This final reports present the comprehensive findings of the Truth, Restoration, and Education Commission (TREC) of Colorado, which, over the last two years, in collaboration with the People of the Sacred Land (PSL), has diligently examined the widely untold history of Colorado in order to uncover the causes of widespread land displacement and the genocide of Native peoples in the state. The TREC’s primary focus is on restoring the status of Tribal Nations in modern-day Colorado, and establishing an environment where Native communities in the state can grow and succeed. In the wake of irreparable harms, this work is dedicated to the restoration of Indigeneity, relationality, and wellness for the next seven generations.
The TREC report provides a comprehensive examination of the extensive damage endured by Native peoples due to forced relocation, illegal seizure of land, violations of human rights, acts of violence, warfare, deceptive practices, and other illicit actions perpetrated by the state of Colorado, its citizens, and the US government and federal agents over the past 170 years. The TREC report outlines the processes by which the extermination transpired and pinpoints the entities accountable for implementing harmful policies, agreements, and laws that had detrimental effects on American Indian populations.
Introduction; Legal and political history of the Apache of Oklahoma, Cheyenne & Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma, Comanche, Kiowa, Northern Arapaho, Northern Cheyenne, Shoshone, Ute Tribe of Utah, Southern Ute, and Ute Mountain Ute.
Key Finding: The TREC identified these 10 Tribal Nations as having aboriginal title, congressional title, and treaty title to lands within Colorado. Each report explores land cessions – legal, illegal, and coerced – and the underlying circumstances that precipitated such events.
Historic Economic Loss Assessment (HELA) focuses on the quantitative impacts of Euro-American expansion into Colorado (particularly upon the above tribes) including how this theft became the original source of capital that built Colorado.
Key Findings:
A comprehensive overview of the history, evolution and current state of Indian Education in Colorado from K-12 to higher education.
Key Findings:
Every section of the full report includes specific recommendations for the State of Colorado, US Government, and/or individual institutions; however, the following is a list of prioritized recommendations that focus on restoration, reparations, and reconciliation for the State of Colorado:
We recommend that CSU return the remaining 19,000 acres of land of the original land grant to those Tribal Nations that it was illegally taken from.
We recommend that the State of Colorado and its Department of Natural Resources honor the treaties of Tribal Nations by restoring the Tribes’ hunting and fishing rights within the boundaries of the State of Colorado.
People of the Sacred Land is a Colorado-based nonprofit working to uncover the truth about American Indian history in the state. The purpose of the People of Sacred Land is to support American Indian people who are citizens of the State of Colorado to preserve their culture, language, and ways of life that were intimately tied to the land.
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