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Heritage Under Fire: Native Americans fight for culture, history, survival

Our nation鈥檚 Indigenous people have seen their visibility rise in recent years.

The first Native American Cabinet secretary, Deb Haaland, was appointed to head the U.S. Department of the Interior last year. Last month, Nicole Mann became the first Native American woman to fly into space. Two new television series, Reservation Dogs and Rutherford Falls, feature Indigenous cast, directors and writers.

But as the nation marks Native American Heritage Month, the struggle for the First Nations to maintain autonomy and cultural identity is as fraught today as it was 10, 20, even 50 years ago. As the U.S. Supreme Court debates whether it should overturn the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) of 1978, making it easier for non-Indigenous families to adopt Native American children, advocates worry that an erosion of other tribal rights is around the corner.

鈥淚 have a hard time with Native American Heritage Month because learning our history is lifelong,鈥 said Valerie Adams, one of the co-founders of the and a member of the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Nation. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e talking about the history and stories of over 574 federally recognized nations, and that doesn鈥檛 count those which are non-federally recognized.鈥

Carmeleta Clark, a physical security supervisor for the Southern Poverty Law Center, has supported the 人兽性交鈥檚 efforts to bolster those Indigenous tribes and maintain their unique cultures.

鈥淭he disparities found in the Indigenous communities are numerous, like many of the other marginalized communities,鈥 said Clark, herself a member of the . 鈥淎nd while I can鈥檛 speak to them all, as someone with Indigenous roots, I have often and continue to see the way our communities are affected.

鈥淲ith the 人兽性交鈥檚 commitment to supporting these communities, they can bring focus and education to a group that so often gets overlooked and pushed aside,鈥 Clark continued. 鈥淭he partnership with the Alabama Indigenous Coalition and our JEDI (Justice, Equity, Diversity, Inclusion) working group has begun with educating staff internally of some of the systemic and current challenges facing the Indigenous communities in our areas and nationwide.鈥

No good deed

The history of this country鈥檚 Indigenous people has been marred by tragedy since the arrival of explorers and colonists on the North American continent centuries ago 鈥 starting with the other side of the story of the first Thanksgiving. Instead of the traditional story, in which Pilgrims asked the Indigenous people to share a feast celebrating their first harvest, the Native American version tells that they were not actually invited.

Instead, the story goes that the settlers were firing guns in the air to celebrate their harvest. The leader of the Wampanoag Tribe investigated with 90 of his men and, because a prophesy had foretold the arrival of the foreigners and cautioned that a peaceful beginning would bring harmony and plenty to the land, they hunted and gathered food to share with the newcomers.

Because of their generally peaceful nature, the Wampanoag had no inkling that their kindness would lead to years of strife, including the taking of their lands, the forcing of the Christian religion on their people and the near genocide that would follow.

Thanksgiving Day, Adams said, became a time for 鈥淸m]y parents, my grandparents, our family 鈥 to enjoy each other鈥檚 company, get a day off but definitely not to celebrate Thanksgiving. It was just a time to get together.鈥

For many other Native Americans, it is a day of mourning. And today, even though laws and treaties to protect the remaining tribes have been signed, their autonomy remains under attack.

鈥淭he ICWA debate is not just about adoption,鈥 said Adams. 鈥淲e are watching Big Oil attorneys line up and ask Supreme Court justices to look at other issues like sovereignty, rights and gaming. They are framing this like a 鈥榬everse racism鈥 case, but they are just blowing past the adoption issue to talk about these other things that have nothing to do with it [ICWA].鈥

At the core of the Supreme Court case is the current requirement that children of Native American families who are up for adoption be first offered to the immediate family members, then to other families in the same tribe, then to families from other tribes before a non-native family can adopt them.

The requirement was written into law after centuries of Native American children being taken away from their families, either through adoption or being forced to attend where their culture was not allowed.

鈥淲e are already dealing with the legacy of the boarding schools, with having Christianity thrust down our throats and their 鈥榢ill the Indian and save the man鈥 mentality,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淚n our history, removing children from the family was another attempt to kill our culture. But they haven鈥檛.鈥

Those efforts were not from some far-flung past.

