The Havasupai people (Havasupai: Havsuw’ Baaja) are an American Indian tribe who have lived in the Grand Canyon for at least the past 800 years.Havasu means “blue-green water” and pai “people”.
Located primarily in an area known as Cataract Canyon, this Yuman-speaking population once laid claim to an area the size of Delaware. In 1882, however, the tribe was forced by the federal government to abandon all but 518 acres of its land. A silver rush and the Santa Fe Railroad in effect destroyed the fertile land. Furthermore, the inception of the Grand Canyon as a national park in 1919 pushed the Havasupai to the brink, as their land was consistently being used by the National Park Service. Throughout the 20th century, the tribe used the US judicial system to fight for the restoration of the land. In 1975, the tribe succeeded in regaining approximately 185,000 acres of their ancestral land with the passage of the Grand Canyon National Park Enlargement Act.
As a means of survival, the tribe has turned to tourism, attracting thousands of people annually to its streams and waterfalls.
Havasupai may refer to:
So I woke up in the morning
with only one word on my mind
It was given to me in my sleep
and I knew I just had to find
The meaning,the answer
The reason for this mystery
Oh, and I knew it came from you
Cause I felt this overwhelming peace
You said I am a Crown of Splendor!
You said I am a Royal Diadem in your hand!
Chorus
Youve called me Hephzibah
Youve called me Hephzibah
Im no longer forsaken,Oh but to know!
That you delight in me,And you call me Hephzibah
So I was once desperately
insecure and desolate
With damaged dignity
In all my sins and faults and bruises
Trying to find my beauty
seemed impossible to me
Till you came and took my shame
And dressed me up in your Glory
What magnificent exchange
Youve adorned me with Your name
Your beauty for my sin
And here I stand not just forgiven
But dressed in royalty
as you rejoice over me
As a bridegroom for His bride