Field Trip: Glacier National Park
Post Reports
The Washington Post
4.4 • 5.1K Ratings
🗓️ 6 July 2023
⏱️ 58 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Today on “Post Reports,” we join The Post’s Lillian Cunningham on her journey through the messy past and uncertain future of America’s most awe-inspiring places: the national parks. Next stop? Glacier.
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All 63 national parks sit on Indigenous ancestral lands. They’re places Native Americans called home for thousands of years. But for more than 100 years, these places have also been public lands, intended to benefit all Americans. Sometimes that puts Native American tribes and the National Park Service into conflict.
That’s particularly true in Glacier National Park, where members of the Blackfeet have fought to preserve their deep connection to the land in the nearly 130 years since the tribe ceded it to the U.S. government.
In this episode of “Field Trip,” Washington Post reporter Lillian Cunningham takes listeners on an immersive journey, as she drives off the park’s Going-to-the-Sun Road and onto the Blackfeet reservation. Because to get inside the heart of Glacier today, you have to go outside it.
We’ll hear the story of how Ed DesRosier challenged park officials for the right to tell his people’s story inside Glacier; meet two women, Rosalyn LaPier and Theda New Breast, who practice their families’ traditions on both sides of the park border; and talk to Ervin Carlson about a plan, years in the making, to return free-roaming buffalo to the park.
We’ll also take a detour to Washington, D.C., where we’ll hear from Charles Sams III, the first Native American to helm the National Park Service, about what the future of collaboration between parks and tribes could look like.
You can see incredible photos of Glacier and find more on the national parks here. Subscribe to Field Trip here or wherever you're listening to this podcast.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hi, it's Alahe Azadi. |
| 0:04.5 | It's Thursday, July 6, and today we are going to share another episode of our new podcast |
| 0:10.4 | series, Field Trip. |
| 0:12.4 | It's a show that digs into the messy past and uncertain future of the national parks. |
| 0:17.9 | This time, we're going to Glacier and the surrounding tribal lands. |
| 0:22.1 | A place when's teaming with a majestic animal that, as of last week, is now roaming free |
| 0:27.9 | again for the first time in a century. |
| 0:31.4 | This is thanks to a unique partnership, years in the making. |
| 0:35.4 | It's a fascinating and powerful story, and I really wanted to share it with you. |
| 0:40.2 | Tomorrow, post reports will be back to its usual programming, but if you want to hear more |
| 0:44.8 | from Field Trip, we'll include a link to it in our show notes, or you can look up Field |
| 0:49.0 | Trip wherever you listen to podcasts. |
| 0:51.6 | Okay, here's the show. |
| 0:57.9 | It's around sunrise, late summer. |
| 1:08.8 | I'm in the car with my colleagues, audio producers, Bishop Sand, and Emma Talkov. |
| 1:13.7 | And we're about to drive one of the most famous roads in the country, the going to the |
| 1:18.7 | sunroad in Montana's Glacier National Park. |
| 1:21.9 | We're now just scanning the trees for bears, podcasts. |
| 1:30.1 | I love this time of day. |
| 1:32.3 | I feel like it's one place to show their true selves without all the bustle and clutter |
| 1:37.8 | of the day. |
| 1:39.5 | My whole life, I've been dragging people out of bed to watch the sunrise. |
... |
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