| |
Category: 17.5 Efforts to obtain federal recognition
WILK006. Wilkins, David. Wilkins:
Red, black, and bruised. Indian country today October 21,
2003.
Publication type: Newsletter article
Electronic access: http://www.indiancountry.com/?1066749827
Wilkins describes historical and current relations
between Native Americans and African Americans as a specter
that is haunting Indian country. After discussing this issue
in terms of the Seminole, Creek, and Cherokee, all of whom allowed enslavement
of African Americans until the Civil War, he explains how this issue
has hindered efforts of the Lumbee to obtain true federal recognition.
Some opponents of Lumbee recognition argue that because Lumbee ancestors
intermarried with African Americans in the past, present-day Lumbees
are somehow less authentic as Indians. Wilkins reminds readers that
tribes, as sovereign nations, have the right to determine, without outside
interference, who belongs to their tribe. He concludes the article this
way: As one writer put it, If we dont form history,
history will surely form us. Let us, then, as First Nations, form
a realistic understanding and appreciation of our respective and diverse
tribal histories that draws from rather than shirks or denies any aspect
or component of our cultural, genetic, political, or legal past or present.
Let us choose not to act from bigotry and racism. There is enough of
that still being leveled on us psychologically, emotionally, and structurally
by the larger state and society.
Additional Subjects: Indian/Black relations
Note: Author is Lumbee.
This annotation was written on: June
6, 2004
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
|
|