URGENT CALL TO ACTION
TO PREVENT MILITARY AND POLICE INCURSION ON MOHAWK TERRITORIES
Please forward this email to your networks. If your group has a website, we
would be grateful if you posted this call.
March 2006
The Coalition in Support of Indigenous Sovereignty – Native Caucus is
asking that you take some time to phone, email or fax the authorities below
to register your objection to a potential incursion onto Mohawk Territories
this spring and at any other time.
This request comes as a result of warnings by community leaders in Akwesasne,
Kahnawake, Kanehsatake and Tyendinega who are preparing for a joint Canadian
Forces/RCMP raid on April 1, the latest in a series of actions designed to destroy
the Mohawk tobacco trade.
Our position on this issue is as follows:
In 1876 the Indian Act imposed the band council system of government on the
indigenous people of Turtle Island (North America). Among other things, this
law:
Deposed already existing leadership to establish band councils and the areas
over which they had jurisdiction. The Indian Act was passed without consultation
with any indigenous leader, usurped the treaty process (nation to nation agreements)
and made First Nations governments null and void, despite the fact that these
governments had served our ancestors for millennia before Europeans arrived
on Turtle Island. This is akin to the US government passing a law that disbanded
the current Canadian government, determined what type of government Canada must
have and designated the limitations of its power.
Made First Nations Communities economically dependent on Ottawa. The federal
government controls the only sources of revenue for social programs, economic
development projects or job creation in FN communities. Ottawa determines through
a variety of legal and financing mechanisms what band councils can and cannot
do for their communities. Even the process of pursuing a land claim is legislated
by Ottawa, funded (or not) by Ottawa and decided ultimately in Canadian courts.
Land usage on FN territories is determined by Ottawa. There are many examples
in history when the federal government leased or sold First Nations lands or
resources and consequently reaped huge profits that did not accrue to the community.
Clearly, the poverty that exists in First Nations communities is, and always
has been, by Ottawa’s design.
Blatantly discriminated against women by recognizing Native descent through
the male line so that First Nations citizenship rights for women were recognized
only through their father’s lineage and husband’s status, and by
prohibiting them from voting or running for office in band elections. This was
a complete contradiction to traditional First Nations practices, in which descent
for many communities was reckoned along the female line, and where women had
significant authorities in political, economic and social life. While there
were many nations and many practices, it is safe to generalize and say that
women held positions of leadership directly and/or appointed male leaders and
held them accountable. This was completely overturned by the Indian Act.
Although women now have the right to vote and run for band office, almost a
century of being excluded from political, economic and social decision-making
has left First Nations women on and off reserve in very vulnerable situations.
Women are among the poorest in First Nations communities. They have been targeted
through various amendments to the Indian Act and thousands were stripped of
their status along with their homes, benefits and any treaty rights they may
have had. The hundreds of women who are missing from our communities, dead and
murdered, is a direct result of a deliberate and calculated attack on the rights
and authorities of First Nations women by the Canadian government.
Determined who could call themselves an “Indian” and live in First
Nations communities. The Indian Act established an Indian registry and with
subsequent amendments there has emerged a complex set of legal categories (status
& non-status Indians, Treaty Indians, Bill C-31 Indians, etc.) designed
to divide and disempower First Nations families and communities. Non-status
Indians are those who are not recognized by Ottawa as First Nations. They cannot
live in their communities, do not enjoy benefits or treaty rights and are not
permitted to participate in band council elections. Again, this is akin to the
US determining who could be a Canadian and who could not, as well as who could
live here and vote in Canadian elections.
Initially through the use of Indian agents with sweeping powers and more recently
through purse strings, Ottawa has controlled band councils, band chiefs and
the Assembly of First Nations. Whether this current control is perceived of
as friendly or hostile is irrelevant and sidesteps the basic assumption that
First Nations people are children who cannot manage their own affairs. To recognize
that some band councils, their chiefs and police are sincerely interested in
serving their communities while others are corrupt may be true but fails to
recognize that the band council system is itself inherently corrupt, paternalistic
and racist.
