This is strange. I would have thought that tribes would want t be vigilant about clowns and posers representing themselves as "medicine men and women" and making money writing books, selling trinkets, and collecting speakers' fees. I don't know much about the Indian Arts and Crafts law, but I know it requires sellers claiming Indianness to prove tribal enrollment. Well, a very stunning fraud in Memphis promotes herself as a high-degree Midewiwin of a clan that does not even exist on the reservation she claims. Now, I'm not sure how to check legal compliance with the enrollment criteria except to just ask. So I just ask. I contacted the tribe, explained my concerns, and asked whether she was a genuinely enrolled member. I provided her various aliases.
What I got back was an all-caps RANT from the tribal enrollment office, accusing me of personal vendettas and suggesting that I could not prove who I was either, and that I am not to ask again! Apparently, their requirement is that the wannabe must notarize consent for their tribal background to be verified--which is HIGHLY absurd, as no wannabe in the world wold actually supply such consent. Thus, the policy of this tribe seems to protect the frauds rather than holding them accountable. And even though I explained the rationale for my concern, they were irate with ME for being so rude as to even ask. Well, so much for defending tribes from phonies. As far as I'm concerned, White Earth is welcome to whatever rogue's gallery of Sun Bears and Windsongs and whatever other plastic shamans want to claim them, because they won't assist in efforts to educate, and actively RESIST efforts to do so.