Embrace the Truth and Honor Our Ohlone Ancestors |
As Ohlone, we believe that honesty and respect should guide our claims to identity and territory. Our ancestors valued honesty in all aspects of life and demanded that others respect known territorial boundaries. In the past, deliberate deceit and the violation of territorial boundaries were severely punished, sometimes by death. In addition, we should be vigilant about the veracity of the information we share because the dissemination of inaccurate information inevitably creates tension in the Ohlone community and leads to misinformation in the broader public.
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So in the end it does matter that we tell the truth, that we make claims based on what we do know rather than on what we would like to be true. Our interests should be guided by Ohlone principles and goals, such as honoring all of our Ohlone ancestors, preserving Ohlone culture, and sharing an accurate account of our history. When we make false claims in order to garner attention, to acquire land or financial resources, or to assert one Ohlone group’s interests above others, then we serve our interests not the truth, not the public good, and certainly not the greater Ohlone community. So with truth and honor as guiding principles, and in order to be clear about the relationship between identity and territory, I present a short list of questions and answers.
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The original people of what is now San Francisco County we refer to today as the Yelamu. The Yelamu were an independent tribe of the Ramaytush Ohlone peoples. The southern boundary of their tribal territory was fairly consistent with the current San Francisco/San Mateo county line. There are no known living descendants of the Yelamu. Only descendants of the Ramaytush Ohlone have ancestors who were born in what is now San Francisco County; however, our ancestral village of origin was located in Pacifica, in what is now San Mateo County.
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The original peoples of the San Francisco Peninsula were and are referred to as Ramaytush, which is the Chochenyo word meaning "people of the west." The Ramaytush spoke a dialect of San Francisco Bay Costanoan language, which was one of three dialects, including Chochenyo and Tamyen. There were six Costanoan languages in total: Karkin, San Francisco Bay (Chochenyo, Tamyen, and Ramaytush), Awaswas, Mutsun, Rumsen, and Chalon.
Of the original, approximately 1500 to 2,000 people who inhabited the San Francisco Peninsula prior to the Portola Expedition in 1769, only one lineage is known to have survived. Their descendants comprise the four branches of the Ramaytush Ohlone peoples today.
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