The Magic Gate - Part 4
The Navajo Indian Reservation - Its Art and Culture
Monument Valley
 
Leaving Moab, we drove our Ford south to Monument Valley, Utah/Arizona. After viewing the area made famous by Henry Fonda in the movie Fort Apache and John Wayne in Stagecoach, we stopped at Goulding’s, an historic trading post and tourist lodge. While there, the manager showed us a hand-wrought silver and turquoise belt buckle, recently pawned by a Navajo elder. Mistaking our disinterest for a desire to bargain, he dropped the price to one hundred dollars, which barely covered the value of the silver and turquoise. To us, that was a lot of money, so rather than buying the belt buckle, for about the same price we purchased two hand-loomed Navajo rugs.
Kayenta, Arizona
Beyond the southern end of Monument Valley is the town of Kayenta, Arizona. 
 In the 1960s, Kayenta was desolate, forlorn and seemed forgotten by all
 except its Navajo residents, who represent ninety-four percent of the 
town's population.  Today, as Kayenta's population approaches 9000, the 
city features a McDonald’s, a Burger King and a supermarket.  As a sign 
of the times, the local high school recently installed the only video 
message board within one hundred miles. 
Here is my alternate memory regarding our stop in Monument Valley.  I wonder which version is true?
The Corn People 
 
  
Jim knew a little about Navajo rugs; for instance, 
what made one more valuable than another.  When he entered the trading 
post that morning, he spotted a treasure right away.  It was a handmade 
Navajo rug, featuring corn people on a white background, with a black 
border.  Although the rug was small, the tightness of its weave and the 
depth of its colors made it stand out from the others.  Casually 
fingering the price tag, Jim’s eyes widened when he saw $1000 hand 
lettered on the tag.
As a knot of employees formed around the scene of 
coffee chaos, Jim rolled up the prized rug, tucked it under his arm and 
walked out the door.  An hour later and half a mile away, the two 
friends united.  With high-fives and sincere congratulation, they 
celebrated their victory over the tyranny of the trading post system.  
As Jim steered the car into the parking lot of their
 dusty motel in Kayenta, Paul added, “I am proud to have taken part in 
the liberation of such a fine rug”.  Dropping Paul at the motel, Jim 
turned north on Highway 163, leading back into Monument Valley.
As he turned off the highway and on to a dusty 
track, Jim mumbled, “The Indian got paid for this rug long ago, so 
hitting that predatory trading post where it hurts means I am doing 
something on behalf of all the Indian nations, not just the Navajos”.
When he finished his photography, the sun was fading
 fast.  As the light changed and he shifted his focus, he saw before him
 a Navajo woman, working at her loom.  With a traditional hogan as a 
backdrop, slowly and steadily she sent the shuttle across the loom.  
After each long stroke, she paused to tamp down the woolen threads.  
Staring at this scene, Jim felt a shiver go up his spine.  He felt like 
he had been photographing the details of a bedroom, only to find that 
someone occupied the bed.
Not once in all this time had the Navajo woman 
looked in his direction or acknowledged his existence.  As his car 
crested a small hill in fading light, he glanced back in the rear view 
mirror.  The woman had vanished, but hanging there on her loom was a 
half-finished rug, depicting corn people, on a white background, with a 
black border.

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