Other Arms: The Power of a Dual Rights Legal Strategy for the Chamoru People of Guam

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Other Arms: The Power of a Dual Rights Legal Strategy for the Chamoru People of Guam Using the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in U.S. Courts I. INTRODUCTION In Guam, even the dead are dying again. At the time of this writing, 432 human remains—the bones of the ancestors of the indigenous Chamoru people buried some 1,500 years ago 1—sit in a private lab owned by the company, the Guam Okura Hotel, commissioned to do an archeological survey on its premises.2 Some two hundred of these are set for shipment, via parcel post, to an undisclosed American lab for scientific study.3 In boxes marked “fragile,”4 the bones of our ancients remind the Chamoru people of our dispossession. In Guam, hotel development has become synonymous with desecration. According to the Guam Historic Preservation Office, one hundred sixty other graves were desecrated for a swimming pool at the Nikko Hotel.5 Five hundred more were violated at the Hyatt.6 In July 2007, in the ancient village of Gogña,7 an undisclosed number of graves were gutted to pave the way for a proposed sky-rise and mega-shopping compound.8 The sting is sharp. The indigenous people of Guam have a rich tradition of ancestor worship involving the bones of our deceased relatives, particularly skulls.9 In prehistoric times, we buried our dead beneath the family house and, after the flesh had decomposed, usually after a year, we exhumed the skulls, anointed them with coconut oil, laid them in a basket woven from young coconut leaves and placed them on the equivalent of an altar in the house.10 We used these skulls to communicate with the spirits of deceased relatives, usually for the purpose of insuring the success of 1

Telephone Interview with Hope A. Cristobal, Former Guam Senator, Founding Member of the Org. of People for Indigenous Rights & Chairperson of the Coal. for the Prot. of Ancient Cemeteries (Feb. 18, 2007). 2 Id. 3 Id. 4 Id. 5 Id. 6 Id. 7 Id. 8 Id. 9 SCOTT RUSSELL, TIEMPON I MANMOFO’NA: ANCIENT CHAMORRO CULTURE AND HISTORY OF THE NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS 152 (1998). 10 Id. at 153.


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