Who Can Save the Grand Canyon?
A holy war is being fought over a proposal to build a $500 million commercial development, on the rim of America's natural treasure
By David Roberts
Twelve miles in on the rutted dirt road we pull over in a dry wash and get out of our vehicles. We are on the western edge of the Navajo Reservation in Arizona, not far from the sandstone rim where the Grand Canyon plunges 3,000 feet to the confluence of the Colorado and Little Colorado rivers. The bare plateau across which we are driving is treeless, almost desolate. The region, nearly uninhabited today, was for centuries home to some of the most traditional of the Diné, as Navajos call the People.
Our guide to this outback, Delores Wilson, grew up on the plateau and knows every wrinkle of its landscape. In summer, when we herded the sheep on our way home, Wilson says, we used to stop here and cool off in the shade. I had two sisters, six brothers and countless cousins. We all herded sheep when we were kids.
Four miles farther in, we stop by the half-collapsed ruins of a small building. This was my grandmothers hogan, says Wilson. Until I was 7 or 8, we all slept in there, all 10 or 15 of my family, because we didnt have a home of our own. Packed together like sardines, to stay warm in winter. I can still hear the sheep wailing for the lambs to come home in the evening.
Our next stop is another six miles west, beside a nondescript bedrock shelf. This is where I had my puberty ceremony, says Wilson. I had to run in all four directions. The other kids ran after me. If they passed me, theyd get old before I did.
Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/who-can-save-the-grand-canyon-180954329/#6skejwbUzQb97GqD.99