From Sea
to Shining Sea
by Diana Ramsdell Newman
Traditionally, Native American women were integral to native
governance. In fact, the majority of tribes were matrilineal. Women were not
viewed as being inferior to men. They were entrusted with vital, respected
decision making positions. Men’s and women’s roles were viewed by both genders
as being distinctive but complementary and of equal importance. Even in patrilineal tribes women were held
in esteem as equals. Violence against women was unusual and was not tolerated
by tribal communities. Women were valued as being uniquely powerful, practical,
reasonable, strong, and spiritually discerning.
Elizabeth Cody Stanton and Matilda Joslyn Gage, women’s rights
advocates of the mid-nineteenth century, expressed great admiration for the
egalitarian worldview modeled by the Iroquois. Whereas these two women felt
disenfranchised by men in their own patriarchal culture, they witnessed firsthand
the dignity with which Iroquois women were treated. Iroquois women were not similarly marginalized but exercised
considerable influence. Stanton and Gage noted that the nomination of chiefs
was entrusted to Iroquois women. Women were likewise free to initiate
definitive, corrective actions if they became disenchanted with the actions of
an errant chief.
It may warrant mentioning that although early white feminists are
rightly celebrated for their awareness and courageous initiative in relation to
gender issues, many Native American women view the impacts of racial
discrimination and class status as far outweighing gender bias as being the
primary determinants of oppression in the lives of women of color. A fuller view of the causes of their
oppression must take into account the pervasive and debilitating impact of the
Manifest Destiny and colonization upon Native Americans.
With colonialism came the wholesale importation and imposition of a
hierarchical, Eurocentric model of governance that ran counter to Native
American practices. Its patriarchal view and biased suppositions
claiming the inferiority of women had far-reaching and devastating consequences
in the lives of countless Native Americans. For instance, white government officials and settlers typically
refused to talk with tribal women regardless of the women’s leadership roles
and status within the tribe. The undermining of kinship traditions, the
persistent lack of acknowledgement of female leadership, the forced
displacement, abuse, and annihilation
of native peoples, and the violation of indigenous homelands served to
cut off at the very roots much that had successfully sustained the integrity of
traditional cultural values.
The sense of place, a profound kinship with the land, and its
inhabitant’s respect for the reciprocal nature of relationship between all
living beings was of paramount importance to Native American spirituality. The
natural homeland as a place of reverence was a kind of sacred geography as
essential to Native Americans as was the primacy of the church building to many
European immigrants.
In direct relationship with nature, life, and death Native Americans
viewed time as cyclical and reciprocal. The prevailing mindset of the invading
Europeans was by contrast given over to linear thinking and concepts of
ownership that were the antithesis of indigenous experience and values. To the
Native American the living, the generations to come, and the ancestors were
inextricably and holistically connected as a sacred ecology from which a
natural theology was recognized. While there was much diversity among tribal
groups, a common hallmark of the over 500 tribal nations is that its land-based
experience spawned sensibilities and cosmologies that embodied a deeply
informed awareness of the relational interconnectedness of all creation. Thus
native religion was naturally and intrinsically bound in vibrant relationship
with specific bioregions. Within the rich and multidimensional circumference of
bioregion all was considered sacred. Thus, to witness exploitation of nature
was to native peoples nothing short of utter disregard for the Creator, and was
equivalent to seeing the desecration of one’s beloved church or violation of
one’s mother. Pervasive displacement
of native peoples from their ancestral homelands was a vehicle of religious persecution
and genocide.
An undeniable part of the legacy of the dominant culture is that the
sovereignty of over 500 indigenous nations on this continent called Turtle
Island has been violated and its lands have been largely desecrated! So it is understandable that contemporary
Native American women activists often articulate and exercise a distinctive
feminist ideology that takes into account the necessity of environmental
justice, reclamation of displaced kinship traditions, and the concept of
“birthright’ in relation to homelands.
Remarkably the strong oral tradition integral to traditional native
culture has survived and continues to uniquely inform and rekindle native
women’s vision and activism today. In fact, indigenous women from all parts of
the globe are gathering, networking, and articulating their concerns and hopes.
Future installments will address issues specific to indigenous women, their
struggles, and their vision.
Many people in the United States continue to rationalize or understate
the magnitude and unjust impact that the legacy of the Manifest Destiny has had
on indigenous populations including its contemporary incarnations (economic usurpation
and environmental degradation of ancestral lands) which continue to violate indigenous
peoples. Do nations of our earth
actually share a consensual view about any of this? In 2007, after twenty years
of study and dialogue, The United Nations passed a landmark Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples. 143 nations endorsed the
resolution which affirms and upholds the rights of self-determination to the
world’s indigenous groups.
Even though the Declaration is legally nonbinding and cannot be
enforced by international law it does clearly articulate the predominant and unequivocal
sentiment of the participants that native people’s throughout the world deserve
authentic redress of grievances and the rightful exercise of sovereignty. There
is some optimism that the resolution is an indication that several nations will
now be willing to voluntarily engage in negotiations with indigenous groups
whose lands have been acquired though domination and colonization. But in
keeping with the United State’s current propensity to dig in its heels and
exempt itself from global responsibilities and protocols, it was one of only
four nations that voted against the resolution. Given the sheer enormity of the
amount of land and resources acquired at the expense of native sovereignty on
Turtle Island “from sea to shining sea” is it really any surprise that countries
opposing the resolution such the U.S. and Canada would shy from the accountability
of colonizers implicit in the Declaration? No doubt Article 26 of the
Declaration poses a bit of a problem to big time land grabbers: “Indigenous
peoples have the right to the lands, territories and resources which they have
traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired.”
If returning an entire continent to the descendents of over 500
indigenous nations is untenable how then will the United States begin to make authentic
restitution? Perhaps one way is for its citizens and governing bodies to reach
beyond tokenism and make a steadfast commitment to foster true freedom and
justice for all.