Minnesota's first managed wolf hunting and trapping season, set for this fall, will be more than just controversial.
It also will be a cultural clash.
American Indian bands around the state oppose the hunting and trapping of wolves on spiritual grounds, will prohibit wolf hunting on tribal lands and complain that the DNR and Legislature haven't considered their views.
"The wolf is part of our creation story, and therefore many Ojibwe have a strong spiritual connection to the wolf," Karen Diver, chairwoman of the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, wrote in a letter to the DNR this spring. "Many Ojibwe believe the fate of the wolf is closely tied to the fate of all the Ojibwe. For these reasons the Fond du Lac Band feels the hunting and trapping of wolves is inappropriate."
Leaders of the Leech Lake, Red Lake and White Earth bands wrote similar letters of concern to the DNR when the Legislature was still debating a wolf hunting season. Red Lake -- the only closed reservation in the state -- will close its 900,000-acre reservation to wolf hunting.
The views of wolves couldn't be more different.
European settlers and their descendants sought to exterminate wolves, and today, with their population healthy in Minnesota, plans for a limited trapping and hunting season have the support of many Minnesotans. But wolves are revered in American Indian culture.
"We understand wolves to be educators, teaching us about hunting and working together in extended family units," James Zorn, executive administrator for the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission, said in a letter to the Wisconsin Legislature. That legislature, like Minnesota's, OK'd a wolf hunting season. The commission, which represents 11 Ojibwe tribes in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, opposes public wolf seasons in all three states. "Wolves exemplify perseverance, guardianship, intelligence and wisdom," Zorn said.