To'Hajiilee Navajo Chapter
{{Short description|Indian reservation in the United States}}
File:DB táá' naaznil dabighan.svg
File:Rio Puerco at east edge of Tohajiilee Indian Reservation.jpg crosses its eastern boundary, just west of Albuquerque's West Mesa, Petroglyph National Monument, and Double Eagle II Airport]]
File:I-40_West_Exit_131_-_To%27hajiilee_(33524358212).jpg]]
The To'Hajiilee Navajo Chapter{{cite web |title=To'Hajiilee {{!}} Land Acknowledgment Toolkit — NMAHC |url=https://www.nmhealthcouncils.org/land-acknowledgment-toolkit/tohajiilee |website=New Mexico Alliance of Health Councils |access-date=18 November 2024}} ({{langx|nv|Tó Hajiileehé}}, {{IPA|nv|txʷó hɑ̀t͡ʃɪ̀ːlèːj˔é|pron}}), also spelled To'hajiilee, formerly known as the Cañoncito Band of Navajo Indians{{cite web |title=sessions acknowledging the name change of the navajo nation chapter ... |url=https://www.nmlegis.gov/sessions/99%20Regular/FinalVersions/HM042.html |website=New Mexico Legislature (.gov) |access-date=18 November 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231109032532/https://www.nmlegis.gov/sessions/99%20Regular/FinalVersions/HM042.html |archive-date=9 November 2023}} is a non-contiguous section of the Navajo Nation lying in parts of western Bernalillo, eastern Cibola, and southwestern Sandoval counties in the U.S. state of New Mexico, west of the city of Albuquerque. It is a Navajo phrase roughly translated in English as "Dipping Water."
It was formed on the "Long Walk," during the forced relocation of Navajo tribal people, in 1864. Residents there claim that people who settled there, were considered (and still are, infrequently) a renegade band who refused to go further and settled in this part of New Mexico known as the checkerboard, where both Pueblo and Navajo people share the land and live to this day.
Description
It has a land area of 121.588 square miles (314.911 km2) and a 2000 census population of 1,649 people. The land area is only about 0.5% of the entire Navajo Nation's total. The name comes from the Navajo phrase tó hajiileé, meaning "where people draw up water by means of a cord or rope one quantity after another."{{citation | title = Tó Hajiileé in Online Analytical Lexicon of Navajo | url = http://interglacial.com/d/navajo/entry?LO%27#G_32}}
In popular culture
- The final scenes of The Ghostway novel by Tony Hillerman, published in 1984, take place in Cañoncito Reservation.
- To'Hajiilee is a recurring location on the television series Breaking Bad (2008–2013); the 13th episode of its final season, "To'hajiilee," is named after the reservation.{{cite news | first = Scott | last = Meslow | title = Breaking Bad recap: The ticking time bomb | date = 2013-09-08 | work = The Week | url = http://theweek.com/article/index/249293/breaking-bad-recap-the-ticking-time-bomb | accessdate = 2013-09-11}}
- To'Hajiilee returned in Breaking Bad spin-off prequel Better Call Saul as a filming location in the episode "Bagman", depicting a fictional location near the US-Mexico border.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}}
References
{{Commons category}}
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://tohajiilee.navajochapters.org/ Official site]
- [https://www.census.gov Canoncito Indian Reservation (Tribal Census Tract 9459), Navajo Reservation and Off-Reservation Trust Land, Arizona/New Mexico/Utah] United States Census Bureau
{{Indigenous Peoples of New Mexico}}
{{Indian reservations in New Mexico}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Coord|35|05|09|N|107|05|07|W|scale:250000_source:ID934285GNIS|display=title}}
Category:Geography of the Navajo Nation