Barona casino museum

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The Barona Cultural Center & Museum is dedicated to the history and heritage of the Barona band in San Diego. The Iipay~Tipai Kumeyaay Mut Niihepok (Land of the First Peoples) outdoor exhibit area, opened in Old Town in 2021, commemorates the area's Kumeyaay heritage. Native American Heritage Sites Iipay~Tipai Kumeyaay Mut Niihepok Of the 20,000-plus Native Americans who make up the four tribal groups in San Diego County, only a small percentage live on reservation land. The county's tribal bands are part of four distinct cultural groups: the Kumeyaay/Diegueño (also known as Iipay~Tipai), Payómkawichum (Quechnajuichom/Luiseño and Acjachemen/Juaneño), Kuupiaxchem/Cupeño, and Cahuilla peoples. Two additional tribal bands here have no federally recognized lands: the San Luis Rey Band of Luiseño Indians and the Mount Laguna Band of Luiseño Indians. (One reservation is governed jointly by the Barona and Viejas bands.) The tribal bands that govern those reservations are the Barona, Campo, 'Ewiiaapaayp (Cuyapaipe), Inaja-Cosmit, Jamul Indian Village, La Jolla, La Posta, Los Coyotes, Manzanita, Mesa Grande, Pala, Pauma, Rincon, San Pasqual, Santa Ysabel, Sycuan and Viejas. San Diego County has the most Native American reservations of any county in the United States, with 18.

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