The Hopi: Native American Nations by Liz Sonneborn, consultant Tim Topper, Blastoff Discovery, Bellwether Media, Minneapolis, MN, 2024.
The Hopi are a people from Northeast Arizona. Their history dates back at least until 1150 when the city Oraibi was established, the oldest continuously inhabited city in the United States. They live in a harsh arid desert environment with springs and rain water to sustain them. The developed a unique culture to deal with the hardship based on balance, community and peace. They raise corn and cotton. They weave baskets. They gather nuts and berries and wild fruit and raise turkeys. They built pueblos of stone and mud. They also built kivas for religious ceremonies.
In 1540 the Spaniars arrived looking for gold. The Spaniards held them in subjugation for the next 140 years until Po'pay lead them in revolt in 1680. In 1821 they became part f Mexico and in 1848 part of the United States. In 1882 their reservation was established. In 1894 Hope elders were imprisoned because they refused to send their children to boarding schools. They struggled to keep their culture alive. Children were forced by the government to Indian schools. The Hopi peo0ple have insisted on keeping their cultre and language and have been able to do so.
Famous people of the Hopi include Po'Pay, Nampeyo who is known for pottery and Tsökahovi (Lewis) Tewanima who is a long distance runner and won a silver medal in the 1912 Olympics.
The tribe is facing problems with the left overs of now abandoned coal kines, and with the lack of water.







