The euthanasia Saturday of Los Angeles’ most celebrated mountain lion, P-22, prompted headlines across the country, accolades from politicians and a memorial hike in honor of what one congressman called “our beloved mascot.”

But perhaps the most heartfelt tribute came from representatives of the Tongva, Los Angeles’ first people, who feel displaced from their own land — as P-22 was.

Tongva artist Weshoyot Alvitre this week posted to Instagram a montage of photos of the mountain lion accompanied by a song to the celebrity cat “to send you back, in our language, so you’re not stuck in this world after all the suffering you endured.”

For Alvitre and fellow Tongva artist Mercedes Dorame, P-22’s death hit particularly hard because his story of displacement reflects that of their own people.

“He mirrors us,” Alvitre wrote in a poem about the cougar. “He was born on this land, like those who came before him. I’m angry and saddened he won’t have a chance to return to the land in the way he should.”

The Tongva lived in Southern California for thousands of years before Spanish, Mexican and white American settlers destroyed their villages and subjugated them. In October, they received a one-acre parcel from an Altadena homeowner, establishing tribal land for the first time in nearly 200 years.

The parcel, like P-22’s hunting grounds in Griffith Park, is squeezed by suburban sprawl.

Wildlife authorities say the mountain lion suffered from a series of ailments — including old age — and was likely hit by a car in recent weeks, which may have explained his recent interactions with humans and their pets.

Alvitre noted that freeways have been built over Tongva trade routes and atop traditional burial sites.

“Colonization has affected the land and the health of the land and the health of everything that relies on the land,” she said.

The Tongva people have a special relationship with animals.

“We don’t place ourselves above them; we consider them our relatives,” Alvite said. “And when we see them suffering, it’s really a reflection of us suffering.”

Both Alvitre and Dorame said the “wildlife overpass” being built over the 101 Freeway in Agoura Hills is necessary but an insufficient step in addressing how the built environment has displaced big cats and other wildlife and distanced people from nature.

Indigenous animals and humans have a connection to the Los Angeles basin, Dorame said.

“You can’t isolate the individual from the land; you can’t isolate a community from its base,” she said.

She said she was troubled by P-22’s celebrity status, which reduced the cat to a “scintillating, sparkling specimen” and overshadowed the tragedy of his habitat in decline.