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Category: 17.5 Efforts to obtain federal recognition
WILK003. Wilkins, David. Racial identity
and the federal recognition process: a case study of the Lumbee Indians.
Paper presented at: Eating out of the same pot: relating
Black and Indian (hi)stories. Hanover, NH: Dartmouth College, April
2002. 14 pages.
Publication type: Conference paper
Electronic access: Professor Wilkins has given me permission
to distribute the text of his paper via e-mail attachment. Interested
readers should contact me at: glennellen@boone.net.
In this perceptive, forthright paper, Professor Wilkinswho
has written extensively on Lumbee efforts to obtain true federal recognitiondescribes
thetri-racial isolationism of Robeson county in the late
1960s and early 1970s, when his father retired from the Army and moved
the family there. He then discusses his first powwow, his travels and
exposure to Native Americans (and Native American activism) on a broader
level, and his archival, genealogical, political, and historical research
to understand the origins of his and other Southeastern tribes and the
barriers that had kept them from achieving true federal recognition.
He discusses three categories of motivations the Lumbee have for pursuing
recognition, and four reasons why they have thus far failed to achieve
it. He talks in depth about the fourth reasonRacial/Cultural.
Finally, he issues a wake-up call to the Lumbee in regard
to their history and the benefits of improving their relations with
Blacks.
The three categories of reasons the Lumbee have pursued
true federal recognition are (1) political/legal (to gain a degree of
sovereignty over their people, their territory, andto an extentover
non-Lumbees; (2) fiscal (to become eligible for services and benefits
that are only available to members of tribes with true federal recognition;
and (3) normative. Wilkins asserts that the third reason is the most
compelling, especially for older members of the tribe. He explains:
... they seek federal recognition as a form of justice long denied
them. In other words, they have suffered a great deal of discrimination
because they are Indians yet they are denied the basic rights and protections
accorded to recognized Indian tribes because of their status as Indians
(p. 6).
The four categories of reasons the Lumbee have not
yet succeeded in gaining true federal recognition are:
- Policy/Administrative. Three of the eras during which
the Lumbee were making major efforts to gain recognition (the 1880s-1920s,
the 1950s, and the 1980s) were periods when the federal government was
striving to terminate or to drastically reduce its relationship to Native
Americans. The fourth era, the 1930s, was the IRA period, during which
the federal government was creating a new tribal status, federally
recognized, which hurt many tribes by dichotomizing the nations
Native Americans.
- Fiscal/Demographic. Many opponents of recognition
for the Lumbee argue that there are too many Lumbee and that recognition
for them would reduce the amount of federal money available for services
to members of tribes that are already recognized.
- Administrative/Legislative. In 1978, the petition
process for federal recognition was established, under the administration
of the Bureau of Indian Affairs Branch of Acknowledgment and Research.
Since that time, various parties have disagreed over whether Congress
or the BIA is the most suitable authority for recognizing Indian tribes.
The Lumbee have since discovered that the 1956 Lumbee Act terminated
them at the same time it gave them a limited form of recognition; thus
they are ineligible for the administrative (BIA) recognition process.
- Racial/Cultural. Wilkins identifies this as the
most important set of factors used by Lumbee opponents (p. 9),
almost a stealth set of issues that is usually discussed
in coded musings (pp. 9, 13). Such discussions focus on
certain traits of Indianness that the Lumbee appear to lack
(a distinctive aboriginal language and religion; a reservation; and
treaties with the federal government) and other traits that
they have too much of (admixture of non-Indian racial characteristics,
both White and Black; but negative emphasis is usually placed on the
the latter). Wilkins notes that both oral and documentary evidence show
that Lumbee ancestors intermarried with Blacks (mostly prior to 1800)
and occasionally with Whites and with other tribes since then. He also
questions, How many tribes have not had a history of intermarrying
with other peoples, regardless of race, ethnicity, or national origin?
[Note: See also comments from William W. Quinn, Jr., ethnohistorian
for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, in his 1987 conference paper (QUIN001)
that relative to 25 CFR 83, triraciality is a non-issue
(p. 9) and his statement in the same paper that the BIA has no requirement
for a minimum Indian blood quantum for federal acknowledgment.]
Wilkins concludes his paper with these remarks and
advice:
Lumbees an d Blacks, by eating out of
the same pot and doing other things together, even if for a
brief time, netted results that, for all the wrong reasons, have severely
complicated the Lumbees efforts to establish formal diplomatic
ties with the federal government. This fact should give one pause
in thinking about the fairness of the governments recognition
criteria and the way those criteria are interpreted. And should serve
as a wake up call to the Lumbee to recover their history and seek
to improve relations with Blacks who, like themselves, have been historically
oppressed. While Robeson County, and not the Lumbee, is the tri-racial
isolate, there is no good reason why Lumbees and Blacks, who constitute
two thirds of that population, need to remain isolated from one another.
Together, they, along with allies from the other third, could begin
to establish political and economic coalitions that would improve
both peoples lot in important respects (pp. 13-14).
Additional Subjects: Robeson County,
North Carolina | Indian-Black relations | Tri-racial isolates | Robert
K. Thomas
Note: Author is Lumbee.
This annotation was written on: June
6, 2004
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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