SENATOR BARACK OBAMA, THE CHEROKEE NATION, AND THE CHEROKEE FREEDMEN

OBAMA TAKES ON THE FREEDMEN ISSSUE

 

TRIBAL SUPPORT
Barack Obama: “Our nation has learned withtragic results that federal intervention ininternal matters of Indian tribes is rarelyproductive . . . This is not a legacy we want tocontinue,” the Illinois senator said.

 

By JIM MYERS World Washington Bureau
5/11/2008
Last Modified: 5/19/2008  3:33 PM

The senator believes the courts, not Congress, should resolve the controversy.

WASHINGTON — U.S. Sen. and Democratic presidential front-runner Barack Obama has come out against any congressional interference “at this point” in the ongoing controversy over Cherokee Nation citizenship for descendants of former slaves.

“Tribal sovereignty must mean that the place to resolve intertribal disputes is the tribe itself,” the Illinois lawmaker said in a statement provided Saturday by his Senate office.

“Our nation has learned with tragic results that federal intervention in internal matters of Indian tribes is rarely productive . . . This is not a legacy we want to continue.”

However, speaking directly to the Cherokee Nation issue, Obama also expressed opposition to unwarranted tribal disenrollment and described discrimination anywhere as intolerable.

“But the Cherokee(s) are dealing with this issue in both tribal and federal courts,” he said.

“As it stands, the rights of the Cherokee Freedmen are not being abrogated because there is an injunction in place that ensures the freedmans’ rights to programs during

the pendency of the litigation. I do not support efforts to undermine these legal processes and impose a congressional solution.”

Obama press spokesman Michael Ortiz said the statement was prepared several weeks ago, but Ortiz did not say why it was prepared.

His comments, which were reported earlier on a blog, put Obama at odds with a number of other members of the Congressional Black Caucus and possibly even the position of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Last year, the House voted to withhold housing funds from the Cherokee Nation until it drops efforts to deny citizenship to freedmen descendants who cannot trace their lineage back to the Indian category of the Dawes Rolls.

Even tougher legislation is awaiting action.

Rep. Dan Boren, D-Okla., won approval of a provision that would delay such punitive action until after the court case.

Boren said Obama’s position “is in line with most who have observed this issue. I agree that the freedmen issue should be litigated in the courts before congressional action.”

The Senate has yet to act on the housing bill.

Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chad Smith welcomed Obama’s statement.

“The Cherokee Nation knows Sen. Obama understands Native American issues and will be a good president for Indian Country,” Smith said.

“We agree with Sen. Obama’s overall position that the courts should decide these issues and wish other CBC members would agree. The Congress should not subvert the courts and judge the Cherokee Nation without considering the facts or the law, which is exactly what some members have done.”

Again, he warned funding cuts would harm thousands of young, poor and infirm Cherokees.

Smith disagrees with claims that an 1866 treaty guaranteed tribal citizenship to descendants of former slaves and believes his stance is supported by previous actions by Congress.


Jim Myers (202) 484-1424
jim.myers@tulsaworld.com

LINK:   http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?articleID=20080511_1_A17_hThes26208

 
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SENATOR BARACK OBAMA AND THE CHEROKEE FREEDMEN: POLITICS AS USUAL
 
 
Posted: 05/13/08 05:29 PM [ET]
 
On the same day that African American voters went to the polls to cast their ballots in North Carolina and Indiana, descendants of the former slaves of the Cherokee Nation (known as Freedmen) fought in the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., to enforce their treaty rights guaranteeing them equality and voting rights in the tribe. Attorneys representing the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma have filed to have the case dismissed on the grounds that only Congress can enforce the treaty because the Cherokees have sovereign immunity. Yet the Cherokee Nation on that same day held a conference in the U.S. Capitol on why the Freedmen matter should be left to the courts.
 
Without a clear understanding of the issue, Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) has weighed in on the side of the Cherokees by publicly opposing my legislation, H.R. 2824, which suspends U.S. relations with the Cherokees until the rights of Freedmen are restored.  Sen. Obama also takes exception to a recent Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) letter sent to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) in which the caucus declares its opposition to Native American housing legislation if it does not include a provision that would prevent the Cherokee Nation from receiving any benefits or funding under the bill if the Freedmen are expelled from the tribe.
 
