Current:Home > ContactWith bison herds and ancestral seeds, Indigenous communities embrace food sovereignty -Elevate Profit Vision
With bison herds and ancestral seeds, Indigenous communities embrace food sovereignty
View
Date:2025-04-12 04:15:00
BOZEMAN, Mont. — Behind American Indian Hall on the Montana State University campus, ancient life is growing.
Six-foot-tall corn plants tower over large green squash and black-and-yellow sunflowers. Around the perimeter, stalks of sweetgrass grow. The seeds for some of these plants grew for millennia in Native Americans' gardens along the upper Missouri River.
It's one of several Native American ancestral gardens growing in the Bozeman area, totaling about an acre. Though small, the garden is part of a larger, multifaceted effort around the country to promote "food sovereignty" for reservations and tribal members off reservation, and to reclaim aspects of Native American food and culture that flourished in North America for thousands of years before the arrival of European settlers.
Restoring bison to reservations, developing community food gardens with ancestral seeds, understanding and collecting wild fruits and vegetables, and learning how to cook tasty meals with traditional ingredients are all part of the movement.
"We are learning to care for plant knowledge, growing Indigenous gardens, cultivating ancestral seeds, really old seeds from our relatives the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara: corn, beans, squash, and sunflowers," said Jill Falcon Ramaker, an assistant professor of community nutrition and sustainable food systems at Montana State. She is a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Anishinaabe.
"A lot of what we are doing here at the university is cultural knowledge regeneration," she said.
But it also has a very practical application: to provide healthier, cheaper, and more reliable food supplies for reservations, which are often a long way from supermarkets, and where processed foods have helped produce an epidemic of diabetes and heart disease.
Many reservations are food deserts where prices are high and processed food is often easier to come by than fresh food. The Montana Food Distribution Study, a 2020 paper funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, found that the median cost in the state of a collection of items typically purchased at a grocery store is 23% higher on a reservation than off.
"With food sovereignty we are looking at the ability to put that healthy food and ancestral foods which we used to survive for thousands of years, putting those foods back on the table," Ramaker said. What that means exactly can vary by region, depending on the traditional food sources, from wild rice in the Midwest to salmon on the Pacific coast.
Central to the effort, especially in Montana, are bison, also referred to as buffalo. In 2014, 13 Native nations from eight reservations in the U.S. and Canada came together to sign the Buffalo Treaty, an agreement to return bison to 6.3 million acres that sought "to welcome BUFFALO to once again live among us as CREATOR intended by doing everything within our means so WE and BUFFALO will once again live together to nurture each other culturally and spiritually."
Nearly a decade later, dozens of tribes have buffalo herds, including all seven reservations in Montana.
The buffalo-centered food system was a success for thousands of years, according to Ramaker. It wasn't a hand-to-mouth existence, she wrote in an article for Montana State, but a "knowledge of a vast landscape, including an intimate understanding of animals, plants, season, and climate, passed down for millennia and retained as a matter of life and death."
Ramaker directs both the Montana Indigenous Food Sovereignty Initiative and a regional program, the Buffalo Nations Food Systems Initiative, or BNFSI — a collaboration with the Native American Studies Department and College of Education, Health and Human Development at Montana State.
With bison meat at the center of the efforts, the BNFSI is working to bring other foods from the northern Plains Native American diet in line with modern palates.
The BNFSI has received a $5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to carry out that work, in partnership with Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College in New Town, N.D.
Life on reservations is partly to blame for many Native people eating processed foods, Ramaker said. Food aid from the federal government, known as the Commodity Supplemental Food Program, has long been shipped to reservations in the form of boxes full of packaged foods.
"We were forced onto the reservations, where there was replacement food sent by the government — white flour, white sugar, canned meat, salt, and baking powder," she said.
Processed foods contribute to chronic inflammation, which in turn leads to heart disease, cancer, and diabetes, which occurs at three times the rate in Native Americans as it does in white people.
