Getting a lot of questions about the “Abenaki tribes” in VT & NH since publication of my book. To be clear, all of them are involved in #raceshifting. All of them. The actual Abenaki people took a strong stand against the “Abenaki” charade in New England last April.
I explain in Chapter 1 of #DistortedDescent that virtually everybody enrolled in these “tribes” are white French-descendants relying on Indigenous OR French women ancestors born prior to 1650. I discovered this in doing research on online genealogy forums. #raceshifting
Rich Holschuh is member of Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs and public liaison for “Elnu Abenaki Tribe” in VT. He has 1 (potential) Mi’kmaw ancestor born in 1641 (Germain Doucet), though there’s some controversy about whether Doucet was Indigenous at all.
At Oct. 9 meeting of VCNAA, he explained how my book was putting “Abenaki tribes” in VT in “negative light”. Good. I’ve seen and completed dozens of genealogies of their leaders. Every single one of them rely on an ancestor or 2 from 1600s. #raceshifting
You may remember Raymond Lussier, the “tribal judge” for “Nulhegan Abenaki Tribe” in VT who falsely turned a French woman (Catherine Pillard, born 1651) into “Huron-Wendat” woman named “Ouenta”, "long-lost daughter of great Huron-Wendat chief."
Since publication of the article above and my book a month ago, he has double-downed on Pillard being “Ouenta” and even suggested that another French woman (F. Grenier, b. 1604) that I discuss in Chapter 2 is “Indigenous”. #raceshifting
Not surprising, as I explain in Chapter 2 how these "tribes" use Pillard extensively as an "Indigenous" root ancestor for membership purposes. #Raceshifting is at the basis of movement in New England and has been for a longer time than in ON, QC, NB, NS.
Lussier has himself relied on a couple ancestors born in 1600s to shift into an “Indigenous” identity, according to his own genealogy. This is basis of entire “Abenaki” movement in NE, which is why actual Abenaki people have taken a stand against these “tribes”. #raceshifting
Unfortunately, the state of VT recognized 4 of these “tribes” in 2011 & 2012 … this, despite the fact that first and main “Abenaki” organization in state failed to receive federal recognition after a decade of research. #raceshifting
VT authorities barred actual Abenaki people who were prepared to testify at state recognition hearings from testifying. You can read more here on Denise Watso’s blog: abenakinews.blogspot.com
None of 4 state-recognized “tribes” had to produce any ancestral data as part of recognition process. They mostly relied on fact that Abenaki people historically lived in the region and were mistreated by white settlers to evoke political sympathy. #raceshifting
As Circe Sturm has argued in her book on the self-identified "Cherokee" movement in U.S., the advent of state recognition has been a gift to #raceshifting ... state recognition is often nothing more than "pure politics".
In this case, white French-descendants weaponized pain and suffering faced by generations of actual Abenaki people who lived in NE, then lobbied to ban descendants of these same people from testifying about truth. Sturm calls this process "symbolic inversion". #raceshifting
There are a few hundred Abenaki individuals, registered at Odanak in present-day QC, who live in parts of NE and NY. They’re not related to “Abenaki tribes” in VT or NH though. This PhD dissertation explores some of these dynamics: pdfs.semanticscholar.org/7751/3fcf2d74c…
I have extensive documentation on #raceshifting movement in VT & NH. I write about it briefly in chapter 2 of my book Distorted Descent: White Claims to Indigenous Identity: uofmpress.ca/books/detail/d…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
In other news, Michelle Latimer and her PR firm continue to gaslight us all in that terrible piece in the G&M today. Hiring Malette & Pulla and then calling them "experts" is a bit rich, even for Navigator (PR firm). 1
All we find out is what we already knew - Latimer's "non-status Algonquin" & "Métis" identity relies on two women ancestors born in about 1605 and 1647, respectively. That doesn't make her Indigenous. Period. 2
The story that broke last December by journalists @Kanhehsiio & @JorgeBarrera with research by genealogist Dominique Ritchot was simply confirmed in the G&M story today. Nothing new here. 3
I just completed a journal article on the fake "Abenaki tribes" in Vermont. What I uncovered is remarkable. They all rely on French-Canadians immigrants in mid-1800s as "root ancestors," no Abenaki ancestry whatsoever.
In case you're wondering, these 4 "Abenaki tribes" were recognized by the State of Vermont:
Elnu Abenaki Tribe + Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk-Abenaki (2011) + Abenaki Nation at Missisquoi + Koasek Traditional Band of the Koas Abenaki Nation (2012).
They now receive $millions in state & federal educational funding, lifetime fishing licenses, authorization to sell products under Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990, repatriated human remains + land to manage.