Thirty-five CBC members signed the letter, including its chairwoman, Rep. Carolyn Kilpatrick (D-Mich.).
 
Sen. Obama’s argument mirrors the Cherokees’ justification for Freedmen termination. He declares that the Freedmen issue is a matter of tribal sovereignty and should be arbitrated in the courts and not Congress. But what Sen. Obama fails to understand is that the Freedmen issue is about treaty rights, not tribal sovereignty. What Sen. Obama probably has not been told is that the Cherokee Freedmen issue tracks the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma’s attempt in 2002 to terminate its Freedmen that was squashed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs when it halted all federal funding to the tribe and suspended the Seminoles’ federal gaming authority.
 
The Cherokee Nation, as many of the other slaveholding Indian tribes, fought on the side of Confederacy during the Civil War. In 1866, the U.S. and the Cherokee Nation signed a treaty to reestablish relations between the Cherokee Nation and the United States. The 1866 treaty forms the new foundation for Cherokee sovereignty that continues to this day.
 
Article IX of the Treaty of 1866 states that Cherokee Freedmen shall have “all the rights” of Cherokees.  The language in the treaty has been interpreted on more than one occasion by the courts as that “all rights” include the right of Freedmen citizenship.  That same year, in 1866, the Cherokee Nation amended its constitution to give Freedmen full rights of citizenship, including land allotments. Federal courts have consistently determined that the treaty abrogated the Cherokees’ sovereign right to legalize slavery or determine the citizenship of its former slaves.
 
Despite a long history of legal precedent favoring the Freedmen, Chad Smith, the principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, continues to hammer at the notion that Congress should defer to the courts on the Freedmen issue. It has become the rallying cry of his supporters and numerous well-paid lobbyists. He reminds us that the Cherokee Nation is a nation of laws and will abide by the decisions of the courts. Given Smith’s mantra that the Freedmen issue should be left to the courts, it is curious that Smith’s lawyers recently argued in U.S. District Court that Congress has rightful jurisdiction over the fate of the Freedmen.
 
Whatever branch of government has ultimate authority, it is clear that the past actions of Smith belie his commitment to the rule of law. After the Cherokee Nation’s tribal courts ruled in favor of Lucy Allen, a Freedmen descendant who sued for citizenship, Smith chose to dissolve the Cherokee tribal court and pack the newly constituted court with his cronies, who proceeded to approve a referendum to overturn Allen’s petition. The decision of Smith’s court laid the groundwork for the March 2007 vote to expel the Freedmen.
 
The Cherokee Nation lost its sovereign right to engage in slavery upon enactment of the 13th Amendment and to determine the citizenship of the descendants of its former slaves upon ratification of the Treaty of 1866. Over the past several decades, our nation has stood up for the rights of indigenous minorities, as has the U.S. Congress through its Helsinki Commission as well as other congressional forums. Defending any government’s right to commit gross acts of discrimination under the guise of sovereign immunity is a non-starter. It is as unsupportable in South Africa, China, Zimbabwe and Bosnia as it is in the Cherokee Nation, arguably even more so in the Cherokee Nation since it is located within the continental U.S. and its sovereignty on the issue at hand has already been abrogated by Congress.
 
African American voters should think about how they would feel if their citizenship rights were suddenly removed because they descended from slaves. This is precisely what the Cherokee Nation wants to do in violation of its own treaty obligations.  It is morally repugnant and legally wrong.
 

Watson is a member of the House Oversight and Government Reform, and Foreign Affairs, committees

 
 
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BAACK OBAMA WEIGHS IN AGAINST CBC LEGISLATION ON CHEROKEES
Posted: 05/09/08 01:19 PM [ET]
 
 
Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.), the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination, has weighed in against legislation proposed by the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) that would punish the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma.
 
CBC lawmakers have proposed a number of provisions this year that would cut off federal funding to the tribe because of its decision in March 2007 to remove the Freedmen — descendants of freed slaves once owned by tribe members — from Cherokee membership.
 
