when we met tribe member chris brunet in 2012, he wanted to stay on the island. >> this land may not be much, but this land is ours, and we are still here. >> sreenivasan: but now, he's decided to go, even though he's lived here all of his 50 years. >> i got around to thinking, okay, me, at my age, i could probably finish off my life over here on this island. but what about the younger generation that's about ten, 11, 12, 13, and all of this here? i don't think so. i am for the relocation. moving as a community. it makes it a whole lot easier to where you're just not beginning on your own, but that you're actually moving, you know, with family. >> sreenivasan: the tribe's first choice is to relocate to this 500-acre parcel of land in northern terrebonne parish, about 40 miles to the north. >> the piece of land that we're looking at came out to be the best of all that we looked at. i mean, there's no marsh, there's trees, and it's high ground. >> sreenivasan: one goal of the relocation is to reunite with tribe members like chantel comardelle, who already left the island and are disper