Archive for category indigenous

Census: Masking Identities or Counting the Indigenous Among Us?

New America Media
Commentary, Roberto Dr. Cintli Rodriguez

Mar 04, 2010
It was when I first stood atop the Pyramid of the Sun in Teotihuacan, Mexico in 1976 that I was finally able to grasp something my parents first communicated to me when I was five years old; that my roots on this continent are not simply Mexican, but both ancient and Indigenous.

My red-brown face should have been enough to teach me this. However, that was not the message I received in school at the time, nor is it the message little red-brown kids receive today. I experienced a similar kind of reaffirmation this past month when I stood in front of the world-renowned, ancient Mayan observatory at Chichen Itza, on Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula.

Upon my return to the United States, I received a message from a colleague regarding the U.S. Census Bureau. My mouth soured; another decade and another story about how the bureau paradoxically insists that Mexicans are Caucasian. I will have to explain to them again that Mexicans are the descendants of those who built the pyramids at Teotihuacan and Chichen Itza – that it was not Caucasians who built them.

The genesis of this nonsensical “misconception” goes back to the era when the United States militarily took half of Mexico in 1848. At that time, the Mexican government attempted to protect its former citizens by insisting that the U.S. government treat them legally as “white,” so they would not be enslaved or subjected to legal segregation. That strategy only partially worked, because most Mexicans in this country have never been treated as “white,” or as full human beings with full human rights.

That era is long over, yet the fear, shame, denial, and semi-legal fiction of being “white” remains, perpetrated primarily by government bureaucrats.

Despite the bureau policy of racial categorization, the Indigenous  Cultures Institute in Texas, a Census 2010 partner, has advanced an alternative: It asserts that Hispanics, Mexican Americans, and Indigenous people of Mexico are native or American Indian. After answering Question 8, regarding whether one is Hispanic or not, the institute suggests: “If you are a descendant of native people, you can identify yourself (in Question 9) as an American Indian in the 2010 Census… If you don’t know your tribe, enter “unknown” or “detribalized native.” If tribe or identity is known, fill it in, i.e., Macehual, Maya, Quechua, etc.

This may not be the best option, but the bureau has never made it easy to recognize the indigenous roots of “Mexican Americans/Chicanos” or “Latinos/Hispanics.” The long and sordid history of the census has been to direct or redirect them into the white category, even–and especially–when they have asserted their indigenous roots or when they have checked the “other” race category. (Since 1980, about half of Hispanics/Latinos have checked the “other” race category and are virtually the only group that chooses this category.) This has been a standard practice of the bureau since the second half of the twentieth century. Coincidentally, this is also when government bureaucrats imposed the term “Hispanic,” a tag that generally masks the existence of indigenous and/or African roots in many peoples of the Americas.

In 2000, the Census Bureau finally recognized a Latin American Indian category, but it did not create an educational campaign to go with it. The bureau now recognizes peoples who are traditionally viewed (using arbitrary criteria) as indigenous in Mexico, Central and South America, but it does not recognize those who are considered “mestizo” –- peoples who are at least part, if not primarily, native. The mestizo category, borne of a dehumanizing racial caste system in the Americas, is also a troublesome category, yet it is how most people of Mexican and Central American descent identify, comprising approximately 75 percent of all “Latinos/Hispanics.”

The Indigenous Institute promotes its idea as a means by which Mexican Americans or Latinos/Hispanics can honor their indigenous ancestry. If this option is widely embraced, it remains to be seen how the bureau will count this information. The same question arises if people choose the American Indian category and write in “mestizo.”

Traditionally, the bureau has taken a narrow view of who is indigenous, because the “American Indian” category was designed not to ascertain Indigeneity, but to count “U.S. Indians.” If a more expansive view is embraced widely –- as advocated by the institute -– it would result in an increase from 5 million (the 2009 census estimate) to perhaps 30 to 40 million people. (Not all of the nation’s close to 50 million Hispanics/Latinos can or would claim indigenous ancestry.) If done correctly, the institute’s suggestion need not negatively affect the allocation of resources to specific tribes. Neither should the way people identify be subject to government approval. Yet, the ramifications of exercising such an option should indeed be studied.
Rodriguez, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona, can be reached at: XColumn@gmail.com

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Stand beside us in defense of the land: Wet’suwet’en

by Dawn Paley

Toghestiy (Warner Naziel) traveled from Smithers to Vancouver on Thursday in order to add his voice to the chorus of Olympic resistance.

He came with a message for activists gathered in Vancouver: he thinks the pressure for corporate development on Wet’suwet’en territory, which encompasses 22,000 square kilometers in central British Columbia, will increase when the B.C. government has to start paying down the deficit accrued because of the 2010 Games.