But Obama disagrees with those measures. In a statement to The Hill provided by his Senate office, the Illinois Democrat said that although he opposes unwarranted tribal disenrollment, Capitol Hill should not get involved.
“Discrimination anywhere is intolerable, but the Cherokee are dealing with this issue in both tribal and federal courts . . . I do not support efforts to undermine these legal processes and impose a congressional solution,” said Obama. “Tribes have a right to be self-governing and we need to respect that, even if we disagree, which I do in this case. We must have restraint in asserting federal power in such circumstances.”
 
Obama’s position on the Freedmen issue was first reported by the blog NowPublic.com and has since been confirmed by The Hill.
 
Representatives for the Cherokee have made a similar argument in that the complicated issue needs to be resolved in court, not by Congress. Until that litigation is settled, the Freedmen still have tribal citizenship rights.
Members of the CBC have said the tribe betrayed an agreement it signed with the U.S. government by removing the Freedmen. The Treaty of 1866 gave tribal citizenship rights to the group, according to the CBC.
 
The Cherokee disagree, however, pointing to legislation passed by Congress in the early 1900s and court rulings that revoked citizenship rights for Freedmen descendants.
 
Nevertheless, lawmakers have offered measures to stop federal funding for the tribe until the Freedmen are accepted back into the Cherokees’ ranks.
For example, Rep. Diane Watson (D-Calif.) has sponsored a bill that would cut off roughly $300 million in federal funds to the Cherokee. Plus, Rep. Mel Watt (D-N.C.) passed an amendment to a Native American housing bill that would halt federal housing assistance to the tribe.
 
Watt, who has endorsed Obama for president, downplayed any difference the senator has with the CBC on the battle over the Freedmen.
 
“This is not a fight between us and Barack. I think he is on our side,” said Watt. “This is a fight between the Congressional Black Caucus and the Cherokee.”
 
In a March letter, Watt, Watson and other CBC members warned Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) that Watt’s funding ban for the Cherokee must be included in the Senate version of the Native American housing bill. Otherwise, the caucus would lobby against the bill. 
 
Thirty-five CBC members signed that letter. Obama was not one of them.
 
 
 
 
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5-12-08

Are Blacks Being Victimized Twice by the Cherokee?

By Arica L. Coleman

Ms. Coleman is Assistant Professor of Black American Studies at the University of Delaware.
 
In 1983, the Cherokee nation revised its constitution, stripping the Cherokee Freedmen, descendants of former Cherokee slaves, of their voting rights and citizenship status. According to the tribal election council, the Freedmen are not Cherokee “by blood” and thus are not “real” Cherokees. To the chagrin of many tribal members, on March 7, 2006, in a 2-1 decision, the Cherokee Supreme Court reversed the earlier decision calling the expulsion of the Freedmen unconstitutional, therefore, reinstating them into the tribe.
 
The Cherokee nation rejected the CSC’s verdict and called for a special election to settle the question once and for all. On March 3, 2007, Cherokee tribal members decided overwhelmingly by a vote of 70 percent to expel the Freedmen. Consequently, on June 21, 2007, the Congressional Black Caucus called on Congress to withhold funding from the Cherokee nation until such time that the Freedmen are fully restored.
 
The Cherokee nation has an annual budget of $300 million of which 80 percent is derived from federal aid. Withholding such aid would no doubt have a detrimental effect on the tribe. The measure passed the House. The CBC is now pressuring the Senate to do the same. In response to the CBC’s activism on behalf of the Freedmen, Tim Giago published an article on the Huffington Post entitled, “Congressional Black Caucus Attacks Sovereign Status of Indian Nations.” Giago asserted that such activism is an assault upon tribal sovereignty.
 
Nevertheless, positing the CBC’s call for sanctions against the Cherokee nation as an “attack” on tribal sovereignty ignores over two centuries of Black – Cherokee relations, and the current issue which is not tribal sovereignty, but rather human rights.
 
As a means of “civilizing” American Indians, Southern whites introduced chattel slavery to what are now known as The Five Civilized Tribes: Creeks, Seminoles, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Cherokees. The Cherokees exceeded their Indian counterparts in embracing southern white culture and they profited the most from slave ownership. By 1809 there were 600 enslaved blacks living in the Cherokee nation; the number increased to 1,600 by 1835. When Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act forcing Cherokees on a death march out west–the infamous “Trail of Tears”–they carried their black slaves with them.
 
