The Chumash of Malibu Speak Out
1 media/PU_2_mtn_19950817_4734_001.jpg 2021-10-11T10:17:51-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e 39590 3 The Southern California chapter of the American Indian Movement (AIM) filed a lawsuit against the City of Malibu for failing to protect Chumash Native American cultural resources. A Malibu landowner complained that he was being charged too much for an archaeological study to be done prior to development of the land he acquired. The City of Malibu relented and granted reduced mitigation measures for the property. The Chumash, in addition to Malibu City’s Archaeologist, were certain that the land contained artifacts and important burial sites from the large Chumash village of Sumo. Read the article “AIM Sues Malibu for Site Approval” for more details (transcript below).[title] AIM sues Malibu over site approval [author]P.G. O’Malley, Staff Writer The Southern California Chapter of the American Indian Movement has filed a lawsuit against Malibu, charging the city with failing to protect Native American cultural resources. The action is the latest development in an escalating controversy that began in autumn 1994, when Malibu property owner Jack Skene complained he was being charged too much--$46,000—for an in-depth archaeological study by locally based Own Clan Consultants. The controversy culminated last month then when Malibu City Council approved reduced mitigation measures for Skene’s property. City Attorney Christi Hogin said the city will fight the suit based on the fact that the Statute of Limitations has run on the original City Council action that allowed Skene the reduced measures. AIM attorney Carol Houck says the suit is based on assertions by City Archaeologist Chester King that Skene’s property contains a site that “may represent he last and best of its kind,” with “artifacts and probably burial sites of tremendous cultural significance to Native Americans.” In a report to the city, King justified his opinion of the value of the site on research done on other known sites in the area and his own investigation of the site surface. King did not respond to requests to be interviewed for this story. Pepperdine archaeologist Dr. Holly Love, who has been following the Skene conflict since the beginning, said, “The only way (King) can make such a claim would be to dig the site. As far as I know, he hasn’t done that. If he has, that means the city archaeologist has been trespassing on private property.” “We do not know about that site in its age or importance,” said Roberta Greenwood, a 30-year veteran of Southern California excavations, including in Malibu and the city archaeologist for San Juan Capistrano. Greenwood maintained there is no way to characterize a potential site without excavating it, despite what anyone might hypothesize from findings of other related or neighboring sites. William Bonner, whom Skene sought for a competitive Phase II bid, also challenged King’s assertion of the site as sacred. “There are clearly artifacts on the surface, but nothing that would indicate it’s the last intact site. Dr. King has a different opinion about the historical consequence (of Native American settlement). I don’t know anyone who would back him up.” [subtitle]‘Got it coming’ Native American A-lil’koy Lotah, secretary of the Malibu Native American Cultural Resources Study Group, has no doubts about the significance of the site, which she says is the last remaining remnant of the Sumo, a Malibu village that reached as far as Point Dume. “It’s sacred because it’s old,” she said. Asked what should be done with the Skene property, Lotah said she didn’t think anyone should be allowed to live on it and that perhaps the city should buy it or Skene should donate it. “I think AIM is doing the right thing. Jack Skene has caused a lot of people hurt. He put native people against each other. He’s got it coming,” she said. plain 2021-10-19T13:32:38-07:00 08/17/1995 Pepperdine University Special Collections and University Archives In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted (This Rights Statement can be used only for copyrighted Items for which the organization making the Item available is the rights-holder or has been explicitly authorized by the rights-holder(s) to allow third parties to use their Work(s) for educational purposes without first obtaining permission.) 34.0387982 , -118.6373951 The Malibu Times Pepperdine University Special Collections and University Archives Azatuhi Babayan 74097555e69815676ea9b222e9e6b3bfcbe131cdThis page has paths:
- 1 2021-10-14T10:02:55-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e Communities Curtis Fletcher 9 Los Angeles has long been multicultural, with peoples of different backgrounds finding a home and a place to create community. The stories told here spotlight communities little featured in traditional narratives of the city and county history. They include activism by the Chumash people, who predate California as a state, seeking to ensure the continuity and visibility of their history in Malibu. It also includes stories of African-American communities, Japanese-American communities, and activists defending the rights of day-laborers and street-vendors. structured_gallery 2021-10-22T11:12:57-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
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Pepperdine University's Special Collections and University Archives maintains several collections of materials related to the history of Los Angeles. The Malibu Historical Collection includes a full run of the Malibu Times newspaper (1946-present), a full run of the the Malibu Surfside News newspaper (1973-present), the John Mazza Collection of Historic Surfboards, historic books related to Malibu and its residents, audio recordings of lectures on Malibu history, and records of the Malibu Water Company, the Rindge Dam, and the Malibu Stage Company. The James Hahn Collection (1990-2005) includes materials from Hahn's years as mayor of Los Angeles and as Los Angeles City Attorney. The Elinor Oswald Collection of Los Angeles Tourism Ephemera includes brochures, pamphlets, and newspaper clippings related to museums, art galleries, and artists in the Los Angeles area. The William S. Banowsky Papers and the M. Norvel Young Papers include materials related to various civic and political events in the Los Angeles area that occurred during their tenures as Pepperdine presidents. The Pepperdine University Archives includes photographs, audio and video, publications, and institutional records that document the history of the institution from its founding in 1937 in South Central Los Angeles, to its move to Malibu in 1972, to the present time.
https://library.pepperdine.edu/collections/special-collections/ structured_gallery 2021-10-19T11:22:17-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e