Harjo: Fakers and phonies and frauds, egad: There ought to be a law Posted: February 10, 2006
by: Suzan Shown Harjo / Indian Country Today
http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096412438Another Indian impersonator is unmasked: Nasdijj, who masqueraded as a Navajo and made a pile of money from best-selling books about his life as a
poor reservation kid with an alcoholic mother.
It turns out that Nasdijj is a very white man with some very dark secrets. He really is Tim Barrus of North Carolina. He did not grow up on or near any
Indian territory. Neither parent is Navajo or Indian of any nation. His mother was not a drunken Navajo.
At the very least, Barrus and his promoters owe all Navajo people, especially the women, an apology.
Nasdijj's true identity was exposed by Matthew Fleischer in an extensive article in LA Weekly's Jan. 25 issue, ''Navahoax,'' which asked the question:
''Did a struggling white writer of gay erotica become one of multicultural literature's most celebrated memoirists - by passing himself off as
Native American?''
The Nasdijj expose hit the stands the day before Oprah Winfrey's grilling of author James Frey about misrepresentations in his memoir. In less than one
week, Random House's Ballantine imprint announced it would cease shipping Nasdijj's ''Geronimo's Bones'' and ''The Boy and the Dog are Sleeping.''
Nasdijj was the darling of publishing for a hot minute. He won a prestigious award intended for Native writers. Critics heaped praise on his
writing; one called it ''achingly honest.''
Native people who read Nasdijj's work did not believe he was a Native writer because there was nothing familiar about the content. Non-Natives
embraced his work because of its familiarity - it ''derives its special power from his ability to capture the universal emotions that we all share,'' as one book cover put it.
It is this very familiarity that allows pseudo-Indians to rise so far so fast in circles controlled by non-Indians. They write with what non-Indian
reviewers like to call ''universal appeal,'' meaning that they appeal to other non-Indians because they are non-Indian.
Once these pseudo-Indians are revealed as the non-Indians they actually are, many of their enablers continue to support them, even chiding those who have brought the hoax to light as mean-spirited, small-minded or jealous.
And what happens to the posers? Like actors who've deep-ended in their roles, they either hold on to their fictionalized personae until the laughing dies down and then adopt a ''so what'' attitude - so what if I'm not actually an Indian? I'm now an Indian expert by virtue of having portrayed an
Indian - or they shift into another shape to please a new audience.
And what happens to all the damage they caused and the money they made and the accolades they garnered under false pretenses? They abscond with the money and goods and leave the mess for the people they pretended to be.
The pseudo-Indians should not be held harmless. They should be made to pay.
There ought to be a law, you say? I couldn't agree more.
During the hearings in the 1980s on amendments to the Indian Arts and Crafts Act, I testified on behalf of the National Congress of American
Indians that Congress should establish a new law that would authorize a tribe to bring a federal action against those who profit from false claims that they are people of that tribe.
And what about people who don't profit from their false Indian identities?
This is not the norm. In the vast majority of these cases, the non- Indians are pretending to be Indians for profit of some kind - for tenure, a
job, a book contract, a record deal, a movie role. Look into the eyes of a pseudo-Indian and
you see gold.
A new cause of action for Native nations should be more than a cease and desist order. Budding pseudo-Indians should know that there are
potential consequences for identity theft.
There should be a law for Navajo Nation to sue Barrus for the profits he made while committing the crime of stealing tribal identity.
There already are ways for Native writers, who were finalists for the Native writing award that the Poets, Essayists and Novelists organization
bestowed on Barrus, to seek redress. Both Barrus and PEN should hope that the snubbed writers don't use those laws to recover damages.
Some Native nations might not want to engage these fakers. Some may not consider this offense against Native people to be offensive; perhaps
the same ones who think that the mascoting of their tribal identities and heroes is not a problem. So, they wouldn't sue the pseudos.
Other tribes could exact some of the profits the pseudos made off their good names and reputations, and could provide time in the slammer for the offenders to reflect on their next career moves.