Malinda Maynor (now Malinda Maynor Lowery), Lumbee, completed this film at
Stanford University, where she received a masters degree. The film was
one of eight Native American films shown at the Sundance Film Festival
in 1996. It was also shown at the New York Native American Film and Video
Festival and the Feminale Women's Film Fest in Cologne, Germany. It won
Best Short Film at the South by Southwest Festival.
The film is a succinct, perceptive, and provoking exploration
of Native American identity from the Lumbee perspective and from that
of other Native Americans. Maynor herself provides a goodly portion
of the dialog, juxtaposing it with remarks from Native American women
from two other tribes. She uses visual devices such as her own family
photographs, footage from a powwow, a Native American Barbie doll, and
herself wearing a buckskin dress and war paint. She forthrightly confronts
the identity problems she and other Lumbees have faced. She explains
that when she was growing up, she didn't question her Indian identity.
When she left home, she found that There are real Indians and
fake Indians; and Lumbees are definitely fake ... as least according
to some people. Her grandfather told her that some Lumbee
families have good blood (White) and some have bad blood (Black).
She notes that her grandmother's family was proud of their good blood
and tried to fit in with White society in order to be socially
acceptable Indians.
A speaker from another tribe remarks about the Lumbee
that some Indians believe that the fact that there has been some intermarriage
with Blacks overshadows their Indian identity - and that the Lumbee
are less real because they don't have an obvious tradition
or a native language. She quickly notes that many other tribes also
have not retained distinctive traditions or their native language.
Maynor also comments that some of the other Indians who
object most strongly to recognition of the Lumbee are involved in the
pan-Indian movement. They have borrowed dancing, feathers, and clothing
from other tribes, using cultural appurtenances that were not part of
their own tradition. She notes that those Indians have adopted a stereotype
that they don't even realize is a stereotype. Maynor summarizes the
other Indians' objections to the Lumbee: No reservation, no ancient
language, and too much bad blood. She comments, I'm not
a John Wayne/Pocahontas/cigar store Indian. War paint just doesn't become
me.
The Native American women from other tribes then comment
on what makes up the essence of Indian identity. One remarks that she once
ascribed to certain stereotypes; but as she traveled across the country
and interacted with Indians from other tribes, she came to believe Indianness
is an outlook. What seems recognizable to her is a connection to home,
a sense of place and roots. The other woman remarks that her mother and
grandmother had always retained their own connections with past family
members and ensured that she also had those connections by telling her
stories and giving her history lessons.
Maynor ends the film by recalling how she and her father would
drive through Robeson County--remembering, planning for the future,
and exploring. He told her that she could go into any Lumbee house,
tell the people that she was Waltz Maynor's daughter and Wayne Maynor's
granddaughter, and they would take her in and take care of her, because
her family was their family. Maynor remarks, That's tradition;
that's what's real.