treaty rights / Larry Nesper. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 0-8032-3344-2 (cloth : alk. paper) – isbn 0-80328380-6 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Ojibwa Indians – Fishing – Wisconsin. 2. Ojibwa Indians – Legal status, laws, etc. 3. Lac du Flambeau Reservation (Wis.) 4. Wisconsin – Ethnic relations. i. Title. e99.c6 n47 2002 639.2⬘1⬘089973–dc21 2001053181
To the memory of Jerry Maulson And for my parents and daughters
contents
List of Illustrations
ix
Preface
xi
Introduction
1
1. Cultural Topography and Spearfishing
11
2. Anishinaabe Culture
29
3. Hunting, Fishing, and ‘‘Violating’’
43
4. The War Begins
65
5. The War Within
107
6. Spearing in the Four Directions
127
7. Anishinaabe Summer
155
8. The Referendum
183
Conclusion
199
Epilogue
207
Notes
213
Bibliography
221
Index
235
photographs
illustrations
1. Scott Smith sharpens the tines of his fishing spear
1
2. Spearfisher in the prow of a boat
11
3. Modern-day torches
25
4. Tribal member puts tobacco into the lake before spearing
29
5. Boy holding a speared walleye
43
6. The heads of fishing spears