Past words come back to haunt ex-mayor
By John Christian Hopkins
Diné Bureau
"I
felt like Custer, surrounded by nothing but brown faces."
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FARMINGTON The internet can become a tangled
web at times. It apparently is for former Farmington Mayor Marlo
Webb.
An e-mail making the rounds contains a quote attributed to Webb
during a 2002 interview that is less than flattering to Navajos.
The quote is posted on a website for the Southern Poverty Law Center
in Alabama.
Webb supposedly said: "They've culturally not come in to join
what we call modern society. They're not they haven't been educated
to do it, they're not equipped to do it. They're very backward."
Webb said he wants to see a copy of the interview, to see what his
quote actually says.
"I remember it. This came up a few years ago," said Webb.
"On the Internet, anyone can put anything they want about you,
and it spreads like leaves in the wind. You can never gather them
all up again. What can you do?"
He was interviewed for a documentary that was to be made by an English
company, but has never seen a copy of the interview or the documentary,
Webb said.
It's not true that he's anti-Navajo and, he said, some of his best,
repeat customers are from the tribe. He is co-owner of Webb Chevrolet.
Some of his Navajo friends have forwarded him the e-mail, Webb said.
It just seems to pop up every once in a while, said Webb.
Some of the anti-Navajo stigma attached to Webb may come from his
period as mayor in the mid-1970s when racial tensions ran high between
the Nation and city, culminating in a large civil rights march just
weeks after Webb took office.
Webb set up a 13-member human rights commission to listen to the
Navajo complaints, but the panel was soon disbanded when a representative
from the American Indian Movement threatened to turn the protest
violent.
Webb said in a later interview that he was genuinely interested
in working the problems out, but some of the protesters seemed more
interested in fanning the flames of discontent. Tensions were so
high in 1974 that city councilmen routinely wore sidearms that summer,
Webb recalled.
Recalling that time in the city's history, Webb was quoted as saying
"I felt like Custer, surrounded by nothing but brown faces."
Maybe, that old quote attributed to him is being dredged up because
once again, racial tensions between the Navajo Nation and the border
towns are simmering, suggested Webb.
John Christian Hopkins can be reached at hopkins1960@hotmail.com
or by calling 505-371-5443.
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Friday
February 2, 2007
Selected
Stories:
Prisoner
transport vehicle crashes
Hounshell
fires back at White; Sheriff says county supervisor exaggerated
severity of crime
Past
words come back to haunt ex-mayor
3 run
for 2 board positions
Deaths
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