The Indian Act was and is an instrument of genocide. Likewise, the system of
reserves, band councils and taxes are all tools of genocide. At best, the levying
of taxes by Canada or the provinces on commercial activities within and among
First Nations communities is an infringement of sovereignty as well as a violation
of the treaties that exist, not to mention the inherent rights of First Nations
people.
This is particularly objectionable when the levying of taxes applies to transactions
involving tobacco. It was First Nations people who developed, cultivated and
cared for tobacco plants. Our ancestors were the first to understand and benefit
from the use of tobacco in ceremony (even in times when our ceremonies were
illegal). Canada now assumes it has a right to control the tobacco trade, which
is consistent with its assumption that it has a right to control the lives of
First Nations people. Now that tobacco is being used to generate income and
sustain First Nations-owned businesses (an anti-genocidal activity), Ottawa
wants to step in and crush the initiative.
We reject the portrayal of Mohawk communities as divided between the minions
of organized crime and law-abiding citizens. Mainstream media and Canadian authorities
would have us believe that thugs are defying legally elected First Nations governments
and Canadian laws. Such an analysis does not acknowledge the impact of a band
council system, imposed, funded and controlled by Ottawa. It does nothing to
educate us on the long history of genocide that remains official policy in this
country. It does not examine Ottawa’s historic role in sabotaging activities
that contribute to the economic independence of First Nations people.
On these grounds we are asking that you and your organization fax or email the
officials below and voice your concerns regarding a potential violation of Mohawk
sovereignty, which would follow a systemic pattern of violations over the years.
Attached to this email is a Backgrounder on the issues and information on the
Coalition in Support of Indigenous Sovereignty. Below is a sample letter that
you can edit, cut and paste into your own email if you choose.
Nia:wen / meegwich / thank you for your support. For more information contact:
daryljamesbucar@yahoo.ca or amadahy@rogers.com.
Scroll down for the sample letter. To voice your concerns send an email, phone
or fax:
Prime Minister Stephen Harper:
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa
K1A 0A2
Fax: 613-941-6900
pm@pm.gc.ca
Jim Prentice, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and Federal
Interlocutor for Metis and Non-Status Indians
Parliament Hill: House of Commons
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A6
Telephone: (613) 992-4275
Fax: (613) 947-9475
E-Mail: Prentice.J@parl.gc.ca
SAMPLE LETTER
To: Prime Minister Stephen Harper
Jim Prentice, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and Federal
Interlocutor for Metis and Non-Status Indians
I am writing to register my concern regarding ongoing violations of Mohawk sovereignty
and continued actions that threaten the health and safety of the residents of
Akwesasne, Kahnawake, Kanehsatake and Tyendinega.
I strongly urge you to put a stop to government-sponsored activities that portray
these communities as being bastions of “organized crime” engaged
in an illegal tobacco trade. Furthermore, I suggest your government cease operating
under the assumption that Band Councils and the Assembly of First Nations, which
are funded and controlled by the federal government, are the only legitimate
representatives of First Nations communities.
Many studies, some commissioned by the federal government (such as the Report
of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal People), have determined that the issues
confronting First Nations communities include sub-standard health care, inadequate
and sub-standard housing, inadequate employment opportunities, poverty, violence,
racism, etc. These studies clearly attribute this set of deplorable conditions
to the actions and inactions of consecutive Canadian governments.
Raiding Mohawk communities and seizing tobacco products does nothing to address
the day-to-day issues confronting First Nations people. In fact, such activities
actually contribute to worsening the oppressive conditions under which First
Nations people live by depriving families of their livelihood as well as assaulting
their dignity and violating their inherent rights.
Military and police incursions onto First Nations territories are not a solution
to the long standing issues confronting these communities. Moreover such actions
shame non-First Nations people, many of whom reject complicity in a centuries-old
genocide project.
Your government has the option of creating a disaster that would rival the Oka
Crisis, Gustafson Lake and the murder of Dudley George put together. Or you
can decide to deal with First Nations communities in a way that is proactive,
peaceful and respectful, for the first time in Canadian history. I strongly
urge you opt for the latter of the two choices.
Signed,
Hundreds of Aboriginal women Missing or Murdered in Canada!!
www.missingnativewomen.org
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