Welcome
to
Discover
Yakama
Learn about
the worlds most fertile valley, the yakama indian nation, visit
an indian winterlodge, rent a teepee for the weekend, visit the mighty
columbia river.
The Yakama Indian Reservation is comprised
of 1,371,918 acres.
Although the Yakamas ceded 10,828,800 acres
of ancestral homeland to the U.S. government, they reserved their right
to hunt, fish, access and use traditional cultural sites, gather traditional
foods and medicines, pasture stock and have water in sufficient quantity
and quality in all of their "usual and accustomed places" within this ceded
area.
The Yakama Reservation is primarily agricultural
on the valley floor, range or grazing in the foothills and forested to
the west and south.
The city of Toppenish is located east of the
Yakama Indian Nation's headquarters in the eastern part of the Reservation.
The Yakama Reservation covers 1,573 square
miles in the south-central Washington counties of Klickitat and Yakima.
This territory offers many and varied food sources such as fishing, hunting,
and gathering of seasonal wild roots and berries.
The members of the Yakama Nation have historically
depended on the Columbia River and the salmon for their sustenance.
Traditional routes for subsistence were, and
continue to be on the Columbia River, starting above Priest Rapids to the
traditional fishing site on Celilo Falls, and extending west on the lower
Columbia River beyond the Klickitat River tributary.
The Yakama Reservation and its members are
governed by the Yakama Nation Tribal Council. Self-government was re-established
among the Yakamas in 1935.
Since the Indian Nation was made up of 14 bands
and tribes, each group selected a representative, forming the modern tribal
government. In 1947 a rule change provided for election by the General
Council of half of the Tribal Council members every two years for four-year
terms. All enrolled Yakamas become voting members of the General Council
on their eighteenth birthday.