I'm sorry you feel that I offended you, but I do have some animosity towards Federally Recognized tribes who use those rolls. MY ancestors never made it west to get recognized on them rolls the BIA set up, and just as you pointed out, you never knew there were even State Recognized tribes out there until you got a computer and internet. I think it offensive when these Federally Recognized tribes push their brother's and sisters away who HAVE done their geneology and DNA (which matches up perfectly) yet these individuals aren't on these rolls, because those who decided to inter-marry made that decision to stay on their tribe's homeland. If you had two choices, either to stay and inter-marry and stay on your ancestors homeland, or go off to no where and possibly die, which would you take?
I know how it is, even before we had done the DNA test. My mother and I tried to apply to some Federally Recognized tribes, yet we were pushed away like scum. I know how the minds of many Fed. Tribes think, in the offices and out.
And you made a contradiction yourself. You say your tribe decides who belongs to your nation...yet you say you have to be born on the rez or have been on the rolls of that tribe. I even was told by a Winnebago Elder that some Sioux people adopt - when I called a few bands, they didn't.
Congrats you were born on a rez, that you were raised in your culture and religion, but it appears to me that many who live on a rez has no sympathy for anyone who were scattered in the past, and those individuals just found out the hard way of who they are. Us back east cannot help that our culture is scattered and much of it is lost. When I mentioned that I'm the only one in the Alleghenny Lenape to speak Lenape, it was made in a broad aspect. There could be a few out there teaching themselves like I am, but I don't know. That's what happens when members are not grouped onto just one land, you don't get to know every single member.
My animosity towards Federally Recognized tribes grows for many are even more rude to those who knows their geneology, is WILLING to be a part of a tribe to help out, but these people who live on rez's are narrow-minded in my view for they DON'T want to unite, they DON'T want to have their tribe grow. I'll always have animosity when Federally Recognized tribes think they are superior to any one else. Sure, even I hate wannabes, but a person isn't a wannabe when they know who they are descended from, and are willing to learn and become a part of a community.
Being NDN isn't glamourous, I know that. It's a poor life - but it can't be any worse than what my mother and I have already been through. We would give up what we have now for even a poorer situation just to reunite my family back with the tribe they belong to, to get to learn what was lost within my family.
No, Federally Recognized tribes needs to drop the old rolls from the rules of membership. They can demand a full geneology and DNA, which would have to match perfectly. They can still do blood quantum if they want. Just keep the old rolls as a documentation for those who are doing their geneology, not make it madatory that their ancestor HAS to be on it.
I swear, Alaskan Natives are more lenient than people on Rez's. Did you know that you can be adopted in a Alaskan tribe, as long as you have Native American blood and live in their village and they'd adopt you? It's not because they're desperate, it's because they believe that we're all related in some way or form. But my mother isn't willing to pack up and go up to Alaska, too cold as she told me.
The only thing that is needed is for the Federally Recognized tribes to stop turning away those who knows their family (geneology), even if they're not on a roll. As my mother says, it's the ONLY way to unite in some way or form, so the culture CAN live on.
Eric
apparently there is a bit of confusion as to fractions here. the last 1/2 breed (as some may call him) was in my great grandfather, due to a half-breed and a full NDN marrying and having a child, which would still be 1/2, since there is no 3/4ths in blood quantum. Fractions shown are of Native ancestry.
Maybe this will help: 1/16th, 1/8th, 1/4th, 1/2, 1/2 + 1 full
me, mom, grandfather, grt grandfather, grt gfather + grt gmother
Cont.: Great Grandfather's side - father was 1/16, mother 1 full
The last full blood is only 4 generations back, the last 1/2 blood 3 generations back.
So, pretty much, I don't fall short as you clearly say I do, saying 15/16, which pretty much would only give me 1/32 or possibly 1/64, only 1%, when I have more than that. Not even I understand how tribes can take in people of 1/32, when to me the stop point is 1/16th, and after that it's washed out.
My mother and I will always be members of the Alleghenny Lenape, for they are still around. Sammy was NDN, yet was also a crook (not all NDN's are nice and friendly and honest).
A Federally Recognized tribe might be good to get information from for politics and culture, I know many Federally Recognized tribes would push away someone who can prove the geneology due to the idiotic rolls set up by the BIA, because our ancestors never went out to live on a rez. You cannot say that my ancestors were less honorable because they decided to inter-marry and stay on their homeland. True, I feel for those people who went westward, of what they endured, but it doesn't give no Federally Recognized NDN any right to dictate who is and who isn't just from 'ancient' rolls. Even today, those rolls are added to, but the problem is the old rolls needs to just be a reference, not demand that an ancestor has to be on it.
I agree with you on the one part that we must ensure that cultures are saved, and that we should learn from those on the rez., for the cultures are more preserved than the Alleghenny Lenape. I am only one person to learn the Lenape language, but I at least can start bringing that back into context.
Thank you for your links, though, and some advice.
Eric
Eric i find many of your statement offensive and that you have very little knowledge of tribal people. We decide who belong to our nation. You have to be born on the reservation or one of your parents and grandparents. We never moved westward but stayed on our homelands. The problem come when people who live in the white culture for so long forget how to act and are rude and offensive to Native People.
I am a federally enrolled member of my tribe, my tribe has my enrollment down as 7/8 but due to our enrollment changing to include all Lakota, Dakota and Nakota blood I can now claim my 1/8 Oglala blood.
I truly believe in order to belong to a tribal nation you must be known by them, you must know your relatives, you must be a part of the nation. I was born here on the reservation where I live today. I was born into my nation because my parent, grandparents, great grandparents ect.. were all from my nation. It has nothing to do with rolls because we all know our families going back nine generations and further. It is about family.
When a tribal person meet you we all ask who are you related to what clan/band/or family do you come from, because it is the way to establish a relationship with each other.
So if you came to my home we would ask you your family name, your grandparents name and great grandparents name. Indian country is small so it is easy for us to find out about each other.
I never heard of state recognized until i got on line. I do know about the unrecoginzed tribes but they know who they are just ask and they can tell you who they are along with the families they are related too.
As we say we were Native when it was uncool to be Native today we are still native fighting for our rights to live.
check out some of the fraud people on this site they all claim to be adopted or from some fake tribe they abuse our belief, mix them up or just plains make them up.
what is with this statement???
I am only one person to learn the Lenape language, but I at least can start bringing that back into context.
I have now seen nine different people make that claim that they are the only ones! Don't that tribe talk to each other???