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Description

A Fantastic Plea For An Indian Homeland

Fascinating and densely packed map illustrating ‘Lilawaste Lake Country Refuge-To-Be’ – a protected area set aside for use by Native American peoples in the United States. The words :Lila waste" means "best" in the Lakota language.

This provocative map employs a variety of text and symbols to outline the proposed organization of the Native American refuge, one of several idealized homelands to be established across the U.S. No detail is left out.  Everything from boating regulations and firearms use to ecological management and visitor access is explained within the map.

The map's focal point is indigenous culture, agriculture, and conservation methods.  Even the cartographic details incorporate a mix of Western and Native American symbology and visual mechanisms. Nevertheless, the map reflects the mindset of the era.  The upper left suggests "aboriginal innovations as SPECIAL NOVELTY ATTRACTIONS" and numerous blocks of text reflect contemporary racial concerns between white people and ‘Injuns.’

The map and accompanying text are designed to be deliberately provocative.  The creator’s name, Iktomi Witkotkoka, is almost certainly a pen name, as Iktomi is a trickster spirit in the mythology of the Lakota people. The map was included as part of America Needs Indians!, written by Itkomi Lila Sika and published in 1937 by Bradford-Robinson. The under-appreciated volume, also written in the antagonistic style of the trickster Itkomi, is an incredible declaration of European/American misdeeds and a powerful statement of the reconciliation necessary to heal the nation’s wounds. The proposed conservation areas, along with indigenous universities, underpinned this process. As described by the National Park Service;

“One manifestation of the change in attitude between Indians and the federal government was a proposal by Lakota Sioux writer Iktomi Lila Sica for the creation of national “Indian-wild life sanctuaries” that would encompass lands surrounding Yellowstone, Glacier, and Wind Cave national parks as well as Badlands National Monument. These “wilderness area[s] for Indians and wild life” were a throwback to ideas espoused by George Catlin a century before, and more recently to Black Elk, a contemporary Sioux leader.”