Since before the arrival of the
Bearded Ones(Spanish) the waters of the Gila River has provided for the Akimel
Oothom. The Spanish gave these desert farmers a name which is still used today PIMA.
The Oothom were here in village
clusters and had a well defined irrigation system in place. The Oothom had crops of
corn, beans and squash, grown in abundance. These were the food crops but they also found
cotton and tobacco being cultivated.
Their villages dotted the entire Gila River
Valley, to the East as far as Florence, to the West near the base of the Estrellas or
Komatke as they are called by the Oothom.
The Spanish found these people diverting the
waters of the Gila into canals they had constructed, with the aid of only wood and stone
tools, which extended for miles and miles. Their engineering ability was amazing to these
new arrivals. From the larger canals they had headgate to divert waters to the actual
field of crops. It was a combined effort with each village responsible for the maintenance
of the canal system to their fields and village. Field houses were often put up near the
fields but home was in the main village.
The Oothom people are a peaceful group
and worked together on large scale projects. For instance, in the rebuilding of a house
which was lost by fire, the village would rebuild it in a matter of days. Materials would
be gathered such as posts and beams for the roof and corners, arrowweeds obtained from the
banks of the river. Labor was from the village and food was provided for the noon lunch.
There was no monetary exchange but food was donated by the families and the ladies did the
cooking. Not only did they do the cooking but also helped in the actual house or structure
construction.
It was also a time for visiting with old
friends and relatives. The elders would sit in the shade and watch over the grandchildren.
Plus watch the progress and offer suggestions to the young men who still had much to
learn.
Irrigation continued and there came a time
when the Pee Posh came to the valley seeking refuge from their fellow people. Part of the
Yuman groups along the Colorado they came East to ask permission to live among the Akimel
Oothom. They were welcomed and allowed to live and farm in what is now District
Seven. Today they still coexist and therefor the name for the irrigation Project of today,
the Pima-Maricopa Irrigation Project.
There came a time in the 1800's when the
people who were so generous with their crops to the people crossing their lands to
California began to see changes in the river flow. A good number of the settlers stayed in
the upper Gila River Valley and began to use the waters, which affected the flow
downstream. Due to their diversion upstream the waters finally stopped flowing down in the
lower valley where the Oothom and Pee Posh lived. This major event forced some of
the people to migrate to the Salt River Valley only to suffer the same fate, the eventual
loss of water.
Today the people who now reside within the
reservation of the Gila River Indian Community the Pima and Maricopas, are in the planning
stages of an irrigation project of monumental proportions. The plans are to establish an
irrigation system to deliver water to 146,300 acres. From District 1 in the Blackwater
area to the farms of the Pee Posh in District Seven. It will again take the effort of all
the people to make major decisions, just like in the old days. There will be impacts to
the community members in many ways and they will all have to be addressed. It will take
years to complete but in the end the community members will once again hear the sweet
music of rushing water.
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