OAK FLAT, Ariz. — Carrying eagle feathers and chanting prayers, Western Apache runners hit the street on a roughly 80-mile journey this month to attempt to save their sacred land from being fast-tracked by President Donald Trump right into a copper mine. This nationally watched battle, which hinges on spiritual freedom, awaits the U.S. Supreme Court docket.
The prayer run aimed to defend a 6-square-mile piece of land in rural Arizona outdoors of Phoenix known as Chi’chil Biłdagoteel, or Oak Flat, the place tribes have held ceremonies for hundreds of years. The U.S. Forest Service, which owns the location, plans to commerce a portion of it to a foreign-owned mining firm, Decision Copper, in alternate for different environmentally delicate properties.
The battle over Oak Flat traces again 30 years, when prospectors discovered an enormous copper deposit beneath the bottom. The proposed land swap, which Congress authorized in 2014 via a protection spending invoice, has been stalled by three lawsuits.
However on April 17, the Trump administration pushed the undertaking ahead with out ready for the courts. The Forest Service introduced it will problem an environmental evaluation as quickly as June 16, which might pave the best way for the land switch. Trump issued an government order to expedite the Decision Copper mine undertaking, as a part of a broader push to open extra public lands to drilling and mining.
The copper mine could be the biggest in North America, producing as much as 1 / 4 of U.S. copper demand, the firm initiatives. Nevertheless it additionally would destroy most of Oak Flat, forsaking a sinkhole almost 2 miles extensive and as deep because the Eiffel Tower.
Apache Stronghold, a nonprofit that goals to guard sacred lands together with Oak Flat, received a reprieve on Could 9, when U.S. District Choose Steven Logan granted an injunction blocking the land swap whereas the Supreme Court docket considers its case. The excessive courtroom is predicted to determine whether or not to take it by early July.
“The federal government and Resolution Copper have put Oak Flat on death row — they are racing to destroy our spiritual lifeblood and erase our religious traditions forever,” Wendsler Nosie Sr., founding father of Apache Stronghold, mentioned in a press release. “We are grateful the judge stopped this land grab in its tracks so that the Supreme Court has time to protect Oak Flat from destruction.”
Apache Stronghold’s non permanent victory got here after the four-day journey from Oak Flat to the federal courthouse in Phoenix forward of the injunction listening to. The prayer run drew 60 runners, operating in segments. Eighty-five religion teams and 44 tribal nations are supporting Apache Stronghold’s Supreme Court docket enchantment.
The battle over Oak Flat gives a glimpse into environmental, public well being, and spiritual battles which will intensify as Trump prioritizes tapping into home sources of minerals equivalent to copper, a key ingredient for electronics and renewable vitality initiatives. The case additionally might set a authorized precedent for whether or not spiritual freedom grants tribes the proper to hope on ancestral lands outdoors of their reservations.
The Oak Flat case highlights a few of the well being issues that come up when ancestral Native American lands owned by the federal authorities are opened to mining, from bodily sickness — attributable to water and air air pollution — to psychological, religious, and existential misery.
In roadside prayers and rallies alongside the run, members of assorted tribes provided visceral accounts of the hurt they’ve skilled after sacred lands have been tapped for minerals, fossil fuels, and heavy metals. They described assaults on well being, id, faith, and tradition that many known as ongoing genocide.
At Oak Flat Campground, Apache Stronghold supporters gathered for a ceremony earlier than the prayer run started. Runners have been blessed with ashes to guard them on a route that will traverse huge fields of cacti, slim mountain passes, and even two combative drivers on metropolis streets.
Amongst these lacing up trainers was Nizhoni Pike, 24, one in all Nosie’s granddaughters. Pike has a deep connection to Oak Flat, the place her household holds ceremonies and gathers medicinal crops and meals. For Pike, her misery is visceral, quick.
“This fight means so much,” she mentioned.




