The Acoma have a casino/hotel/RV park just off I-40, 60 miles west of Albuquerque (ABQ) and that's where we're camped. Trish suggested stopping here and touring the Pueblo. She, wearing her housing consultant hat, worked with the Acoma several years back. We toured the Pueblo and museum yesterday.
The impressive museum is
located just below Sky City.
Making a 180 degree turn from where the above picture was taken,
there's this memorial to the Acoma who served in the US military.
The Acoma have a zero tolerance policy on alcohol: the casino doesn't have a bar and no alcoholic beverages are served anywhere on the premises. I assume this policy extends to the Pueblo itself. Good on 'em say I! Native Americans have low firewater tolerance, something in the genes or chemical makeup, I don't recall exactly. Regardless, it's common knowledge that booze messes them up, so banning it is definitely good policy. BTW, the Acoma are matriarchal: women are head of household and owners of the homes in which they live.
The Sky City mission dates back to 1640. Walls are 10' thick at the base, narrower towards the top. Those walls contain Acoma bodies, planted there by the Spaniards so the Acoma wouldn't destroy the building. Also, they located the altar directly over the village kiva, the Puebloan place of worship. Finally, further endearing themselves to the natives, the Spaniards cut off the right hands of those who refused to acknowledge Catholicism. The treatment of natives in the new world was similar to the Spanish Inquisition in the old world - spreading the fine Christian principles of peace, love, good will and tolerance far and wide.
Happy Trails!
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