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Speech: Descendants of Freedmen
Association 5th Annual Conference
June 7, 2008
Langston University
Congresswoman Diane E. Watson
I want to thank Dr. Haysbert, President of
Langston University, Rhonda Grayson, Conference Chair, and Marilyn Vann,
President of the Freedmen’s Association, for inviting me to address the
Descendants of Freedmen Association’s 5th Annual Conference.
I also want to thank Jon Velie, the Freedmen’s chief counsel, and Wayne
Thompson for their assistance to me and my staff. Their expertise and
knowledge has been invaluable. Finally, I want to thank Eli Grayson
for his incredible support for the Freedmen cause.
Some issues never die. They fade away and lay
dormant for years, even decades, and once again rear their ugly heads
with renewed vigor. Such is the condition of the Freedmen and the
current controversy over Freedmen citizenship in the Cherokee Nation.
I first became aware of the Cherokee Freedmen in
early March 2007, after the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma voted to expel
the majority of Freedmen citizens from the Nation. In response to the
March 3 vote, 25 of my congressional colleagues and I sent a letter to
Carl Artman, Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, requesting his
interpretation of the legality of the vote.
Assistant Secretary Artman responded a month later
with what is best described as a non-response. Artman wrote, and I
quote, “The Department…is studying the many issues surrounding this
evolving matter. We are concerned about the ramifications this will
have on the Freedmen of the Cherokee Nation and will continue our
careful evaluation of all facets of the matter.”
I have held political office long enough to know
that when a government official talks about “studying” an issue, it is a
sign that he or she wants to bury and lay it to rest. I was determined
that the Freedmen would not be subjected to such a cruel fate and
instructed my staff to draft legislation.
In June 2007, I introduced H.R. 2824, legislation
that severs U.S. government relations with the Cherokee Nation of
Oklahoma until such time as the Nation restores full tribal citizenship
to the Cherokee Freedmen disenfranchised in the March 2, 2007 Cherokee
Nation vote. Twenty four members of Congress have cosponsored the
legislation. It has been referred to the Committees on Judiciary and
Natural Resources.
I remain hopeful that Congressman John Conyers, a
cosponsor of my bill and Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and
Congressman Nick Rahall, Chairman of the Natural Resources Committee,
will hold joint committee hearings on the Freedmen. If any issue
deserves congressional oversight in the light of day, it is the Freedmen
issue. It is something the Cherokee leadership does not want. Sunshine
is truly the best antiseptic.
Over the past year, the Cherokee leadership has
spent in excess of $10 million dollars lobbying against the Freedmen in
Washington, D.C. It has hired a number of expensive D.C. lobbying firms
and a stable of high-priced lawyers to argue its case in U.S. Federal
District Court. Chad Smith, the Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation,
travels back and forth between his base in Talequah and the U.S. Capitol
in a private chartered jet. He oversees a corporate empire that
receives $300 million yearly from the federal government and more that
$400 million from its federally chartered gaming operations. Three
quarters of one billion dollars is not an insignificant amount of money
by any standard. Many well-healed corporations operate with much less
capital on hand.
I find it incredulous that the Cherokee Nation
would spend $10 million dollars to lobby against a small minority of its
citizens, 2,800 Freedmen by its own calculation, out of a total Cherokee
population of 300,000. Why, I must ask, is the Cherokee Nation so
intent on ridding itself of people like Bernice Riggs -- a descendant of
humorist Will Rogers and Clem Vann Rogers, a noted Cherokee leader --
who suffers from Alzheirmer’s in a nursing home unsupported by Indian
Health Services medical benefits? Is it because Ms. Riggs is a Freedmen
descendant, who Chad Smith will declare to her face and the world is
non-Indian? I’m certain that it would cost a mere pittance of $10
million dollars to tend to Bernice Riggs needs or the needs of other
poor Freedmen who have been denied services and benefits by Chad Smith.
One of the many myths put forward by the Cherokee
Nation’s propaganda machine is that Freedmen only want to become
citizens of the Cherokee Nation to take advantage of the Nation’s
federal benefits and gaming proceeds. You and I know this is not true.
Most Freedmen, as is the case with the vast majority of Cherokee
citizens, do not qualify for federal benefits dispensed by the tribe.
But those who qualify for benefits, such as Bernice Riggs, certainly
should receive them.
You and I know that the Freedmen’s motivation is
not financial. It is about preserving the historical record and setting
it straight. We know that a man without a history is like a tree
without roots. And we know that the intent of Chad Smith and others is
to engage in the worst form of historical revisionism by denying
Freedmen their rightful place as citizens of the Cherokee Nation. The
Freedmen seek to reclaim their history, nothing more and nothing less.
Freedmen want history to record that they too
walked the Trail of Tears and suffered through the hardships of removal
with the red badge of slavery attached to their chests. Freedmen want
history to record that they were made citizens of the Cherokee Nation in
1866—along with the Shawnee, Delaware, and intermarried whites—and that
it was the only citizenship they would have until Oklahoma became a
state in 1907. Freedmen want history to record that they, like other
Cherokee citizens, voted and ran for political office and that as many
as six Freedmen were elected and served on the Cherokee National
Council. And Freedmen want history to record, in the words of Professor
Daniel Littlefield, “that the Cherokee Nation was a multi-racial,
multi-cultural constitutional nation, whose citizenship was based not on
blood or culture but on either birth or adoption.”
Freedmen seek to destroy the myths offered up by
Chad Smith and others in their defense of the indefensible. It is past
time for Mr. Smith and the Cherokee leadership to face the facts. But
it appears the longer the Freedmen issue lingers, the greater is their
descent into misstatements, misunderstanding, half-truths, and
hyperbole.
Let me discuss just a few of these myths with you:
Myth Number One: H.R. 2824 is a termination
bill.
