Morongo Celebrates One-Year Anniversary of Historic Supreme Court Victory for Native Children, Families, and Tribal Sovereignty

Tribes assembled at the former St. Boniface Indian School and Cemetery to recognize the landmark ruling affirming the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).

Morongo Tribal leaders and elders accept a resolution from state Assemblyman James Ramos.

(BANNING, CALIF. June 15, 2024) The Morongo Band of Mission Indians gathered with tribal members from across the Inland Empire at the ruins of the St. Boniface Indian School and cemetery to celebrate the one-year anniversary of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that affirmed the constitutionality of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).

In a ceremony imbued with renewal and resilience, tribal members recognized the June 15, 2023 victory for tribes, tribal families, and Indian children when the Supreme Court overwhelmingly rejected arguments that sought to dismantle ICWA and undermine tribal sovereignty. Morongo was one of five tribes in the nation who defended ICWA before the Supreme Court.

Morongo Tribal Chairman Charles Martin discusses the importance of the Indian Child Welfare Act at an event celebrating the one-year anniversary of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding this crucial civil rights legislation.
Morongo Tribal Councilmember Mary Ann Andreas recounts her memories of attending the former St. Boniface Indian School in Banning at an event celebrating the one-year anniversary of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding the Indian Child Welfare Act.

“The watershed Supreme Court decision was a momentous victory for tribes, tribal sovereignty, and the best interests of Indian children,” said Morongo Tribal Chairman Charles Martin. “It protected Native American culture and heritage, and it guaranteed that tribes will continue to have a voice in our children’s future.”

Before Congress passed ICWA in 1978, an estimated one-third of all Native American children were being removed from their parents, extended families and tribal communities by state child welfare and private adoption agencies – even when safe homes with relatives were available. ICWA sought to end these devastating practices.

Morongo Tribal Elder Ernest Siva provides a blessing for the ICWA Day celebration at the former St. Boniface Indian School in Banning.
Kawiya Bird Singers from the Aqua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians help celebrate ICWA Day.

St. Boniface was one of the 367 Indian Boarding Schools that operated in the U.S. between 1860 and 1978 under federal policies of forced assimilation that sought to eliminate Indian people and culture. Studies show that by 1926, more than 80% of Indigenous school-age children were attending boarding schools run by the federal government or religious organizations.

“As we honor the importance of ICWA and the Supreme Court decision, we should pause to honor the victims, survivors, and descendants of Indian boarding schools,” said Morongo Tribal Councilmember Mary Ann Andreas, a former St. Boniface student. “We should acknowledge the generational trauma of these federal policies and we should remember the children buried here who did not have the protections of ICWA, and the parents and tribes who lost their children.”

The St. Boniface school site, cemetery and the rubble of the former Catholic church are being transferred to Morongo in perpetuity for care and preservation.

California Tribal Families Coalition Legal Director Kimberly Cluff discusses the path forward for ICWA.
Tribal members from Morongo and across the state take turns watering an olive tree planted at the former St. Boniface Indian School in Banning as a symbol of their commitment to nurturing and protecting Native children.

The tribal celebration included the planting of an olive tree among the rows of olive trees that have grown at the school for generations. A procession of tribal members from Morongo and other tribes took turns watering the tree as a powerful reminder of their commitment to nurturing and protecting Native children.

“This tree symbolizes new life, new hope, and the enduring resilience of our people. It symbolizes our ongoing obligation to care for future generations, to safeguard the wellbeing of Native families and to protect tribal sovereignty,” Chairman Martin said.

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