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Republic of Lakotah

 
 

 
     
     
     
     
     
  We would like to make a special acknowledgement of all the Indigenous Nations and Independence Movements who have contacted us with their support.  
     
  Aho! We've had more than half a million hits on our website in one week! Thanks for your interest and support  
     
  Pilameya! Many thanks to all people who are sharing their support and solidarity with us. People from more than 100 different nations have visited our website. The whole world is watching!  
 
 

Oceti Sakowin/Tetonwan Oyate Omniciye
APRIL 4, 5, & 6, 2008*Eagle Butte, SD
Tentative Agenda

 

"Further proof our Independence is valid"

A sorry attempt at apology


Shannon Francis never sought an apology from a country that yanked her mom and grandma off their reservations, forced them into white foster families and barred them from speaking their native Hopi and Navajo languages.

So the Denver resident was unaware Tuesday that her government had decided to say, "Sorry."

"I had no clue it was coming," the 38-year-old mother of six said with a shrug. "So much for making history."

Like Francis, you probably missed it when the U.S. Senate quietly apologized for centuries of "violence, maltreatment and neglect inflicted on Native Peoples."

The unprecedented resolution acknowledges that the government forced indigenous people off their land, stole their assets and was responsible for "official depredations, ill-conceived policies and the breaking of covenants" with tribes.

When Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd apologized two weeks ago for policies that degraded that country's Aborigines, he blared his pronouncement live on giant screens throughout Australia.

U.S. senators instead buried their "Oops, our bad" in an amendment to a bill for American Indian health care.

Well, that certainly makes up for the Sand Creek Massacre and Wounded Knee.

So much for healing generations.

"White America can't afford to apologize too seriously because it would threaten their ownership of Indian land," said Iliff School of Theology Indian cultures professor Tink Tinker.

Tuesday's resolution came at the urging of Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., who reports a "deep resentment" among Native Americans in his state.

His colleagues aren't so big on apologies. Congress hadn't formally said "sorry" since apologizing to Native Hawaiians in 1993 for overthrowing their kingdom a century earlier. In 1988, lawmakers apologized and compensated Japanese-Americans interned in World War II detention camps.

Brownback's resolution does not authorize or settle any claim against the United States.

"We have a government that took our land and our children and physically and emotionally abused them and forced them to assimilate into something that they're not," said Francis, an accounting consultant by trade and a longtime activist for American Indian causes. "We — I — live with the pain of that every day. And for this they issue a bunch of words, empty like their treaties, that mean nothing and nobody hears."

Who is the apology really for, Francis wonders?

Is it for her mother, grandmother and aunties who spent lifetimes trying to forget the federal boarding schools that sought to strip away their culture?

For her brother, plagued like their father and grandfather by poverty and alcoholism?

For her son, who failed a 7th-grade history test when he refused to check the box saying Christopher Columbus discovered America?

Or for Francis herself, who overcame years of shame about her dark skin and accent to learn the ways of her ancestors that her own family had failed to pass on: to honor her kids, hug them and root them deeply in their heritage?

"If our people had been left alone, maybe things would have been different," she said.

As Francis sees it, Tuesday's resolution does little to fix a sad sequence of abuses that still is far from over.

"We don't need any more hollow words," she says. "What I want is for the country to be honest, really honest, about what it has done and what it continues doing to our people."

Susan Greene writes twice weekly. Reach her at 303-954-1989 or greene@denverpost.com.
 


Petition for Recognition of Lakotah Sovereignty

February 18, 2008
 
Russell Means, Chief Facilitator for the reborn Republic of Lakotah (formerly known as the Sioux Nation of Indians) is in Washington DC this week meeting with diplomats of over a dozen countries.
 
Means will be presenting the nations of the world with a "Petition for Recognition of Lakotah Sovereignty." The petition is supported by legal documents citing both international and United States law which make a highly persuasive case in support of Lakotah sovereignty. A copy of the petition portfolio is available at:
 
http://www.republicoflakotah.com/docs/Petition.pdf
 
Means said, "It does not take an international attorney to see that our sovereignty is unquestionable; it is obvious to anybody who can read history."
 
The Washington Post has booked a reporter and a photographer for the entire week to follow Means and Interim Attorney General for the Republic of Lakotah, Gerald (Jerry) Collette, around Washington's
embassy row.
 
Other members of the press are also welcome to join the Lakotah embassy tour, or to meet with Russell Means for an interview while he is in Washington D.C.
 
Means was part of the Lakotah Freedom Delegation which announced two months ago, in Washington DC, that the Lakotah were withdrawing from all treaties with the United States. At that time, a portfolio was
presented to the U.S. State Department, and to several embassies. Since then, the momentum for Lakotah sovereignty has snowballed. Means said, "Freedom is a natural state for human beings. It cannot be
stopped."
 


 

Means proposes wind project for new republic

'Those who control the energy control the economics'

Two months after announcing that the newly formed Republic of Lakotah had seceded from the United States, organizer Russell Means outlined plans for a wind-energy project for citizens of the new country.

Continue

 

Long Chain of Abuses

Broken Treaties

Since 1787, over 750 land cessions have been authorized by supposed mutual compacts. History demonstrates there was little that was mutual about these "treaties."

"To the United States, Native American nations were only de facto states. In the implementation of its diplomatic policy toward the Native American population, the United States assumed the role of an empire over a protectorate. "

Continue


American Indians have suffered under foreign invaders for 500 years. Now the descendents of Sitting Bull are fighting back, withdrawing from treaties with Washington..

By John C K Daly for ISN Security Watch (25/01/08)

http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details.cfm?id=18570



Trial for Columbus Day parade protesters ends

DENVER - A controversial trial against three Native activists who protested the city's Columbus Day parade ended in Denver County Court Jan. 22 with mixed verdicts.

''No case anywhere is more important than this case,'' David Lane, a prominent civil rights attorney, told prospective jurors at the start of the four-day trial, ''because the relationship between the government and its citizens is the most important thing.''

More than 80 people were arrested Oct. 6 in downtown Denver, including the three whose consolidated trial concluded Jan. 22: Glenn Morris, a professor in the political science department at the University of Colorado - Denver; the Rev. Julie Todd, a Methodist minister in a doctoral program at Iliff School of Theology; and Koreena Montoya, a Denver educator. They were charged with misdemeanor offenses that included blocking the street, interfering with a parade and, for Montoya, resisting arrest.

Indian Country Today News


Billions Missing From U.S. Indian Trust Fund

The U.S. has lost not millions, but billions of dollars belonging to native Americans.

"The BIA has spent more than 100 years mismanaging, diverting and losing money that belongs to Indians."

In many instances it provides the only life-line for Indian families who often make up the most impoverished sector of our society.

BIA's fiscally irresponsible behavior may prove more sinister than mere incompetence.

Taxpayers who will have to cough up the money lost by the BIA

"If this happened in Social Security, I tell you there would be a war."

If this was IRS missing money, it would be found and recovered expeditiously!

Read this Article

 
 
 
 

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