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Members of the Native American coalition Apache Stronghold hold protest cards ahead of formally asking the Supreme Court to overturn an earlier ruling allowing the development of the Resolution Copper mine in Oak Flat, Ariz., outside the court in Washington Sept. 11, 2024. (OSV News photo/Piroschka van de Wouw, Reuters)

Indigenous coalition asks Supreme Court to stop mine threatening sacred site

September 12, 2024
By Kate Scanlon
OSV News
Filed Under: News, Racial Justice, Religious Freedom, Supreme Court, World News

WASHINGTON (OSV News) — A coalition of Western Apache people, along with other Native American and non-Indigenous supporters, under the banner of the non-profit Apache Stronghold, asked the U.S. Supreme Court Sept. 11 to protect their sacred site at Oak Flat, Ariz., from destruction by a copper mining giant after a federal appeals court rejected their request.

Oak Flat in Tonto National Forest — about 70 miles outside of Phoenix — is considered a sacred site by the region’s Indigenous peoples and is on the National Register of Historic Places. However, after the discovery of copper deposits on the land, in December 2014, Congress authorized the U.S. Forest Service to swap the land for other sites with Resolution Copper, a foreign-owned mining company, and lifted a mining ban on Oak Flat.

An environmental impact report mandated by the National Environmental Protection Act estimated that mining the site would result in a crater nearly 2 miles in diameter and about 800 to 1,000 feet deep.

Members of the Native American coalition Apache Stronghold hold protest cards ahead of formally asking the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn an earlier ruling allowing the development of the Resolution Copper mine at Oak Flat, Ariz., outside the court in Washington, Sept. 11, 2024. (OSV News photo/Piroschka van de Wouw, Reuters)

In March, a divided 9th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a request in Apache Stronghold v. United States, to stop the federal transfer of Oak Flat to Resolution Copper. Apache Stronghold argued the site has long been home to Indigenous religious ceremonies and mining the land would destroy it. The appellate court ruled the Religious Freedom Restoration Act did not protect the group, as they were not being coerced by the government to violate their beliefs.

The group previously signaled it would ask the Supreme Court to intervene, arguing the destruction of their religious site, which cannot be replaced, would place a substantial burden on their religious practice, in violation of that law.

“The question in the case is whether the complete destruction of a sacred site where religious practices take place — that can’t take place anywhere else — whether that is a burden on religious exercise that triggers religious freedom protections,” Joe Davis, senior counsel at Becket, a Washington-based religious liberty law firm representing Apache Stronghold, told OSV News.

Davis cited the lower court’s closely divided ruling as a reason the Supreme Court should consider the case.

“Five judges dissented and said that this was a tragic mistake — that, of course, it’s a substantial burden to completely destroy a sacred site — and so, the government needs to be able to provide a really good justification for doing that,” he said.

The case is reminiscent of “incursions on Native American religious freedom in the 19th century,” Davis said.

“But today we have a federal law called the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, a statute passed by Congress intended to provide very broad protection for religious freedom, and it has provided very broad protection for lots of different groups since it was enacted in the 1990s,” Davis said. “This case is really sort of the first major test of whether that statute protects Native American religious freedom.”

Wendsler Nosie Sr. of Apache Stronghold said in a statement, “Oak Flat is our Mt. Sinai — the most sacred place where generations of Apache have come to connect with our Creator, our faith, and our land.”

“We pray the Justices will protect Oak Flat,” he said, “and ensure that our place of worship is not treated differently simply because it lacks four walls and a steeple.”

In a statement to the Arizona Republic earlier this year about the case, a spokesperson for Resolution Copper said the project would bring economic benefits to the region.

“For over a decade, we have collaborated and co-designed the mine plan with local, state and federal governments, Native American tribes, local communities, civil organizations and organized labor,” the spokesperson said, adding that the firm would work to ensure that the copper mine is developed “safely, responsibly, and sustainably.”

A broad coalition of religious groups — Muslim, Jewish, and Sikh, as well as Christian groups, including Catholic ones, have supported the Apache group’s case. The Notre Dame Law School Religious Liberty Clinic has also supported the case.

It remains to be seen if the high court will take up the case, but if so, it would likely make that decision known in the fall.

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