Black enslaved people and their descendants were not and are not migrants, immigrants, settlers, or colonizers to the United States. Our ancestors were brought here against their will. They did not move here looking for a better life or to displace Indigenous people.
I say this because many Native Americans feel as though Black Americans are settlers or migrants, and we aren’t. I’ve had a Native person say to a group of Black Americans in a meeting in college that we should “go back to Africa.” But we really have nowhere to go there.
And for those of us whose ancestors were owned by Native Americans, such statements are even more hurtful. Native Americans bought and abused our displaced ancestors and used their free labor for profit. Telling us to “go back to Africa” in some anti-Black attempt at #LandBack
is offensive and hurtful.
That doesn’t mean that some Black people have not also worked with the US government to undermine or hurt Indigenous people/communities (for example, the Buffalo Soldiers), but it does mean that we aren’t colonizers or migrants if our ancestors were brought here in shackles.
Sign our petition please for the Freedmen of the Five Tribes in regards to Deb Haaland, who is being considered for Sec of the Interior
The reason why we are pushing for our tribes to recognize us as full and equal citizens is because we recognize them as truly sovereign nations. As sovereign nations, they have specific human rights obligations to the descendants of the people they enslaved.
I know many people within Native sovereignty movements believe that sovereignty gives Indigenous nations a free pass to treat their members and non-members however they want, but that’s truly not how sovereignty works. When a sovereign nation makes a cognizant choice to harm
a group of people (specifically when that harm is so targeted based on race and ancestry), that nation has obligations. And other nations should be holding nations who are committing human rights abuses accountable. That means other Natives nations and the United States.
The reason why we even have federal prisons or a federal justice system at all today is because that was the way the US government was able to criminalize Native people/territories and begin weakening tribal sovereignty. The “feds” are actually a fairly recent invention.
And federal prisons and incarceration were literally invented as a way to control and criminalize not only Indigenous individual people but Indigenous sovereign nations as well. Leavenworth Federal Prison was the first ever federal prison and was opened in 1896.
With the introduction of the Major Crimes Act of 1885, US criminal laws expanded to all Native peoples on and off the reservations, increasing the federal government’s reach into Indian crime in Indian Territory, policing people for behaviors that may have been perfectly legal.
As underscored by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson in the conversation “Living in Reciprocity,” with @Adavis777A, @fritzlechat, and @policingblack, anti-Blackness should not be a part of Indigneous self-governing or treaty-making. We are shocked that Freedmen’s discrimination
is being discussed by a panel in Canada! But we are very happy that Freedmen and tribal anti-Blackness more broadly is getting the attention it deserves globally. Thank you @TashiTewa for asking the question to the panel!
A reminder that we are still asking for more signatures on our petition to Deb Haaland asking her to speak out publicly in support of Freedpeople’s treaty rights to equal and full tribal citizenship. Sign and share.
Happy Birthday to legendary actor and Chickasaw Freedman @DonCheadle! He has acted in Hotel Rwanda, as well as in Crash and the Oceans film series. He is perhaps most well-known for his role in the Iron Man and Avengers films as War Machine/James Rhodes.
Don Cheadle descends from Chickasaw Freedmen Mary and Bill Kemp and discovered more about his ancestors and their history of enslavement and delayed emancipation in the Chickasaw Nation on a segment with Henry Louis Gates on the PBS Series African American Lives.
Don Cheadle has been nominated for an Academy Award and has won a Golden Globe for his acting. He has also been involved in activism on climate change and against the genocide in Darfur. In 2007, he, along with George Clooney, was presented with a Summit Peace Award by the Nobel
#FreedmenHistorySpotlightSaturday: Today, we spotlight a #MMIW of Afro-Indigenous descent from the Seminole Nation named Che-Cho-Ter, or Morning Dew. She was one of Chief Osceola’s two wives and bore him four children and was of mixed Black and Seminole descent.
According to accounts at the time in the Quarterly Anti-Slavery Magazine, Chief Osceola and Morning Dew traveled to Fort King (in present-day Ocala) to purchase supplies when Morning Dew was seized as a slave. “Evidently having Negro blood in her veins the law pronounced her a
slave.” This all happened while Seminoles still in Florida were struggling against forced removal on the Trail of Tears, objecting to being moved from their Indigenous lands in Florida. The Indians didn’t want to leave their lands and many free Black people in the Seminole Nation
A follow-up on last night’s Instagram comment, in which we were accused by a non-Black Native of not being Native EVEN if we were mixed with “Indigenous blood.” The person then went on to accuse us of appropriating Native culture. It’s impossible for Freedmen to appropriate our
own tribal cultures. When our ancestors were forcibly bought and enslaved by Native masters, they were also forced to assimilate into our tribal communities. They learned how to speak Chikashshanompa' and Chahta Anumpa by force. It was conditional on them not being abused.
Not only did they learn to speak their tribal languages, but they also learned how to cook traditional tribal dishes and transformed them throughout time, incorporating our own African and American Southern traditions into the food. They also transformed the language