Published October 16, 2012, 08:35 PM

Tribal members liken wolf hunt to slaughter

For the first time since state sponsored bounties drove wolves to the point of extinction more than a generation ago, Wisconsin begins its first wolf hunting season this week. But a quota of killing 200 wolves has Great Lakes area tribes upset.

By: By Mike Simonson/Wisconsin Public Radio, Superior Telegram

For the first time since state sponsored bounties drove wolves to the point of extinction more than a generation ago, Wisconsin begins its first wolf hunting season this week. But a quota of killing 200 wolves has Great Lakes area tribes upset.

Rusty Barber says wolves are their brothers. The Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal council member believes wolves walked side by side with the Anishinaabe people and lead parallel lives. That includes forcing wolves off their own land and government-sponsored genocide.

“That happened to the Anishinaabe and that also happened to our brother the wolf. When you have a hunt like this wolf hunt that’s going to happen here, things are going to happen within these packs. There’s no determining who is the alpha male or the leader of that pack.”

Barber says without the leader, the pack could perish. He says the differences between tribes and non-native people also have to do with hunting for harvesting versus hunting for fun. “Not just for the thrill of putting a hide on the wall or a head with the antlers on it, you know, something to brag about. But we hunt for food and the necessity of sustenance to live.”

Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Director Jim Zorn likens this hunt as seeing his brothers going to slaughter. He also says the wolf population isn’t large enough to sustain a hunting season, so Wisconsin officials just aren’t listening. “From the tribal perspective, the proof is in the pudding, that there’s still a level of hunt that’s taking place that’s unacceptable to the tribes. To that extent I’m not sure the tribes feel their views are fully respected or taken into account.”

The state has agreed to keep the wolf hunt off tribal land, but they will be able to kill wolves in the ceded territory. Department of Natural Resources Land Division Administrator Kurt Thiede says the state must have responsible wolf population management. “We continue to respect that there’s a cultural significance that the wolf holds for Native American peoples, so we’re hoping to move forward in a respectful, meaningful way.”

The Wisconsin wolf season runs until the end of February.

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