Slavery in Indian Country (now the state of Oklahoma) proved far more profitable to the tribes than it had been in the Southeast. By 1860 there were 4,000 slaves living in the Cherokee nation alone. Slavery in Indian Country over time came to differ little from white slavery in the Southern states as slave codes were strictly enforced to maintain the hierarchy between slave owner and slave society. For example, a Cherokee could be expelled from the tribe for teaching a slave to read and write; the penalty for a slave who raped a Cherokee woman was death. Also the tribe fully cooperated with the federal government in enforcing fugitive slave laws. Runaway Cherokee slaves were not uncommon. In 1842, four years after removal, 35 Cherokee slaves accompanied by their Seminole allies staged a slave revolt and attempted to escape through Creek territory. They were apprehended and brought back to their masters. Although the number of slave owners in Indian Country only amounted to approximately ten percent of the population, similar to southern society, the Indian planter class held sway over the tribes, many of whom resented both the Anglo-Saxon lifestyle and the peculiar institution.
 
The Cherokee nation under the leadership of Principal Chief John Ross, himself a slave owner, reluctantly sided with the Confederacy during the Civil War. Stand Watie, a Cherokee and the only Indian Confederate to obtain the rank of Brigadier General, was the last among the Confederate Generals to surrender to Union troops on June 25, 1865. In September of that year the Cherokees entered into a treaty with the United States which terms included establishing permanent peace among themselves and the federal government, the abolition of slavery, the partial ceding of lands, and the consolidation of all tribal governments within the Indian Territory. A subsequent treaty, made with the five tribes in July 1866, granted full citizenship rights to newly free slaves (Freedmen) in Indian Country. Article nine of the treaty reads in part:
They [Cherokee Government] further agree that all freedmen who have been liberated by voluntary act of their former owners or by law, as well as all free colored persons who were in the country at the commencement of the rebellion, and are now residents therein, or who may return within six months, and their descendants, shall have all the rights of native Cherokees: Provided, That owners of slaves so emancipated in the Cherokee Nation shall never receive any compensation or pay for the slaves so emancipated.
Since the signing of the 1866 treaty, the Freedmen’s existence in the Cherokee nation has been tenuous to say the least. Tribal policies on behalf of the Freedmen have been informed by well entrenched southern attitudes toward people of African descent. Hence, the Freedmen’s struggle for equality and the recognition of full citizenship, while in some ways different, mirrors the struggle African Americans have endured as citizens in the United States since after the Civil War.
 
At first glance, the Freedmen dilemma appears to be a case of civil rights vs. tribal sovereignty. In 1968 Congress passed the Indian Civil Rights Act which guaranteed to tribal citizens due process and equal protection under the law. However, in 1975 Nixon signed the Indian Self – Determination Act, assuring Native nations that they can be autonomous while at the same time supported by the federal government. Consequently, tribal sovereignty, vaguely defined as a tribe’s right to have complete control of its internal affairs without interference from the Federal government, became the cornerstone of the new federal policy toward recognized Indian tribes. Nevertheless, tribal sovereignty was soon pitted against civil rights as can be seen in the landmark case of Santa Clara Pueblo v Martinez.
 
In 1978, Julia Martinez, a member of the Santa Clara Pueblo Tribe located near Santa Fe, New Mexico sought tribal membership for her two children, who were fathered by a Navajo Indian. According to tribal law, children fathered by non-members could not receive tribal enrollment. This law did not apply to the children of Santa Clara Pueblo men sired with non-member women. Martinez attempted to sue on grounds that the tribe’s refusal to enroll her children was discriminatory and violated her civil rights. The case went all the way to the Supreme Court. The Court sided with the tribe. The justices used the case to broaden the power of Indian tribes ruling that providing a federal forum in which tribal members could sue tribal governments on the basis of civil rights undermined tribal self determination [read; tribal sovereignty]. Ironically, the justice who wrote the majority opinion in this case was celebrated African-American civil rights lawyer Thurgood Marshal.
 