鈥淢y mom recently passed, and I was thinking about her along with her brothers and other families,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淭hey were sent to boarding schools everywhere. A few are on our reservations still. They were isolated away from what they knew and it affected our language. Even though she spoke fluent Lakota, she would say that sometimes she had difficulty understanding and speaking with the much older members of the tribe. Loss of language is a real issue now for many tribal nations and there are many new language revitalization programs across the country.鈥

Fighting to survive

Like Clark, Adams has worked to organize and support Indigenous people. A large part of that effort has involved co-founding the Alabama Indigenous Coalition with Tori Jackson Edwards.

鈥淭he goal of AIC is to increase awareness of tribal nations鈥 cultures/history as a whole,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淲e founded the group because we discovered people didn鈥檛 understand or know our true history. It is only through coming to a common memory of history that we can understand one another.鈥

In her work at the 人兽性交, Clark is hoping to bring light to the history of the land where the organization鈥檚 offices now stand. After three years of work, she said the effort is coming to fruition.

鈥淚鈥檓 looking forward to the work and discussion that has begun around a meaningful and respectful land acknowledgment for the land that each of our offices are currently residing,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 also appreciate the work being done to bring light to the challenges facing Indigenous communities surrounding voting rights. I am also very happy with the work being done by our Mississippi team in conjunction with the .鈥

Another area of concern to Adams is the loss of the traditional way of living in harmony with the earth.

鈥淲e are having conversations on food sovereignty and self-sufficiency,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ome of the 鈥榥ew traditional foods鈥 like skillet bread or fry bread weren鈥檛 a part of our normal diet as Indigenous food. They were a part of rations after the killing of our food sources. It was either make something with it or starve, and now in contemporary times we have issues with diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer.

鈥淗ow do we get back to being healthy? Our land is poisoned. Our water is poisoned. Because of climate change, even our traditional berries are not available due to a lack of moisture. I am constantly thinking of how we were stewards of the land for thousands of years, but now it has gone to waste.鈥

Glimmers of hope

Despite the toll time has levied on the Indigenous peoples of the United States, there are some investments being made in the future.

In Georgia, the began a Youth Tribal Council to teach the history and workings of the tribe to the next generation of leaders. The program shows children from ages 5 to 17 how they鈥檝e evolved into the tribe鈥檚 current role, including how the tribe is being suppressed from rightful claims to its land, culture and voice.

Out of Birmingham, Alabama, Kate Herrera Jenkins (Cochiti Pueblo) launched in 2014. The group is a leadership and wellness training program to help check the decay in diet among Native Americans and to help them become physically stronger as leaders in their communities.

鈥淲hen something needs to be done, the Creator makes a way,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淚n 2016, we were having to deal with Standing Rock [where tribal burial grounds and religious sites were demolished to make way for a crude oil pipeline]. The medicine men brought us all into a huge prayer circle. Everyone who had a pipe prayed. One of the medicine men said that our biggest problem is that people don鈥檛 know the truth about us. He said that our charge going forward is to educate where you can.鈥

How effective those efforts are, especially in the courts, will tell how the people of the First Nations will fare in the coming decades.

鈥淥ur treaties with the United States say 鈥榓s long as the sun rises, grass grows and rivers run,鈥欌 Adams said. 鈥淥ur relationship with the U.S. is nation-to-nation. Yes, we鈥檙e nervous about the outcome of ICWA. My daughter is a senior in high school. I have been letting her know that if we can get through this, don鈥檛 doubt that they will come again. They won鈥檛 be happy until they erase us so they don鈥檛 have to acknowledge what they have done to us all. They鈥檒l do anything they can do to eliminate us and our version of the truth.鈥

Picture at top: As the U.S. marks Native American Heritage Month, the struggle for the First Nations to maintain autonomy and cultural identity is as fraught as ever. Pictured, a Native American powwow in Georgia. (Credit: Jim Zuckerman/Alamy)