Native Tribe Whose Ancestral Land Includes Billie Eilish’s Los Angeles Mansion Responds to Her Grammy Speech on ‘Stolen Land,’ Clarifying Their Position, Calling for Accurate Recognition, and Highlighting the Difference Between Visibility, Accountability, and Meaningful Indigenous Engagement

When Billie Eilish stepped onto the Grammy Awards stage and declared, “No one is illegal on stolen land,” she likely expected applause—and she received it. What followed, however, was a far more complicated national conversation that reached well beyond the music industry and into the lived realities of Indigenous peoples whose land her words invoked.

Within days, the Tongva Tribe, the Native American people whose ancestral territory includes much of modern-day Los Angeles, issued a response—measured, precise, and notably absent of outrage. Their statement did not demand restitution or spectacle. Instead, it sought clarity, recognition, and a deeper public understanding of what land acknowledgment truly means.

The moment that ignited the debate

Eilish, 24, accepted the Grammy for Song of the Year for Wildflower on February 1, standing alongside her brother and longtime collaborator Finneas. In her acceptance speech, she used her platform to criticize U.S. immigration enforcement and express solidarity with undocumented immigrants.

“As grateful as I feel, I honestly don’t feel like I need to say anything but that no one is illegal on stolen land,” she said, before adding an explicit condemnation of ICE.

The phrase—long used in activist and academic circles—immediately split public opinion. Supporters praised her for using a global stage to challenge immigration policy and acknowledge colonial history. Critics accused her of hypocrisy, pointing out that her multimillion-dollar Los Angeles mansion sits on Indigenous land.

That criticism soon intersected with a deeper question: What do Indigenous communities themselves expect when their history is invoked by powerful public figures?

The Tongva response: calm, not confrontational

In a statement to Daily Mail, a spokesperson for the Tongva addressed the controversy directly.

“As the First People of the greater Los Angeles basin, we do understand that her home is situated in our ancestral land,” the spokesperson said. “Eilish has not contacted our tribe directly regarding her property, [but] we do value the instance when public figures provide visibility to the true history of this country.”

Rather than condemning Eilish, the tribe acknowledged her intent while emphasizing an important distinction: visibility is not the same as relationship.

The Tongva confirmed they had reached out to Eilish’s team to express appreciation for her comments, while also underscoring the importance of explicitly naming the Gabrielino Tongva people in public discussions of Los Angeles history.

“It is our hope that in future discussions, the tribe can explicitly be referenced to ensure the public understands that the greater Los Angeles basin remains Gabrielino Tongva territory.”

Who are the Tongva?

Long before Los Angeles became a global center of entertainment, it was Tongva land.

For thousands of years, the Tongva people lived across what is now Los Angeles County and parts of Orange County, maintaining complex social, cultural, and trade networks. Spanish colonization, followed by Mexican and U.S. governance, violently displaced them, erased their sovereignty, and stripped them of land ownership.

Despite never disappearing, the Tongva remain federally unrecognized, a legal status that severely limits land rights, funding, and political visibility. Their continued presence is often overlooked in mainstream narratives—making moments like Eilish’s speech both an opportunity and a risk.

From acknowledgment to accountability

The Tongva’s response highlights a growing tension around modern land acknowledgments.

In recent years, acknowledgments have become common at awards shows, universities, and public events. When thoughtfully done, they educate audiences and honor Indigenous presence. When casually invoked, they can flatten history into slogans.

The tribe did not ask Eilish to give up her home. They did not demand she house migrants or surrender property deeds. Instead, they asked for accuracy, naming, and understanding.

Their position challenges a binary narrative often pushed online: either celebrities are praised uncritically or attacked as hypocrites. The Tongva rejected both extremes.

The backlash—and who amplified it

Despite the tribe’s measured tone, the online response quickly escalated.

Political commentators and public figures seized on the controversy. Some argued that Eilish should “give her mansion back” or open it to migrants. Conservative voices framed her comments as performative elitism.

Among those weighing in were:

Mike Lee, who suggested land acknowledgment requires surrendering property

Ron DeSantis, who mocked the concept of “stolen land”

Elon Musk, who responded approvingly to criticism with a single word

Much of the backlash ignored the Tongva’s actual statement—substituting Indigenous voices with partisan outrage.

What the tribe did not say

Crucially, the Tongva did not call for:

Confiscation of Eilish’s property

Public apologies or retractions

Viral performative gestures

Instead, they emphasized collaboration, education, and recognition. Their approach reflects a broader Indigenous philosophy: justice is not achieved through spectacle, but through sustained engagement.

Immigration, ICE, and Indigenous complexity

Eilish’s comments also touched on immigration enforcement, an issue that intersects uneasily with Indigenous history.

While Indigenous activists often criticize ICE and colonial borders, tribes also maintain sovereign rights that predate modern nation-states. Simplistic narratives—on either side—risk erasing that complexity.

The Tongva’s response did not engage in immigration policy debates. It stayed focused on what they could speak to authoritatively: their land, their name, and their living presence.

A larger lesson about allyship

This moment illustrates a broader cultural lesson.

Celebrity advocacy can open doors. It can bring forgotten histories into mainstream conversations. But without listening to the communities involved, it can also distort those histories.

The Tongva offered a roadmap forward:

Name the people whose land you reference

Build relationships before speaking on their behalf

Understand that acknowledgment is a beginning, not a conclusion

Their message echoed a phrase often used by the tribe themselves: Ekwa Shem — We are here.

Where things stand now

As of publication, Billie Eilish has not issued a public response to the Tongva’s statement. Her team has not confirmed whether future collaborations or acknowledgments are planned.

The controversy itself may fade—as online storms often do. The Tongva, however, remain where they have always been: on their land, asking not for outrage, but for recognition grounded in truth.

Final reflection

The question raised by this episode is not whether Billie Eilish meant well. It is whether modern advocacy is willing to slow down enough to listen.

The Tongva did not reject her words. They refined them.

In doing so, they reminded the public that Indigenous people are not symbols of the past, but participants in the present. And that real allyship is not proven under bright lights—but in what happens after the applause fades.

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