The city of Oakland, California, announced last week a plan that would make it among the first cities in the country to return land to Indigenous people. 

The city council will conduct hearings and decide whether to grant an easement over five acres of land in a city-owned park to local Indigenous organizations: the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust, the East Bay Ohlone tribe and the Confederated Villages of Lisjan Nation. 

The easement would allow the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust to immediately use the land, known as Sequoia Point, for public education, natural resource restoration, cultural practices and other future uses, the city said. 

“This agreement with the city of Oakland will restore our access to this important area, allowing a return of our sacred relationship with our ancestral lands in the Oakland hills,” Corrina Gould, a co-founder of the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust and Lisjan Tribal Chairwoman, said in a statement. “The easement allows us to begin to heal the land and heal the scars that have been created by colonization for the next seven generations.”

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The Ohlone people, who belong to the Confederated Villages of Lisjan Nation, had inhabited Oakland and Northern California’s East Bay area for thousands of years before their forcible removal by European settlers and their descendants starting in the 18th century, the city said in its statement. 

Discussions for the land “rematriation,” as the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust calls it, began in 2018 between Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf and Gould. 

“I hope the work we are doing in Oakland with the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust can serve as a model for other cities working to return Indigenous land to the Indigenous community we stole it from,” Schaaf said in the city’s statement. 

Schaaf also shared on Twitter that “Oakland, California will return land to the Indigenous community we stole it from.”