Readers know Bluestem has been following considerations of tribal sovereignty for many years. Since moving to Summit, SD, within the historical boundaries of the Lake Traverse Reservation, home of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate, we've been following the fate of the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, since our next door neighbor, a SWO citizen, is the father of three happy and bright adopted brothers, raising the boys along with his non-Indian wife.
His own mother is a traditional herbalist who owns a small business, and the boys help gather sage and other herbs for their grandmother, as well as doing well in the local school. It's a blessing to live beside a happy family.
Yet, while this happiness isn't guaranteed for other Dakota families, there's a movement across the country to protect the concept of tribal sovereignty and heritage.
At the Minnesota Reformer, Michelle Griffith reported Monday in Sen. Smith, Lt. Gov Flanagan highlight tribal rights in the face of U.S. Supreme court ruling:
Minnesota Sen. Tina Smith and Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan on Monday praised the emerging influence of Native Americans throughout state and federal governments, and they urged leaders to uphold tribal sovereignty at a National Congress of American Indians conference.
The conference at the Mystic Lake Center in Prior Lake attracted tribal leaders from across the country. Speakers addressed issues facing tribal nations, including climate change and the 2023 federal Farm Bill.
But the theme of the day was celebrating a series of recent electoral and political victories for Native Americans, all the while anxiously awaiting a potential existential blow to tribal sovereignty from the U.S. Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court any day now will issue a ruling in Brackeen v. Haaland, a case to determine the constitutionality of the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA). The law established federal minimum standards for the removal of Native American children from their homes and requires states to prioritize placing children in homes of extended family members and other tribal homes — places that could reflect the values of Native American culture.
ICWA was enacted following a century-long campaign by the federal government of forcibly removing Native children from their homes and placing them in boarding schools and with white adoptive families. The mission was to assimilate Native children into the white American mainstream — or “kill the Indian in him, save the man,” as the founder of the first boarding school infamously said.
The plaintiffs in the Supreme Court case argue ICWA discriminates against non-Native families because of their race. ICWA proponents argue tribal citizenship is a political — not racial — category.
Smith told the room full of tribal leaders that she will “do everything in my power to protect and strengthen tribal sovereignty.”
“We have to hold each and every federal, state and local leader accountable for respecting your sovereignty,” Smith said.
The Minnesota Legislature this session passed a law codifying ICWA-like language into state law in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling, though if the Supreme Court overturns ICWA it’s unclear what would happen in Minnesota. Minnesota’s law could face its own court challenge.
Flanagan told the room about the initiatives the Minnesota Legislature passed this session for the 11 tribal nations within the state, including additional funding for tribes and restricting the use of Native American mascots in public schools.
Flanagan also said it was a “beautiful gift” for young Native Americans to see themselves represented in the government and in television and movies.
“For far too long, dominant culture has seen Native people as mascots, as ancient history, but that is not and has never been the truth,” Flanagan said. “We are sending powerful reminders that we are still here and we will not be unheard, and it is past time for systems that were built without us to finally listen, or we will change those systems for our own benefit.”
U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, who is the first Native American to serve in a president’s cabinet, also spoke on Monday. The Department of the Interior published a first-ever report last year on the atrocities committed at boarding schools. Haaland said Interior continues to hear the stories of people who survived boarding schools while directing survivors and their descendants toward support.
This Minnesota Reformer article is republished here under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
Related posts
- Update: Amos LaFramboise to be returned to the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate, Lake Traverse Reservation from Carlisle Indian School
- SWO archivist: "We are committed to them . . . to bringing them home like the chiefs that they are"
- SWO moves closer to bringing ancestors home from Carlisle Indian School with affidavit signing ceremony
- Video: Return of Our Sisseton-Wahpeton Children
- With passage of SF667, legislature updates Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act
- MN Reformer: MN lawmakers hope to codify Indian Child Welfare Act language into state law
- Joint panel hears testimony on legislation to codify protections of Native American children
- Mission of Wounded Knee activists continues 50 years later with children, grandchildren
- Philadelphia Inquirer feature 'I had to be prayed home' highlights Sisseton Wahpeton family
Photo: Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, a member of the White Earth Nation, is the nation's highest ranking Native woman elected to executive office. Flanagan shown here speaking before a march for missing and murdered Indigenous women in Minneapolis in February 2020. Photo by Max Nesterak/Minnesota Reformer.
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