Tribal sovereignty is the bedrock of Indian national identity. The right to chose one’s tribal members is a sacred aspect of tribal sovereignty. As noted by Fergus Bordewich in Killing the White Man’s Indian: Reinventing Native Americans at the End of the Twentieth Century (1997): “To abrogate tribal decisions, particularly in the delicate area of membership, for whatever ‘good’ reasons, is to destroy cultural identity under the guise of saving it” (87). Unfortunately, federally recognized tribes have used tribal sovereignty as a cover for discrimination against Native women, black Indians and other “mixed bloods.” After Martinez, the number of cases reported to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights against tribal governments dropped considerably due to the growing consensus among tribal members that filing such complaints would provide little recourse.
 
Despite the Freedmen’s uphill battle for full tribal recognition, a minority within the Cherokee nation have expressed outrage over their expulsion. Most notably, David Cornsilk, a Cherokee nationalist, has called for his counterparts to exercise true sovereignty by embracing a traditional definition of Cherokee which predates Euro-American contact. As quoted in Scott L. Malcolmson’s One Drop of Blood: The American Misadventure of Race (2000), Cornsilk states:
These people [Freedmen] live like Cherokee. . . Many of them even speak Cherokee. There’s a lot of them who, their grandparents spoke the Cherokee language, and they even have passed it down. They might be more Cherokee than most Cherokees. . . . Throughout the history of our tribe, we have always made people who came into our tribe and established a true connection to us—either through marriage or adoption—we made them one of us. And then suddenly to have an entire branch of our family, the freedmen branch of our family, to be cut off, to be simply severed and told, ‘Now you’re no longer one of us,’ for political reasons, for racial reasons, is more than I can tolerate [120].
Not only does Cornsilk call for a redefinition of Cherokee based in traditional Cherokee identity, he also calls on his tribe to live up to its treaty obligations to the Freedmen just as they demand the federal government honor its treaty obligations to federally recognized tribes. Nullifying the 1866 treaty would be the height of hypocrisy, he argues. While many Cherokee resent the activism of the CBC on behalf of the Freedmen, Cornsilk believes the CBC is well within its right to call for an embargo against the Cherokee nation.
 
On June 21, 2007, Congresswoman Diane E. Watson (D-CA) introduced House bill H.R. 2824 which calls on Congress “To sever United States’ government relations with the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma until such time as the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma restores full tribal citizenship to the Cherokee Freedmen disenfranchised in the March 3, 2007, Cherokee Nation vote and fulfills all its treaty obligations with the Government of the United States, and for other purposes.” On March 13, 2008, the CBC sent a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), threatening to block House bill H. R. 2786, the Native American Housing and Assistance and Self-Determination Reauthorization Act of 2007, unless it included language that prevents the Cherokee Nation from receiving any benefits until it fully complies with its treaty obligations to the Freedmen. The Indian assistance bill which passed the House in September 2007 included such language; however, the Senate bill does not.
 
While Giago accuses the CBC of attacking tribal sovereignty, the case of the Freedmen is a human rights issue which places it beyond the domestic sphere and makes it a matter of international concern. It is undeniable that the tribe’s vote to override the 2006 Cherokee Supreme Court decision was racially motivated–a type of ethnic cleansing, as it were. To contend that only those of Cherokee “blood” can be a part of the Cherokee nation, not only distorts historical reality, but is a blatant denial of black-Cherokee kinship ties which occurred despite the enactment of tribal anti-miscegenation laws. Nevertheless, in an attempt to deflect attention from the issue at hand, Giago sensationalizes his account by drawing Barack Obama into the controversy. Given Obama’s membership in the CBC, Giago suggests that the Democratic candidate for president, a champion of tribal sovereignty, is guilty of hypocrisy.
 
This is a time-worn game of guilt by association. There is no hard evidence that Obama has been directly involved in the proposed legislation. Watson’s bill (as well as the Reid letter) originated in the House not the Senate. According to an anonymous source in the CBC office, only 33 out of 43 members of the CBC signed the Reid letter, all of them members of the House. The CBC has not received a response from Reid. It appears that the Senate has yet to render a decision. Hence, to accuse Obama of being two-faced on Indian issues seems a bit premature.
 
