TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 6月2日 05時34分


In the Bears Ears region of southeastern Utah, there is an area of winding canyons known by Navajo people as Nahoniti’ino—or the hiding place. American Indians used the landscape to elude U.S. military troops in 1864, as thousands were being marched by gunpoint down to Fort Sumner in New Mexico. Hundreds died from hunger and exhaustion in what became known as the Long Walk, a brutal chapter that five tribes highlight in a lawsuit they recently filed against President Trump. Tribes worked for years to have the area in the #BearsEars region designated as a national monument, with hopes that it would preserve the artifact-laden landscape and give tribes more control over its management. President Obama fulfilled that desire in late 2016, as he was leaving office. When Trump took over, he initiated an unprecedented review of 27 national monuments—which often upset locals who dislike restrictions on how such land can be used—and decided in December to shrink the Bears Ears National Monument by 85%. Opponents of the monument celebrated, while critics argued that it had essentially been abolished. Royden Teeasyatoh, 26, a local tour guide in Monument Valley, runs stables and gives horseback tours to tourists throughout the area. Photograph by @ryshorosky for TIME


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