“When the time comes for them to actually pay off that bill, we know they’re going to start making their way into our territories, as well as other First Nations’ peoples territories that aren’t ceded yet, and they plan on paying off that bill by extracting resources from our lands, and doing it as quickly and as efficiently as possible,” he said.

There are two proposed oil pipelines that would cut through Wet’suwet’en territory: the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline, and a separate Kinder Morgan pipeline, both of which to carry tar sands bitumen from Alberta to the BC Coast. The Wet’suwet’en have expressed their absolute and unconditional rejection of pipelines in their lands.

“The Wet’suwet’en want to protect our land, we want to protect it from any type of pollution, any type of industrial development, because we need to make sure the lands are available for our children and our unborn children,” Toghestiy told the Vancouver Media Co-op.

In the context of building post-Olympic movements in Vancouver, Toghestiy said that the Wet’suwet’en would like to have the support of people in the city as part of their struggle to defend their lands. “We’re looking at developing a larger network of people who can and will stand beside us,” he said.

The Wet’suwet’en nation withdrew from the B.C. Treaty process last October, after spending 16 years at the table with the provincial government.

“Now that Treaty is dead in our territory, one of the discussions that the clan groups had, we’re made up of five distinct clans, and one of the discussions that the clan groups have been having is ‘what are we going to do about occupation,’” said Toghestiy. “We need to go out and begin actually occupying our lands again.”

One of the ways that the Wet’suwet’en are reoccupying their lands is through a cabin building project, where a group people are learning to cut trees, mill them, and build log cabins. “They’re building them out in our territories, without permits or licences or anything like that from the government.”

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2010 Protesters: Police Had Better Be Peaceful….

February 9, 2010 – 05:51 — no2010

2010 Police State cop cars and CF chopper Ex Silver

http://www.ctvbc.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20100208/bc_olympic_pro…

Police are expecting large crowds of protesters to mark the start of the Winter Games later this week, but international Olympic officials say they’re not concerned the demonstrations will pose any serious problems.

Anti-Olympic groups are planning a large event in downtown Vancouver to coincide with Friday’s opening ceremonies, and others are expected to follow throughout the ensuing 16 days of the Games.

Vancouver police have recently said they expect between 1,000 and 1,500 protesters in the first few days of the Olympics — a significantly larger number than many had previously expected — and protest organizers say they hope to exceed those figures.

But officials with the International Olympic Committee and the local organizing committee, known as VANOC, said they were confident protests will be peaceful and won’t cause any major disruptions during the Games.

Gerhard Heiberg, a member of the IOC’s executive board, said the committee has always been aware of the potential for protests during the Vancouver Olympics.

“I wouldn’t call it concerns,” Heiberg, who was also the chairman of the committee that evaluated Vancouver’s bid for the Games in 2003, said at a news conference Monday.

“We have to accept protests and there will be some and fine, let’s leave it. We are used to that.”

The IOC raised the issue of protests with VANOC during a final briefing on Monday, but Heiberg said he was curious — rather than concerned — about what will happen.

Several protest organizers held their own news conference on Monday, saying they hope everyone from activist groups to union members to disaffected members of the public show up out to denounce the Games.

“I hope thousands of them come out if the press stops scaring people talking about the possibility of violence,” said Bob Ages of the Council of Canadians. “I think it could be really big.”

Police have insisted they will respect protesters’ right to free speech, so long as they don’t break the law or interfere with the rights of anyone else.

However, Olympic critics have complained the RCMP-led unit overseeing Olympic security has harassed activists by approaching them on the street and speaking with their neighbours and members of their families.

They also complain that protesters from outside the country have been stopped or questioned at the border, most recently this past weekend when Martin Macias Jr., an American who led a group opposed to Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Games, was denied entry into Canada.

“The police have worked really hard to intimidate and discourage people from expressing themselves, so I hope they will be brave come the Olympics and realize we have nothing to fear if we have the numbers,” said Alissa Westergard-Thorpe of the Olympic Resistance Movement.

The protest organizers said it will be up to the police, not them, to ensure protests remain peaceful.

For their part, police said they will set up so-called “safe assembly” areas for protests, rather than try to stop them.

The idea of creating areas where protesters could demonstrate safely was a key recommendation in a report into the 1997 APEC protests in Vancouver, when demonstrators were pepper sprayed, detained and strip searched. The event remains a stain on the reputation of the RCMP.

Protesters, however, have vowed not to use any area that police officially designated as a protest zone.

Friday’s protest is planned for a lawn outside the Vancouver Art Gallery, a traditional demonstration space that Vancouver police said they plan to leave alone during the Olympics.

Westergard-Thorpe said anti-Olympic protesters don’t plan to be violent.

“There’s never been any violence associated with an anti-Olympic protest — property damage that you might see in some cases is not violence,” she said.

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