Oak Flat is the place Pike had her dawn ceremony, a coming-of-age ritual, at age 13. Throughout the ceremony, she constructed her personal wickiup, a standard Apache dome-shaped dwelling product of wooden and thatch from the land. Her physique was painted with white clay, embodying the White Painted Lady, a revered cultural determine. On the finish of a four-day ceremony involving dancing from morning to nighttime, Pike walked to a spring to clean off the clay and return it to the land. Butterflies crammed the air, she recalled. Her household named the realm Nizhoni’s Butterfly Canyon.
The dawn ceremony creates a twine by which girls are endlessly linked to the land the place they got here of age, she mentioned. Tribal elders have advised her that ladies could undergo sickness if the cords are lower.
“I’m really worried for me and the other girls that had their sunrise dances there,” she mentioned.
She already had anxiousness, she mentioned, and it has grown worse due to the drying up and pending destruction of Oak Flat. Pike mentioned when she returned to her butterfly canyon a number of years after her dawn ceremony, the spring was dry and a lifeless turtle floated in a close-by pool. She mentioned she has seen giant cracks within the earth there and previous oak bushes beginning to die.
“I’ve never felt so much pain in my heart or spirit before,” she mentioned.
She and different Apache members attribute the dryness to Decision Copper, which has been pumping water out of a 7,000-foot-deep mining shaft on its adjoining property for years.
In a press release, firm spokesperson Tyson Nansel denied that extracting water at that depth impacts the floor water. He mentioned the corporate treats the eliminated water then provides it away to farmers to develop crops to allow them to “pump less fresh groundwater themselves.” He mentioned the corporate has made important modifications to its proposed mine to “reduce potential impacts on Tribal, social, and cultural interests.”

Alongside the run, supporters gathered for blessings from numerous religion leaders, a few of whom sprinkled them with holy water.
They first stopped within the close by city of Superior, a part of the Copper Triangle, which has a protracted historical past of mining. The mayor there helps the brand new mine, which the corporate has mentioned will create 1,500 jobs throughout its projected 60-year lifespan. However opponents in Superior warned that mining has left the realm with excessive most cancers charges, poisonous dumps, and ghost cities.
Within the metropolis of Mesa, runners stopped at an ancestral web site of the O’odham individuals to obtain assist from two Native leaders with roots there.
Su:ok Chu:vak Fulwilder, a council member of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Neighborhood, mentioned lack of land and id is taking a toll on her individuals. Fulwilder mentioned her tribe suffers from excessive suicide charges, and her personal son took his life in 2022.
“These sacred lands being disturbed — our spirits feel that pain and that anger,” she mentioned.
Different supporters raised issues about water amount and high quality in a time of long-term drought. Decision Copper’s plans to conduct block-cave mining would require almost 250 billion gallons of water and the pure water methods could be “altered forever and, in many cases, destroyed in perpetuity,” in line with a federal environmental affect assertion and hydrology report.
Henry Muñoz, 69, who labored in mines for almost 24 years and is now chair of the Involved Residents and Retired Miners Coalition in Superior, famous that the mine would require scarce water to pipe away poisonous waste and copper focus. The poisonous slurry could be despatched to a tailings web site, he mentioned, the place it will require extra water in order that mud laden with arsenic and sulfur doesn’t blow away. He famous that Decision Copper is owned by international mining firms Rio Tinto and BHP, a lot of the revenue would go abroad.
With cuts to the Environmental Safety Company and mine and employee security companies, Muñoz added, “the company is going to have free rein to do as they please with the environment, and the public won’t have any recourse.”
The prayer run concluded in downtown Phoenix, merging right into a march to the courthouse.




Cadence Hardy, 16, who’s Diné, mentioned she grew up in Black Mesa, Arizona, the place intensive coal mining depleted an aquifer and its springs, deeply affecting Hopi and Diné communities. Her great-grandfather labored in a coal mine there and bought lung illness and most cancers, she mentioned.
She mentioned she’s impressed to assist Apache Stronghold “to stop what happened to my family from happening to their family.”
Within the Could 7 federal courtroom listening to, Victoria Peacey, president of Decision Copper, took the stand, going through a courtroom full of Apache Stronghold supporters, and testified that it will be at the very least 16 years till Oak Flat would start to sink.
Nizhoni Pike later mentioned she felt overwhelmed. Sixteen years is a short while, and the consequence could be enormous, she mentioned. “My ancestors’ history could literally be wiped.”
Within the courtroom, Pike mentioned, she appeared Peacey within the eye.
“Look at me,” Pike recalled pondering. “You are going to destroy me if you destroy Oak Flat.”

If you happen to or somebody you already know could also be experiencing a psychological well being disaster, contact the 988 Suicide & Disaster Lifeline by dialing or texting “988.”