This is Mr. Smith’s standard stump speech. He says
that H.R. 2824 is a termination bill. But it is not a termination
bill. Let me state that again: H.R. 2824 is not a termination bill.
It does not overturn U.S. recognition of the Cherokee Nation. It
simply cuts off funds to the Nation until it meets its treaty
obligations. There is not one word, group of words, phrases, or
paragraphs in the legislation that discuss or call for termination of
the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma.
Myth Number 2: To be a citizen of the Cherokee
Nation, one must find an Indian ancestor listed on the federally
authorized Dawes Rolls of the Cherokees.
First, the fact is that the roll made by the Dawes
Commission was a roll of all Cherokee citizens according to the means by
which they acquired citizenship—by either blood or adoption. The
Cherokee Nation’s agreement with the Dawes Commission stated that “The
roll of citizens of the Cherokee nation shall be made…and the names of
all persons then living and entitled to enrollment on that date shall be
placed on said roll by the Commission of the Five Civilized Tribes.”
The Commission made no reference to “citizens by blood” as being the
only legitimate citizens of the Cherokee Nation.
Second, Chief Smith makes much of blood quantum and
that only descendants who can trace an ancestor back to the blood Dawes
Rolls are entitled to Cherokee citizenship. But what Mr. Smith fails to
acknowledge is that the Dawes Rolls were compiled as part of a national
effort to divest Native Americans of their tribal lands. Blood quantum,
rooted in the virulent racism of the 19th Century -- which
said that the whiter one was, the more civilized he was – was recorded
by the Dawes Commission to determine the applicant’s competency. Dawes
Roll registrants who were more than half Cherokee were judged
incompetent to manage their own affairs and became wards of the
Department of Interior. Over one hundred years later, Chad Smith has
hitched the future of the Cherokee Nation to a deeply flawed and highly
racist construct.
Finally, Chief Smith states the issue at hand is
Cherokee identity and who is Indian and that this is a matter of tribal
sovereignty. It is not. The issue is the Treaty of 1866 and whether
the Cherokee Nation can violate the Treaty of 1866, which granted the
descendants of former Cherokee slaves all the rights of Cherokee
citizenship.
Myth Number 3: There is no such thing as a
termination effort against the Freedmen.
The Cherokee Nation terminated the membership
rights of Cherokee Freedmen in 1983. The Freedmen challenged their
termination in U.S. District Court in Vann v. Kempthorne in 2003. It is
still pending. In 2006, the Cherokee Court ruled in the Allen decision
that the denial of Freedmen citizenship and the right to vote was
unconstitutional. After the decision, the Cherokee Nation began
enrolling Freedmen for a period from March 2006 to March 2007.
Since the March 2007 vote, the Cherokee Nation has
ceased registration of Freedmen, despite the fact that many descendants
of the 2,800 enrolled Freedmen have applied. They have no access to the
Cherokee Nation’s medical, educational, housing and other benefits that
stem from the $300 million the Nation receives annually.
The Freedmen that hold citizenship are now in
‘limbo” status. They are called “Non-Indians” by Chad Smith and the
Cherokee Administration and are the focus of a multi-million dollar
lobbying campaign to deny their Cherokee identity.
This sounds and looks like termination to me.
Myth # 4: The Cherokee Nation did not own slaves.
The Cherokee Nation regulated slavery and passed
slave codes prior to the Civil War. Cherokee Nation slave masters held
more slaves than any other Indian Nation, as many as 4,000 at one
point. The Nation enacted strict slave codes and brutally suppressed a
slave revolt in 1842. The Cherokee Nation leadership fought on the side
of the Confederacy during the Civil War in part to preserve the
institution of slavery. It’s true that the majority of Cherokees did
not own slaves. It is also true that Cherokee Nation as a whole
benefited financially from the free labor of its slave population.
The myths put forward by the Cherokee Nation
explain why it has not made a coherent argument as to why it can dispose
of the citizenship of its people in spite of a treaty. It explains why
the Cherokee Nation’s leadership values citizenship so little that it is
not regarded as an inherent birthright and can be taken by the whim of
the majority.
The Chief’s argument that Congress should not act
is not supported by law or equity. Congress has a legitimate oversight
role to play in how taxpayers’ dollars are spent. That is why I will
continue to push for congressional hearings on this issue.
But the battle for the rights of Freedmen cannot be
won by me or other members of Congress alone. The real battle must be
waged by you here in Oklahoma. I have come to learn that most African
Americans in Oklahoma are related to Freedmen. It is up to you to take
ownership in this issue. After all, it is your history.
You may not have $10 million dollars available.
But court, legislative, and human rights battles are not won by money
alone. They are won through constant advocacy. You must write letters,
not only to Members of Congress but to the tribal chiefs to educate them
about the Freedmen. You need to get in your cars and travel to
Washington, D.C. and walk the hallways of Congress, visiting as many
congressional offices as you can. You also need to lobby your local
legislators here in Oklahoma City and across Oklahoma.
When you are finished doing all that, you need to
write more letters and get in your cars again to visit your local
representatives and the Capitol.
Winning the battle for the rights of Freedmen will
take persistence, strength, endurance, and fortitude. The Cherokee
Nation’s strategy is obvious: just outlast the opposition; the
opposition will eventually tire of the issue. When they tire and lose
interest, the Cherokee Nation will be poised to eliminate Freedmen from
the tribe and from its history books.
You hold the fate of the Freedmen in your own
hands. Don’t let it slip due to inaction or fear. The Freedmen ghosts
of Joseph Brown, Stick Ross, Ned Irons, Frank Vann, Samuel Stidham, and
Jerry Alberty are watching. They are depending on you. Please don’t
let them down.
Thank you.
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