Y'all are missing the point. Rattle, because he thinks one drop of Indian blood makes you Indian
Nice insult and the putting of words in my mouth there bls926, now do me a favor and find where I have ever said such a thing in those exact words. I have never said such a thing even as opposed to the concept of BQ as I am. In regards to who is NDN and who is not, I am very complex in my explanations of it, just as I am fair about it.
You on the other hand are rigid in such a way and put people in boxes that it makes me wonder if your only real interaction with NDN people is on the internet.
Since my first interactions with you on here, you have always tried to come at me like you are some sort of authority, and that everyone should bow down to because of it.
Well my friend let me make something very clear to you hear, and hopefully you will remember it and it was cause a lot less friction between us.
In terms of real life interaction with an NDN community and being known and accepted as such, I for one am. Can you say the same about yourself?
Before developing very serious health problems, I routinely attended sweats here in California with a well known elder who has now passed. Ironically, some of the things he taught me you try to contradict by arguing BQ in such a way that ignores things that have to do with divinity.
In terms of community recognition versus legal definition there are areas that cause very critical grey areas. However when it comes to community recognition, I routinely see well known elders and well respected NDN people accept and consider people who are not enrolled and might come from some story about not being able to prove who they as NDN even with those stories, because of their very good and honorable interaction with this NDN community for many years. Perhaps if those same people ventured onto a site like this, a person such as yourself would try to tell them who they can or can not say they are. I doubt the NDN community around here is very much different then many others in the US and Canada. That is why I often wonder if you interact with NDN people off of the net, or maybe you do and are soo afraid that some fraud might read about such things happening that you do not speak of it.
Let there be no doubt in your mind that I do not believe that just because somebody has one drop of NDN blood in their veins that I see them as such. It's just that I try to be fair about things, and judge people from what I have seen and learned in my life, and unlike you I don't put people in rigid little boxes.
I am all for hunting down frauds and fakes, but I am not going to engage in witch hunts or come at people who might have legitimate claims to who they are in such a way as you do, and try to tell them because the same US government that has done so much damage to NDN people does not recognize them as such, that they have no right to claim to be so.
I recognize in life and in this world there is a balance to everything, and I try my best to think in such a way and be fair with other human beings.
As far as book education versus real world experience. I have never claimed to be any sort of expert or traditional person. However I will acknowledge in my life I have been blessed to know and learn from many, and those things I have learned I try my best to use in my judgment of other people in regards to who is right or wrong, NDN or NON NDN. So yes I do have real world knowledge and experience. Come out to California some time and I can gladly prove it.
Then with me there is the issue of book learned things. Though by my grammatical mistakes etc it is probably obvious that I have no degree, but that does not mean I did not attend college. I entered college with the intent of getting into journalism, and my mother told me there was this well known and famous NDN woman on campus and to be sure to take her classes. That woman was of course Wendy Rose, and I did as my mother told me and took her classes, and Wendy became a personal hero of mine. I excelled in her classes and learned so much from her. Later when Wendy became ill and didn't teach, I took the classes of a local Yokut educator by the name of kathy Lewis, whom if you did a google on her name would find that she is been locked in one of the recognition disputes with her own people for a long time now. All of this could be proven with my school records.
So point of telling you that is to let you know when it comes to legal, historical, technical things spoken on this board and others; I do know what I am talking about most the time, or at least have a very good understanding of things. When I don't is when I will listen or ask questions.
I really don't understand who you are or think you are, but quite frankly I don't care. For somebody who is actually a Cherokee person who's family fell through the cracks, I really don't understand why you seem so hellbent on making sure that people with legitimate claims to being NDN are denied that right to say and proudly acknowledge that and be who they are. Sure there are laws and area's of respect some people who are not enrolled should follow, but you seem hellbent on trying to tell them they can't even acknowledge they are NDN people. It's odd to me when people have that line of thinking consider there are people in tribes with no BQ cutoff that are probably way less attached to their people then some who are not enrolled, and yet just because they have legal status they are allowed to call themselves NDN due to the law when in reality they are not in soo many ways.
Maybe because of your family history and what I believe you said they did in terms of assimilation, you feel everyone is like your family; of course that would be you using transference and putting your life on that of others and their families, and that is just wrong.
There are people I greatly admire and respect on this board. Two of them are Dr. Al and Momma Porcupine,even if I had once had issues with them and disliked them. Both of them I believe have taken the time to get to know me at least just a little bit, and neither of them try to talk down to me like you do. In fact though Momma Porcupine said she usually does not agree with me on things, she has said something to me that she still likes to read my perspective on things. To me that was an honor and a compliment.
The person I admire the most on here though is Blackwolf. When I read his posts and his perspectives I see a man who judges people just as critically as he does fairly. It's obvious to me by his posts that he is who he says he is, and is obviously connected to his people. There have been times I have spoken to him in private when I had questions about things, and some of those times he has agreed with things I have been taught by elders here, even if they are not from his people. At those times, it lets me know that I am not wrong or totally wrong about things, and that my understanding of things is not way off base.
