|
Native
American Press/Ojibwe News
NiiSka petitions U.S. Supreme Court to restore
human rights to Indian Law
By Jeff Armstrong - December 14, 2001
In a petition for a writ of certiorari, Clara
NiiSka has asked the highest court in the United States to do
what no other court can--review more than a century of the
contradictory hodgepodge of case law, legislative acts and bilateral
treaties known collectively as Indian Law.
Since the 1997 death of her husband, columnist and
author Wub-e-ke-niew (a.k.a. Francis Blake), NiiSka has submitted
thousands of pages of legal and historical documentation to various
courts in support of the deceptively simple proposition that her
traditional 1984 Mide marriage on Red Lake was legally valid under
tribal, state and federal law of questionable applicability.
A PhD candidate, anthropology professor and journalist
in her own right, NiiSka carries on her late husband's belief that the
Ahnishinahbæótjibway never legitimately lost or
surrendered their jurisdiction over land which includes the current
diminished Red Lake Reservation. She harbors no illusions about the
likelihood of prevailing.
"Are they going to consider on it those grounds?
Probably not," said NiiSka. "When I started this, I wasn't out to
change the world. I just wanted them to recognize my marriage. That's
all I really, really care about."
Wub-e-ke-niew formally renounced his tribal enrollment
in 1990 and with it his legal status as an "Indian," a definition he
viewed as a colonial stereotype intended to perpetrate cultural
genocide and U.S. hegemony over indigenous peoples.
When Wub-e-ke-niew was born in 1928, NiiSka argues,
political power on Red Lake was dispersed among four distinct factions:
the assimilationist U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs; the General Council,
dominated by Peter Graves and others of mixed French-Anishinaabe
(Métis) descent; the Council of Chiefs, characterized by NiiSka
as little more than a fig leaf for the Métis council; and the
consensual, egalitarian leadership of the surviving dodems of the
Ahnishinahbæótjibway, which quietly resisted the authority
of the other three.
In his controversial 1995 book, We Have the Right to
Exist, Wub-e-ke-niew recounts the life of his great-grandfather
Bah-se-nos, a leader of one of the two successful efforts to block the
dissolution of reservations into individual "allotments," a U.S. policy
which led to the occupation of the vast majority of indigenous lands.
After Bah-se-nos' death, the federal government burned his lifelong
birchbark residence to the ground and fraudulently attached his name to
a land "cession" document in 1902--one year after his death.
Wub-e-ke-niew and his widow met a similar fate. One week
after his death, NiiSka was strong-armed out of the home she and her
husband had built by Wub-e-ke-niew's daughter, Valerie Blake. Blake
took control of all of NiiSka's personal and joint possessions,
including a van registered in NiiSka's name, and legalized the theft by
obtaining a Red Lake Probate Court order appointing her administrator
of the estate. When NiiSka appeared in court to contest the Red Lake
Indian court’s assertion of probate jurisdiction, she was removed and
barred from the reservation on the basis of a directive signed by
tribal chairman Bobby Whitefeather.
NiiSka contends that the Red Lake court established
jurisdiction by posthumously re-enrolling Wub-e-be-kniew in his son's
name. She also points out that the court had no probate authority over
her—or her property--as a non-member still among the ranks of the
living.
Based upon years of research into original sources,
NiiSka says that the U.S. Interior Department was forthright about its
intentions in creating Courts of Indian Offenses as a device to punish
and suppress the excercise of aboriginal spiritual and cultural
practices. She also disputes the authority of the executive branch to
create a court system under the U.S. Constitution.
"Here is an agency established by the federal
government, but the indigenous people that the land actually belonged
to did not ask the United States to establish a tribal court," NiiSka
said. "They were established for the explicit purpose of destroying
indigenous culture, period."
In her petition to the U.S. Supreme Court, NiiSka
forcefully argues that if U.S. courts fail to recognize her husband's
withdrawal from tribal membership, they are in effect creating a
race-based court in contravention of Brown v. Board of Education, which
outlawed racial segregation in public schools.
"[I]s 'Indian' legally colored as an immutable 'race'
after all, and if so, doesn’t that invalidate the entire U.S. 'Indian'
system as being unconstitutional under U.S. Const. Amend. 14 §1 as
clarified by Brown v. Board, as well as illegal under subsequent
rulings applicable to federally-funded programs?" NiiSka asks the
justices.
The BIA budgeted $264,000 in federal funds for the Red
Lake Indian court in Fiscal Year 2000, binding it, NiiSka argues, to
respect federal civil rights laws. Despite a well-documented history of
abuses, however, federal dollars keep rolling in.
"They've known for at least 30 years there are serious
problems with the Red Lake court and what do they do? They keep funding
them," said NiiSka.
Equally disturbing to NiiSka, and of central importance
to her case, is the state governments' blanket enforcement, under the
doctrine of comity, of tribal court orders which undermine the most
fundamental precepts of constitutional democracy.
"Absent decisive action from the U.S. Supreme Court –
the only court in the U.S. which has the jurisdiction to supersede its
own Judicially-created doctrine of 'Indian tribal sovereignty' – the
protections guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution will continue to
languish in too many Indian courts. Amplification of civil rights
abuses—and systemic lack of redress—by 'comity' rubber-stamping Indian
court decisions into state jurisdiction happens frequently enough to
merit serious concern by anyone who cares about the underlying
principles of American democracy," she writes.
"Most importantly from the perspective of the
Petitioner, the U.S. Constitution, Amend. I, guarantees 'the right of
the people to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.'
There have clearly been wrongs done—through the interplay of several
legal systems. It is now up to the Supreme Court, whether or not the
'right ...to petition' is still a meaningful avenue for redress."
|