Native American group looks past Alamo disputes and aims to heal — and grow

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Ayala: After years of disputes over the Alamo, Native American group looks to heal and grow

Vanessa Quezada kneels to pray and honor indigenous descendants buried at the Alamo during Native Americans’ annual Sunrise Ceremony on Sept. 7, 2019. In the past, the group was allowed to hold the service inside the Alamo Church. This time, they were barred from doing so. Alamo officials said ceremonies, meetings and receptions inside the church had been prohibited because of structural concerns. The ceremony was held outside the chapel.

Tap Pilam, whose members are lineal descendants of the indigenous people buried at Mission San Antonio de Valero Mission, now known as the Alamo, sued the various defendants for the right to continue their annual religious remembrances in the Alamo Church. The lawsuits also sought a voice for Tap Pilam in deciding how to handle human remains discovered during excavations in Alamo Plaza, which is undergoing an expensive and contentious makeover.

The legal settlement was still being negotiated when I sat down recently with Ramón Vásquez, a Tap Pilam tribal leader and executive director of its nonprofit, AIT-SCM.

As it fought to safeguard thousands of indigenous grave sites, the group’s cultural and educational work continued.The tribal community made even bigger news a few weeks ago when it purchased a $1.2 million property on East Commerce between Hackberry and Pine Streets on the near East Side.

 

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