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Category: 17.5 Efforts to obtain federal recognition
REYN001. Reynolds, Jerry. Indigenous
geography: invisible history of tribes gets a hearing. Indian
country today May 11, 2004.
Publication type: Newspaper article
Electronic access:
http://www.indiancountry.com/?1084286524
Reynolds discusses one aspect of what he calls the
invisible history of tribes: The relationship between Southeastern Native
Americans and African Americans. He notes that Native Americans often
took in, or in other ways helped support, runaway slaves; and Native
Americans stayed behind or hid out (perhaps with the help of African
Americans) during the Indian removals of the nineteenth century. Thus
African American heritage exists among Southeastern Indians. Reynolds
discusses an allusion to this history during the April 1, 2004 hearing
in the House Committee on Resources on H.R. 898, a bill for federal
recognition of the Lumbee. Rep. Eni Faleomavaega asked Lumbee attorney
Arlinda Locklear if race had played a role in the difficulties the Lumbee
have faced in obtaining true federal recognition. Locklear replied that
this would be a fair assumption. Reynolds comments: The exchange
over H.R. 898, singular for content but remarkable also for Faleomavaegas
strained questioning and Locklears clipped answers, implied that
mainstream Americas misguided romance with real Indians
and its historical distaste (to say no more) for African Americans still
operates, though nowadays pains are taken to keep both below the visibility
horizon. But at least a tiny patch of otherwise invisible history made
it onto the Congressional Record April 1.
Additional Subjects: Indian/Black relations
This annotation was written on: June 6, 2004
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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