Lying in the heart of the Black Hills, the majestic Pe Sla is one of the few ceremonial sites of the Lakota virtually untouched by commercial expansion. Next month, however, the land “owned” by the Reynolds family goes up for sale to the highest bidders. (PHOTO COURTESY/RIVEREARTH.COM, via Native Sun News)


By Jesse Abernathy, Native Sun News Editor

RAPID CITY – A Native American spiritual refuge in the heart of the Black Hills continues to face utter decimation.

Almost 2,000 acres of the land known as “Pe Sla” by the area’s original inhabitants – the Lakota – are slated to be auctioned off on Aug. 25. The move would potentially open up the scenic, pristine prairie to development by non-Native Americans, spelling the end of one of the last quiet vestiges of traditional Lakota worship in the Black Hills, or Paha Sapa.

Translated to English, “Pe Sla” means “Old Baldy,” a reference to the sprawling prairie’s sudden but natural juxtaposition against the heavy forest cover of Paha Sapa. The 4,000-acre rolling expanse of hills and meadows is situated approximately 25 miles due west of Rapid City and is primarily undeveloped private ranchland, with a portion being public land managed by the U.S. Forest Service.

The culturally significant mecca is also currently the subject of a road-improvement project initiated by Pennington County commissioners in 2004. South Rochford Road, which cuts a curved path through the center of Pe Sla from the town of Rochford to the Deerfield Lake recreation area, is being considered for paving, realignment and drainage-structure additions. Known as the South Rochford Road Project, the proposed improvements to the 12-mile stretch of gravel road are necessary to facilitate better year-round access to Rochford from Deerfield Lake, officials say.

Through a joint effort with the South Dakota Department of Transportation and Pennington County, the Federal Highway Administration is in the process of preparing a South Rochford Road Project environmental impact statement (EIS). In addition to the potential environmental effects of an upgrade, according to state Transportation Department Environmental Manager Terry Keller, the administration is examining the possible cultural effects of the three road project alternatives under consideration: taking no action, improving the existing alignment, and making improvements to a new alignment.

“(The alternatives) have to compete against each other to see which is the best one,” Keller told Native Sun News in April. And “one of the alternatives that has to be considered all the way through is to do nothing because there are times when doing nothing is the best option for the environment.”

The projected completion date of the study is late summer 2014.
Leonard and Margaret Reynolds, whose predecessors bestowed the family name upon Pe Sla, currently own the tract of land up for sale. The open plain is referred to as “Reynolds Prairie” within non-Native American circles.

The Hill City couple did not respond to a request for comment.

For centuries before European invasion, the Lakota held their Wiping of the Tears ceremony undisturbed at Pe Sla. The sacred ceremony was performed every spring and helped the Oyate as well as the land, or Maka Ina (earth), cleanse and rejuvenate.

This entry was posted on Thursday, July 12th, 2012 at 8:09 am and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

9 comments so far

Anita
 1 

I’ve read that Silver Springs in Florida was also a sacred site. ALL sacred should be left for their original purpose and not developed.

July 14th, 2012 at 10:12 pm
Barbara Renick
 2 

VERY disturbing news. The Lakota need to act NOW! Make noise via tribal resolutions, newspaper articles, and national media on the impending destruction. The R and D presidential candidates need to hear from the Lakota and others on the devastation this will cause.

July 15th, 2012 at 7:25 am
Carey Mayfield
 3 

This is wrong

July 15th, 2012 at 11:36 am
Christina Shipley (Towoda Pita)
 4 

One more means of greediness. It’s all about making the quick almighty dollar. First off the truth is the Reynolds family doesnt actually own the land. Never did! It was never theirs to sell in the first place.Their ancestors stole the land.It’s always been the Lakota People’s Sacred territory to protect for Creator. Isn’t there still laws in the United States about selling stolen merchandise? I’m betting the Lakota Oyate could get a lawsuit together against selling stolen merchandise and involving the Native American Religious Freedom Act!!! So where do the “suppossed land owners” think their kids/grandkids etc.. are gonna live in the future when there is nothing left for them to eat , drink or breathe because their ancestors let commerce destroy all the sacred lands,natural resources and animals homelands ? Just so they could make a few extra bucks short term. They can’t spend that money when they are dead! They need to be thinking about the long term affects of their decisions and how many people it will affect in the long run. Ecspecially, the future generations! Guarantee they would’nt be making the same decisions to the property if a Christian church was there on that land.They need to be thinking about that. No Respect for Your fellow man or their beliefs. What happened to Live and Let Live?If they were any decent kind of human beings they could donate the land back to the Original land owners our Native People where as the Reynolds could then get huge tax breaks, the recognition they seek or they could protect the land and it’s inhabitants by turning it into like a natural wildlife sanctuary so noone could ever touch it to put development on it.That would be the decent and wise thing to do. Mitakuye Oyasin!

July 30th, 2012 at 6:43 am
Stacie Carlson
 5 

Ha! Right after this statement by Ken Salazar on Facebook:

Ken Salazar

The HEARTH Act underscores President Obama’s commitment to empower Indian nations and strengthen their economies by expanding opportunities for tribal governments. This legislation complements the work we are doing at Interior to undertake the most comprehensive reforms of Indian land leasing regulations in more than 50 years. These parallel efforts will have a real impact for individuals and families who want to own a home or build a business – generating investment, new jobs and revenues.

Salazar, Laverdure Praise President Obama’s Signing of HEARTH Act to Restore Tribal Control of Land.
http://www.doi.gov
Salazar, Laverdure Praise President Obama’s Signing of HEARTH Act to Restore Tribal Control of Land Leasing.

Like · · Share · 152 · 7 hours ago ·

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July 30th, 2012 at 10:32 pm
Dave Joyce
 6 

The Black Hills are a beautiful and Sacred area… They need to be left undisturbed and as pristine as possible… there are plenty of other places the have been wrecked already… build your subdivisions and strip malls there…. leave this place be!!

July 31st, 2012 at 6:16 am
Pam Hughes
 7 

Please just send money, no one needs anymore editorializing. Ms. Rave has already done that.
Thank you.

August 13th, 2012 at 12:21 pm
rezinate
 8 

What is being lost in all this is labeling it a
lakota site in the singular-other nations hold it to be the same and claimed it as their land long before the lakota were driven westward by the Ojibwe.

August 23rd, 2012 at 8:32 pm
Julie Reynolds
 9 

No relations to the American Reynolds! What has happened about Pe Sla, what is the latest news?

September 19th, 2012 at 9:01 pm

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