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In Defense of Ward Churchill: A Legacy of Scapegoat-ism
By H. Mathew Barkhausen III, Pacific News Service
Recent controversy over University of Colorado ethnic studies
professor Ward Churchill has focused not only on his controversial
post-9/11 essay but also on his Native American bloodline. The debate
over whether Churchill is a "real Indian," writes H. Mathew Barkhausen
III, is just the latest in a series of efforts use "blood quantum" to
discredit and divide Native Americans.
DENVER - March 2, 2005 - A firestorm of controversy has erupted
around a Native American ethnic studies professor at the University of
Colorado at Boulder, where I had planned to attend graduate school.
Because of an essay he wrote immediately following Sept. 11, 2001, Ward
Churchill has been accused of glorifying terrorists as heroes and
encouraging future attacks on the United States. Now a debate over his
right to free speech, and his Native blood, is being waged in Indian
Country and beyond.
As an advocate of free speech and future University of Colorado student,
I think it is wrong that Churchill's job has been threatened as a
penalty for speaking freely. As a Native American who -- like many of us
-- is not federally recognized and does not have a tribal enrollment
number, I find it ridiculous that the question of whether Churchill is a
"real Indian" has resurfaced as part of an effort to silence him and
discredit his views.
After Churchill published a post-9/11 essay entitled "Some People Push
Back: On the Justice of Roosting Chickens," he was forced to resign as
head of the Ethnic Studies department. In February, he was thrust into
the national spotlight again after New York's Hamilton College canceled
an appearance due to threats of violence. Now, he faces a university
review that could lead to his dismissal.
In the midst of the controversy surrounding Churchill's opinions,
efforts to attack his credibility by challenging his "Indianness" have
gained momentum. Churchill is a member of the United Keetoowah Band of
Cherokees in Oklahoma, and his father was part Creek, which makes
Churchill around 3/8 Indian, for all the racial purists out there. But
now people like Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly have joined some Native
critics in claiming that Churchill is "not really an Indian."
Debates over blood strike close to home in Indian Country. If you want
to discredit someone, all you have to do is say, "He's not really
Indian." Casting such doubt has the potential to destroy the reputation
of a formerly well-respected Native American leader. That is the legacy
of FBI/COINTELPRO operations against the American Indian Movement (AIM)
in the 1970s -- a technique known as "bad-jacketing," which destroys a
grassroots organization from within by causing internal conflict. The
resulting need to prove "Indianess" through blood quantum -- and tribal
enrollment via a system imposed upon us by the federal government -- has
led Native people to commit a self-inflicted statistical genocide.
It is fortunate for Indian history that the blood quantum police were
not always so influential. If they had been, people might have also
dismissed Quanah Parker, the celebrated Comanche chief who was only
"half Indian," or John Ross, a well-respected Cherokee chief who was
only 1/8 Indian. Renowned leaders Crazy Horse, Geronimo, and Chief
Joseph were not "enrolled" Indians. Famed American Indian Movement
activist and actor John Trudell is a non-enrolled Dakota Sioux. Native
American political prisoner and author Leonard Peltier is Turtle
Mountain Chippewa and Dakota Sioux, but is not enrolled in either tribe.
I myself meet the blood-quantum for the Eastern Band Cherokee tribe, but
because my ancestors are not on a list that goes back only as far as
1924, I cannot enroll. I would also be eligible to enroll in the
Tuscarora tribe if it weren't for the fact that my Tuscarora blood comes
from North Carolina, and the Tuscaroras there are not state or federally
recognized.
Travis Elston, a 21-year-old Kickapoo and Powhatan student at the Art
Institute of Colorado, questions the relevance of the debate over the
professor's bloodline.
"Honestly, I don't think you have to be of the ethnicity you are willing
to stand up and fight for," Elston says. "I guess the question is what
makes a Native American, other than blood quantum? Is it the cultural
environment? Is it a traditional lifestyle? Is it someone who is willing
to stand up for those who are Native?"
I had planned on attending the University of Colorado at Boulder, in
great part because Churchill was there and I wanted to take his classes.
Now, because of the university's actions against him, I'm thinking of
enrolling at the Denver campus instead.
I am disturbed by the actions being taken against Churchill. As a future
University of Colorado student, I feel my education will be diminished
by the silencing of this critical voice. As a Native American, I object
to the use of "bloodlines" to aid in this silencing.
Barkhausen, 25, is a staff writer for Seventh
Native American Generation (SNAG) and an interactive media design
student at the Art Institute of Colorado. |