This Feb. 7, 2012, photo shows a cross on a grave at the Wounded Knee National Historic landmark in South Dakota. James Czywczynski, 75, is trying to sell a 40-acre fraction of the landmark for $3.9 million to the Oglala Sioux Tribe. ASSOCIATED PRESS.
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) – One of the country’s poorest Native American tribes wants to buy a historically significant piece of land where 300 of their ancestors were killed, but tribal leaders say the nearly $4 million price tag for a property appraised at less than $7,000 is just too much. James Czywczynski is trying to sell a 40-acre fraction of the Wounded Knee National Historic Landmark on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to the Oglala Sioux Tribe. The land sits adjacent to a gravesite where about 150 of the 300 Lakota men, women and children killed by the 7th Cavalry in 1890 are buried. Czywczynski, whose family has owned the property since 1968, recently gave the tribe an ultimatum: purchase the land for $3.9 million or he will open up bidding to non-Native Americans. He said he has been trying to sell the land to the tribe for years. The ultimatum comes right before the tribe is poised to receive about $20 million from the Cobell lawsuit— a $3.4 billion settlement stemming from a class-action lawsuit filed over American Indian land royalties mismanaged by the government for more than a century. “I think it’s ridiculous that he’s putting a price on it like that,” said Kevin Yellow Bird Steele, a Tribal Councilor from the Wounded Knee district, who thinks Czywczynski is putting pressure on the tribe because of the impending money. “We need to come down to earth and be realistic. We’re not rich. We’re not a rich tribe.” Czywczynski insists the site’s historical significance adds value.
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