For centuries, Native people have been fighting to protect their way of life. In the early 1800s, all the land around the Missouri River belonged to Native Americans—but then white people began moving west. Farmers wanted land to grow crops, and miners came to dig for gold. They forced Native Americans off their land, often by using violence.
Native Americans fought for their land, but the U.S. Army forced them to give in. The government pushed Native groups onto reservations, such as Standing Rock. On the reservations, people no longer had land to hunt on. And children went to government-run boarding schools where they were forced to speak English.
Tokata was taught this history by her parents when she was young. The pipeline is part of that history, she says. It threatens Native land, yet Native people weren’t involved in the decision to build it. “You have to understand the history to understand what’s happening now,” she says.