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DARE TO ASK: Money for American Indians?

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

To American Indians: Do you feel it’s right that you still receive compensation or benefits for things that didn’t happen to you directly?

Acat, white female, West Monroe, N.Y.

Replies

The compensations derived from the near extinction of American Indians by “settlers” of various invading nations were agreed to by the government of the United States to set things right. . . . Should anyone be entitled to reparations when they did not experience it directly? Well, there is what is “legal” and what is “right.” In this case, the legal rights of American Indian tribes don’t seem to be questioned, but the “moralities” of those rights are.

Charles, 43, American Indian/white, Kentucky

Yes, I believe it is right. Our sovereignty and any rights were negotiated with the U.S. government. It wasn’t pity money.

N.N., 26, Comanche male, Cache, Okla.

If you are talking about casinos, that is a sound business decision. Reservations for federally recognized tribes are pretty much the land of a sovereign nation within the United States Also, the only way for people to receive money is to have enough blood quantum to even belong to a federally recognized tribe. Something only American Indians have to do: prove how much Indian they are.

Terrence, 22, American Indian, Albuquerque, N.M.

White people are still benefiting from slavery and “divide and conquer” tactics today. So you are standing on the shoulders of your ancestors’ actions and benefiting from them. So why shouldn’t American Indians?

D. Rich, 28, black male, Memphis, Tenn.

Expert says

It happens from time to time, says Ray Ramirez, editor for the Colorado-based Native American Rights Fund:

“Someone says, ‘My neighbor is Indian and gets a check from the government.’ Well, that doesn’t happen.”

What does happen is that some American Indians have trust land parcels, Ramirez said. “The federal government has fiduciary duties over that land, so let’s say the family leases land out for grazing, timber, oil or gas. The government negotiates contracts on behalf of that family, then collects money for those leases . . . then the money goes back to the individuals, because that’s their money.”

(Two current lawsuits challenge just how well the government has handled that money.)

Then there’s the casino issue, but in those cases, the gaming facilities are on sovereign lands, he said, and for many tribes, a casino makes a modest amount of money, which is often put back into the tribe.

Overall, the main reason people think American Indians receive checks “for being Indian” is poor education, he said.

“We don’t really teach anything in school systems about tribes, indigenous people, sovereign governments. . . . the thing is, non-Indian people will never know what it feels like to have everything known to them taken away from them.”

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