Tribal Government
The tribal government was formed in 1975 and is headquartered inCultural Life
Resighini Rancheria tribal members participate in traditional dances such as the Brush Dance, as well as the Jump Dance and White Deer Skin Dance. The Brush Dance is a ceremony held to heal a sick child or to pray for a long, healthy life for the child. Families come together around a dance pit, beginning on a Wednesday where the medicine doctor, the child and the child's family begin. Actual dancing begin on Thursday evening with two dances. Both females and males dance. The Jump Dance lasts for 10 days. The Jump Dance was revived in 1984. The dance is held to prevent sickness, to bring happiness, and to restore balance in the universe. The dancers wear elaborate outfits, including headdresses with 70 redheaded woodpecker scalps. In addition to the headdress, the dancers also wear dentalia shell necklaces and a deerskin skirt and they carry a Jump Dance basket in the right hand. The White Deerskin Dance is generally held around same time as the Jump Dance. Canoes are used to transport dances. It seems dancers carry poles with deer heads draped by deerskins. This dance provides protection to the people. This dance was also recently revived. Tribal members also engage in the traditions of storytelling, gathering seaweed, mussels and other marine resources for basket making, and subsistence fishing for salmon, trout and eel and other species.Fishing Controversy
The Resighini rancheria is completely enclosed within the Yurok reservation. As a result, fishing conflicts have arisen with the Yurok tribe. The Yurok tribe is the largest in California with 6311 members. The Yurok tribe claims jurisdiction over Resighini lands and interferes with tribal members’ ability to fish at the Klamath River. In May 2016, the Yurok tribe filed a federal lawsuit to stop members of the Resighini Rancheria from gillnet fishing off of the Klamath River. According to the Yurok tribe, in 1991, the Hoopa-Yurok Settlement Act divided lands into the Yurok and the Hoopa reservations. The Resighini Rancheria was offered the option of joining the Yurok tribe in order to have access to Yurok lands and access to fishing. Instead, the tribal members opted for a $15,000 per person payout. The Yurok argue that the Resighini gave up their fishing rights when they made this agreement. The Resighini members argue that they retained their fishing rights and that the Yurok are unjustly interfering with their land and water use. The Yurok further argue that they are in the midst of a massive conservation effort, and the Resighini are interfering in their attempts to save the fish in the Klamath River."Fish War" Lost Coast OutlookEducation
The rancherĂa is served by theReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Resighini Rancheria Yurok Federally recognized tribes in the United States Native American tribes in California American Indian reservations in California Native Americans in Del Norte County, California