You however are not somebody I respect, and that is because you say next to nothing about yourself, and yet try to talk down to me and others like you are some sort of authority.
If you want my respect or wish me to speak to respectfully, then never try to talk down to me like you do, or do as you have now done and put words in my mouth that I have never said. I will never accept that from you, or that your opinion on things is some how higher or better then mine. Your opinion is just that, your opinion.
bls926:I'm not saying someone can't write about their life. Anyone can write anything they want. What I am saying is that someone who is not an enrolled member of a recognized First Nation should not claim that they are a Native American author. It's no different than someone who is not recognized creating a piece of jewelry, weaving a basket, or making a piece of pottery and calling it American Indian. No different than these guys we've been talking about putting Lakota on their music. If you aren't Indian, don't market your creations as Native American.
There is a difference though. A person "creates" artwork, but doesn't create their life, ancestry, or experiences.
Sure there are people like you have mentioned such as Nasdijj/Timothy Barrus' whom were nothing more then fakes and frauds, but I have already mentioned I am not talking about him. I am talking about people with legitimate claims to who they are.
Let's take you for an example. Let's say that despite not being enrolled your family maintained themselves as Cherokee people to the present by at least carrying on whatever ways they could over the generations. Let's say they experiences hardship and racism because of.
Then let's say one of the people in your family or even yourself had a very interesting life based on those experiences as a Cherokee person and wrote a book about it. Since you and your family are indeed in my opinion and probably yours, Cherokee people; should they be legally barred from writing as such?
I am guessing you would probably say no since you think enrollment is the absolute standard for being NDN and having the right to say as such; however I do not.
What I will say here though and strongly emphasis, is that never in this thread have I made any such argument that anyone with a drop of NDN blood is NDN or should be allowed to make NDN art or music ect.
What I have been talking about is non recognized people with legitimate claims to who they are.
bls926:There are exceptions to the law. If you are accepted by your Nation, whether enrolled or not, you are permitted to advertise your work as American Indian with their endorsement. Anyone who is truly connected to their people, should be able to get their blessing and market themselves as Native.
Totally agree with you here, which is why my entire argument has been people with legitimate claims, and not anyone claiming some ancestry they can not prove as you have so wrongly put in my mouth.
However I would like to add here that in places such as California there are entire tribes and bands who are very much NDN people who have no recognition from the state of federal government.
I once posted up a link and some other things in which a man who was next to full blooded was barred from having eagle feathers because his tribe fell into this position. In fact the court acknowledged he was "Indian for some purposes, but not for others." So in that case, if he was barred from practicing his own religion, then I doubt they would let him make artwork as well. I don't know but that seems likely considering one of his legal rights under the constitution was barred due to lack of federal status.
I happen to know people like that off the net since I live in California around many bands who are legitimately NDN people, but have no status.
I'm not saying someone can't write about whatever they want. I definitely don't believe in censorship. What I am saying is that if you aren't a citizen of a First Nation, you shouldn't be able to market your writing as Native American. There isn't any difference between baskets, blankets, jewelry, or a novel. All are expressions of art. Truth in advertising. Anyone ever hear of that
Again, as I have pointed out to you already; I agree with unless a person has legitimate claims to being NDN regardless if not enrolled.
There is at least one author that I know of who was most possibly not enrolled, and does a very fine job of writing about things that are native subject matter. He does not "speak for all Indian people," and was a critically acclaimed and well known writer in the native community.
He of course was Louis Owens. Now maybe he was enrolled and I do not know about it, but at one time I do know he states that at least half of his family was not on the dawes rolls, but did show up on the Oklahoma Indian census of 1910.
Never the less in his book mixed blood messages he does a very good job at talking about people and family who are legitimately NDN, but do not show up on any kind of records. These are not people who "hid out on the trail of tears" as some twinkies claim to be the reason why they are not enrolled, but rather NDN people who lived in Indian territory which is now known as Oklahoma.
One more time . . . and I swear this is the last time I'm going to try to make y'all understand
Again, I want to ask you who exactly you are to try and make anyone understand that people with legitimate claims to who they are must not acknowledge that?
Sure I agree with you in regards to phonies,and people with ggggggg grandma stories they can't prove, and that is about it.
How many people purchased Nasdijj/Timothy Barrus' novels, because they thought he was Navajo
How many people drink and drive, or break the thousands upon thousands of laws we have on the law books? Should people with legitimate claims and experiences in regards to themselves and their families be barred from writing in such a way that makes them legally deny being NDN because of men such as Barrus.
Men like him should be hunted down, exposed and even prosecuted if possible, however it does not mean that people's freedom of speech and other things should be taken away because of him.
In all due honesty they could say they are not NDN because they are not enrolled, and most likely in both the libraries and books stores, their books will be found in the Native American section.
I guess in that regards, we would have to start giving book stores and public libraries fines for putting books in the wrong section huh?