By
Trace A. DeMeyer
OK,
as promised, I have more thoughts after I went to the hallowed halls of Yale
Law School last Friday to hear a review of the Baby Veronica Case - and to hear
what NCAI, NARF and the Tribal Supreme Court Law Project at Yale were doing
while this major case was going on... and I reported to you yesterday what they said essentially…
There
weren't any surprises for me unless you count how these panelists didn't use
the time to discuss the genocide that actually occurred prior the passing of
the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 and the child abductions by social workers
and missionaries - nor did they mention human trafficking and the Nightlight
Adoption Agency dealings with Maldonado, the birthmother. They did mention boarding schools.
So,
I was truly upset. From what I heard, it appears American Indians are eons
behind in civil rights and we can't seem to win a case in the Supreme Court. I’d heard that warning years prior but
this time at Yale was a bit more in my face. This case was about adoption by
non-Indians, something I lived myself.
We
had Justice Alito writing an opinion that Veronica is 1.2% Indian. NARF
attorney Joel West Williams asked the Yale audience, "Who in America is
1/16 or 3/256th anything?" Yet we
have a judge issuing his opinion by measuring an Indian for their Indian-ness
which equates to measuring a child’s blood? This is still happening?
·
JUSTICE ALITO
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This
case is about a little girl (Baby Girl) who is classified as an Indian because
she is 1.2% (3/256) Cherokee. Because Baby Girl is classified in this way, the
South Carolina Supreme Court held that certain provisions of the federal Indian
Child Welfare Act of 1978 required her to be taken, at the age of 27 months,
from the only parents she had ever known and handed over to her biological
father, who had attempted to relinquish his [**736]
parental rights and who had no prior contact with the child. The provisions of
the federal statute [*2557] at issue here do not
demand this result.
·
Jun 25 2013: Judgment REVERSED and case REMANDED.
Alito, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Roberts, C. J., and
Kennedy, Thomas, and Breyer, JJ., joined. Thomas, J., and Breyer, J., filed
concurring opinions. Scalia, J., filed a dissenting opinion. Sotomayor, J.,
filed a dissenting opinion, in which Ginsburg and Kagan, JJ., joined, and in
which Scalia, J., joined in part. Read more here
·
I couldn’t sleep ... Dusten Brown never had a
chance. He went to Iraq knowing the Capobiancos had his daughter but he had to
serve a year and a JAG lawyer took his case.
The puzzle remains why Maldonado mysteriously breaks up with him and severs all communication.
Was she punishing her high school sweetheart Dusten by selling his baby or was
she manipulated by the adoption agency to take their money?
Then it hit me - keeping America ignorant of
Indians, culture, actual history - this all works to take Indian children. Judgment is easy. Third World poverty (which we didn’t create) somehow
equates to abuse of children. Add their
general ignorance of sovereignty and culture, what it means to be Cherokee or
Lakota or Navajo or any tribe - and it means you can't win public opinion polls
or cases before the Supreme Court?
Ignorance
about Indians? Exactly!
It's
been going on since colonial contact. Please, let's not call them settlers
anymore but invaders. America has always
been the Great Divider, building its fences, writing its laws, counting on
classism and racism to divide us.
America
wins every time when it perpetuates this ignorance of Indians. Do Indians do a good job of educating others
about culture, or what's important to us? Not really. We're way behind in any civil
rights movement. We've had movies
romanticizing us over 100 years and it's hard to kill those "savage" “redskin”
stereotypes drilled into all our heads!
What
do Americans know about Indians? Nothing.
Practically zilch.
America's
"taking care" of Indians only works to create HATE among Americans
who view us as privileged in some way that they are not. Like why do we even have a law that keeps nice
white people from adopting Indian babies? Trust me, ICWA is under attack.
I
do know that Indians are way ahead in surviving every broken treaty and then
fighting each other over small scraps of power. Some tribes even subscribe to
"blood quantum" as if they need to purge their citizen rolls of those
who may be too white or too black.
We
have Supreme Court Justices using the blood quantum argument and you see that
is not entirely their fault (they all went to law school but didn’t even have a
course on Indian Law at those Ivy League schools) but it tells me - do not go
anywhere near them. They are not even aware of their ignorance. Dusten Brown didn't have a chance, not in that
court.
We
Indians shouldn't go anywhere near that court or any court with that level of
stupidity. No, you can't tell America they are stupid.
What
the panel did say was each and every tribe needs to create and have their own
child protection network. I agree since it's pretty evident that you can't
trust any non-Indian social worker to go to the reservation and use their
mother- father “family unit” example. Only Indians can decide who the right people are
to care for its children. That person might
be an auntie, grandmother or another relative, depending on who in the tribal
family is willing and able.
And
the panel said we need more American Indian lawyers who become judges - because
the way it is now - Indians can’t win.
For many years Vine Deloria and others did try very hard to
educate others (with their brilliant books) on the white man’s level, even
earning degrees in white man’s colleges like Yale and Harvard, but it all comes
down to this: whites don’t really care.
And if we really think about it, this is a very dangerous
situation to be in.
Footnote: I attended white schools like most everyone
else - Really nothing I learned was true or real about Indian culture or
history. I learned more sitting at the kitchen table of my friend Ellowyn who
is Oglala Lakota, who gave me an education about Indians not written about anywhere. Then there was my one adoptive aunt (a
first-born American) who calls me a liar when I told her there were Indian
Boarding Schools, and this was right after I visited Haskell in Kansas. No,
Americans are not learning about Indians or the truth of our history.
The Baby Veronica case is the sign, whether we wish to see it that way or not - but we can no longer ignore the ignorance or the danger surrounding this case.