By Herald Staff
Hopefully the Friends of Old
Man
House
State Park will accept the Washington State Park Commission’s ruling
and not take legal action over the park’s transfer to the Suquamish
Tribe. Not doing so would show that members still have faith in their
government and much more so, would start a long overdue healing process
between neighbors.
This small piece of land, which has tremendous cultural value to the
tribe, further infected the scab of mistrust that natives and
non-natives in Suquamish had opted to pick at again and again.
Maybe this transfer can serve the deeper purpose of ending this
practice.
Hopefully the tribe will live up to its end of the deal and its promise
to area residents by keeping the park open to the public and well
maintained. Members need to realize that this is one promise they must
keep if they truly hope to create a lasting trust within their
community.
The commission’s decision is an opportunity. It’s not the end of the
road, rather a step forward on a path that has the potential to make a
small parcel of land a source of pride for the entire community —
instead of another reason to pick sides.
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