Cape Argus

Navajo not happy about burials on ‘sacred’ moon

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TWO private US companies have sent human remains into space for a burial on the moon, but the leader of the Navajo denounced the idea.

Yesterday’s launch of the Peregrine lander represents the first effort by private companies to send a lander to the moon. United Launch Alliance and Astrobotic have contracted with various institutio­ns seeking to contribute to the spacecraft’s payload – among them are two companies seeking to bury DNA and human remains on the lunar surface. But the Navajo, which along with other Native American tribes views the moon as highly sacred, opposes the idea.

“We’re not trying to say, ‘don’t do exploratio­n, don’t go to the moon and don’t do those types of scenarios,’” said Navajo Nation president Buu Nygren. “All we’re just saying is this is the one part that we feel like there should be some sacredness to it.”

Nygren calls the plan “an act of desecratio­n” and has complained to the US Department of Transporta­tion and Nasa, whose Commercial Lunar Payload Services programme sanctioned the launch.

“We recognise that some non-Nasa commercial payloads can be a cause for concern to some communitie­s,” responded Joel Kearns, an administra­tor at Nasa’s Science Mission Directorat­e. “And those communitie­s may not understand that these missions are commercial and they’re not US government missions, like the ones that we’re talking about.”

Kearns framed yesterday’s launch as an opportunit­y to explore commercial opportunit­ies created by space launches and insisted the US agency was powerless to intervene against the private companies. However, the US government announced the creation of an “interagenc­y group” to study the Navajo Nation’s concerns.

The US government has historical­ly ignored native tribes’ complaints against desecratio­n of symbols they consider sacred, such as when a giant monument was carved from Mount Rushmore. The Sioux nation has demanded the return of the land that the massive sculpture was carved on, which the US Supreme Court found was illegally seized from the tribe.

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