Also, Giago states that the CBC is selective in its support of the Freedmen only because they are black:
It should be noted that California is one of the worst states in the Union where tribes are systematically removing and denying citizenship to members. Rep. Watson represents a voting district in that state. What has she done about this problem in her own district? And what about the rest of the Congressional Black Caucus? Are they not concerned that Indian people are often removed from tribes in California without even a democratic vote? Or will they only speak up when Black Americans are involved?
These statements are at once disingenuous and contradictory. First, the purpose of the CBC is to address the legislative concerns of African Americans and other minorities, which includes American Indians. Hence, the CBC has supported numerous legislative measures which benefit federally recognized tribes. Second, Giago’s article is based on the premise that efforts of the CBC on behalf of the Freedmen not only jeopardize the sovereignty of the Cherokee nation, but all recognized tribes within the boundaries of the United States. Are we now to assume that Giago is concerned about tribal sovereignty only when it involves the Cherokee nation? Does Giago mean to suggest that the CBC should be concerned with human rights violations within Indian tribes only when the violations are carried out undemocratically?
 
It is not my intent to be facetious or to make light of the matter at hand. I realize this is a sensitive situation. Its complexities are rooted in the divisiveness of racial politics, which have plagued our nation since its inception—what Condoleezza Rice recently referred to as “America’s birth defect.” American Indians, the most invisible minority within the borders of the U. S., have endured centuries of oppression. They continue to struggle for survival and autonomy. Nevertheless, tribal sovereignty should no longer be allowed to remain a shield for federally recognized tribes which engage in discriminatory practices. There must be some measure of accountability.
 
The racially motivated vote to expel the Freedmen from the Cherokee nation by rejecting the 2006 Cherokee Supreme Court’s ruling, which deemed the act unconstitutional, is a human rights violation which the CBC and Congress should not ignore. Withholding funds from the Cherokee nation will send the clear message to Indian Country that while the protection of tribal sovereignty will continue to be honored by the federal government, engaging in the violation of human rights will not be tolerated, even if it is sanctioned by a democratic vote.
 
 
 
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I have been following the Cherokee nation’s stripping the Black Freedmen of their citizenship for quite a while. Over the next week, or two, I will post essays on this issue.

 

5 Comments

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5 responses to “SENATOR BARACK OBAMA, THE CHEROKEE NATION, AND THE CHEROKEE FREEDMEN

  1. Congratulations to the Freedmen for taking a unified stance on their rights.

    As tribal members who were disenrolled from Pechanga, we also are fighting for our civil rights. We support the Freedmen’s position and keep updated on my blog.

    Marilyn Vann is doing a great job keeping the troops together and the information flowing.

    Rep. Diane Watson is a good champion, and, as our tribe is based in California, hope she will include us on her radar screen.

    Keep the stories coming and come visit my blog if time permits.

    Congress needs to STEP in and not reward tribes for wielding sovereignty like a CLUB.

  2. Ann

    Original Pechanga, thanks so much for stopping by.

    I know of Ms. Vann and her courageous fight for the Freedmen(Women). Her family’s ties with the Cherokee nation go back many generations. I also hope Rep. Watson does not forget the Pechangas.

    “Black Indians” like Black Americans have put so much into their *countries* only to be stabbed in the back.

    Wrong is wrong.

    Sovereign nation or not, you do not strip a group of people who have been a part of your nation, of their citizenship. You do not disenfranchise them.

    Whites have done enough wrongs to black people, but, then again, so have the “Five Civilized Tribes” done wrong in their enslavement of black people as well.

    I will definitely check out your blog.

    Once again, thanks for stopping by.

  3. Rod

    I’ve read your article about the CBC and the Cherokee Nation, and as a black indian, I appreciate that there are voices that can resonate our concerns as a people. I am a senior at the College of Visual Arts in Saint Paul, and I plan to make the struggle of the black indians my main focus and thesis. I feel that what has happened in the Cherokee nation in regards to the freedman is no different than what blacks have dealt with in general from advent of slavery to the civil rights movement and beyond. I want to thank both Marilyn Vann and Rep. Watson on their continued efforts for justice. Keep up the fight, and keep the faith!

  4. Ann

    Thanks for stopping by.

    I will post my part 2 of my essay on Obama and the Black Freedmen/Women-Cherokee nation issue next week.

  5. Cassie

    Thank you for this enlightening post. I did not know of this issue. I agree with the post’s author. And President Obama should give his input on resolving helping to resolve this issue.

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