Studies show that people's mental and physical health declines when they consume a processed food diet. "In the last decade there's a growing amount of research on the impact of good nutrition on suicide ideation, attempts, and completion," said KayAnn Miller, co-executive director of the Montana Partnership to End Childhood Hunger in Bozeman, who is also involved with the BNFSI.
All Native American reservations in Montana now have community gardens, and there are at least eight different gardens on the Flathead Reservation north of Missoula, home to the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. The tribe is teaching members to raise vegetables, some of it made into soup that is delivered to tribal elders. This year members grew 5 tons of produce to be given away.
Ancestral seeds are part of the effort. Each year the BNFSI sends out 200 packets of seeds for ancestral crops to Indigenous people in Montana.
Creating foods that appeal to contemporary tastes is critical to the project. The BNFSI is working with Sean Sherman, the "Sioux Chef," to turn corn, meat, and other Native foods into appealing dishes.
Sherman founded the award-winning Owamni restaurant in Minneapolis and in 2020 opened the Indigenous Food Lab, through his nonprofit, North American Traditional Indigenous Food Systems. The lab, in downtown Minneapolis, is also a restaurant and an education and training center that creates dishes using only Indigenous foods from across the country — no dairy, cane sugar, wheat flour, beef, chicken, or other ingredients from what he calls the colonizers.
"We're not cooking like it's 1491," Sherman said last year on "Fresh Air," referring to the period before European colonization. "We're not a museum piece or something like that. We're trying to evolve the food into the future, using as much of the knowledge from our ancestors that we can understand and just applying it to the modern world."
Among his signature dishes are bison pot roast with hominy and roast turkey with a berry-mint sauce and black walnuts.
In consultation with Sherman, Montana State University is building the country's second Indigenous food lab, which will be housed in a new $29 million building with a state-of-the-art kitchen, Ramaker said. It will open next year and expand the ongoing work creating recipes, holding cooking workshops, feeding MSU's more than 800 Native students, and preparing cooking videos.
Angelina Toineeta, who is Crow, is studying the BNFSI at Montana State as part of her major in agriculture. "Growing these gardens really stuck out to me," she said. "Native American agriculture is something we've lost over the years, and I want to help bring that back."
KFF Health News, formerly known as Kaiser Health News (KHN), is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
veryGood! (77446)
Related
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- United flight forced to return to Houston airport after engine catches fire shortly after takeoff
- I Shop Fashion for a Living, and These Are the Hidden Gems From ASOS I Predict Will Sell out ASAP
- Federal inquiry into abuse within the Southern Baptist Convention ends with no charges
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Texas wildfires: Map shows scope of devastation, learn how you can help those impacted
- Luck strikes twice for Kentucky couple who lost, then found, winning lottery ticket
- More Black women say abortion is their top issue in the 2024 election, a survey finds
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Save $130 on a Kitchenaid Stand Mixer and Elevate Your Cooking Game
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Show stopper: Rare bird sighting prompts Fountains of Bellagio to pause shows Tuesday
- Mississippi lawmakers moving to crack down on machine gun conversion devices
- Lance Bass on aging, fatherhood: 'I need to stop pretending I'm 21'
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Gal Gadot Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby No. 4 With Husband Jaron Varsano
- Can AI help me pack? Tips for using ChatGPT, other chatbots for daily tasks
- Critics slam posthumous Gabriel García Márquez book published by sons against his wishes
Recommendation
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Iowa's Caitlin Clark becomes first female athlete to have exclusive deal with Panini
Funko Pop figures go to the chapel: Immortalize your marriage with these cute toys
Social media outages hurt small businesses -- so it’s important to have a backup plan
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Oscars producers promise cameos and surprises for Sunday’s (1 hour earlier) show
Celebrate National Dress Day with Lulus’ Buy 3-Get-1 Free Sale, Featuring Picks as Low as $19
North Carolina schools chief loses primary to home-schooling parent critical of ‘radical agendas’