An
artist must be able to portray phenotypes in portraiture, especially in
sculpture, painting, illustration and caricature. Since this is my profession, I have been a
keen observer of nuances in facial structures, body types and skin colors. Similar
to a dentist who observes teeth upon a first encounter; I notice facial bone
structure, eye and mouth shape, skin texture and color. However, Amerindian
identity is so mired in mythology that accurate phonotypical portrayal in the
visual arts is problematic. More confusion to the issue of Native identity was
added by the Federal Government’s “blood quantum” rule in 1934. This rule was inspired by the racist “1705 [English
law] when Virginia adopted
laws that limited colonial civil rights of Native Americans and persons of half
or more Native American ancestry”. -- Professor
Jack D. Forbes (2008). "THE
BLOOD GROWS THINNER: BLOOD QUANTUM, PART 2". University of
California-Davis.
Five hundred
years of racial mixing in this hemisphere has created a category of human
beings that have varying physical features some of whom choose to accept or ignore
their Amerindian genes. Throughout the Americas, identifying with the
indigenous has continued to be controversial. Peoples of the Americas are often
ignorant about Amerindian cultural and historical achievements. Little is
taught about the hemisphere that produced pyramids, large cities, empires,
multitude of medicines and is the source of 60% of what humans eat. Yet,
against some remaining obstacles, there has been resurgence in Native pride. Compounding
the problem of identity are the labels Mestizo, Métis, Latino, Hispanic, Chicano,
Black Indian, etc.
Some newly
formed tribes handle the issue of resurgence well, while others create havoc in
trying to be “more Indian” than the rest. One example of this extremism is the
group’s attempt at historical revisionism by usually stating that “We are the
Indians” of a geographical location on which their tribal name never
historically appeared. This con-game was also played out by the late
Italian-American actor “Iron Eyes Cody”.
Hollywood Westerns of an earlier period played a pivotal role in this confusing
sham by casting Italian, Middle Easterner, English and Irish actors as Indians.
Notwithstanding
Columbus’ confusion; the answer to who is “Native” is not cast in stone. For
example, a Mexican (even with a high percentage of Amerindian DNA) would say
that unless you speak your language, you are not Indio. In North America the
answer to this question is more fluid.
Top Row: (1) Tecumseh, leader of the Shawnee.
(2) Chief Joseph, Nez Perce [Nimíipuu is their name for themselves].
(3) Charles Curtis, 31st Vice
President of the United
States who had maternal grandparents on the Kaw
reservation.
(4) Noted sculptor
Edmonia Lewis whose father was black and mother an Ojibwa Indian who named her
Wildfire. She grew up with her mother’s family of basket makers on the
reservation. Both African and Native Americans claim her.
Bottom Row: (1) Italian-American
actor Iron
Eyes Cody (born Espera Oscar de Corti April 3, 1904 – January 4, 1999). He
impersonated Native Americans in Hollywood films. (2) Astronaut John Herrington, an enrolled member of the Chickasaw
Nation. (3) & (4) Irish-American actor Burt Lancaster
who played Massai, an Apache leader in Hollywood ’s
Apache
(1954).
Native American n. (1)
Aboriginal
American. a member of the indigenous people of the Americas, belonging
to the Mongoloid group of peoples. (2)
adj. relating to any of the
indigenous American peoples, their languages, or their cultures. Encarta World English Dictionary
full blooded adj. thoroughbred of unmixed breed. Encarta
World English Dictionary
half breed n. an offensive term referring to a person
of mixed racial parentage, especially Native American and Caucasian. Encarta
World English Dictionary
Mestizo n. American
Spanish. A combination between Indio (Amerindian) and Spaniard.
Pardo n. American
Spanish. A person who is mixed with Amerindian, European and African.
Except
for the last two pictures of Burt Lancaster and Iron Eyes Cody, the above
images are of people whom some Indian tribes would call Native Americans
today. Although, in the United States,
we often reserve the term Native American for only the indigenous people of the
mainland USA. This attitude has caused
many legal and “illegal aliens” from south of the border to insist that they
too are Native Americans. According to
some anthropologists, we can evaluate the survival of indigenous populations in
the Americas
since 1492 in two ways. Either, (1) Disease and genocide
drastically reduced the Americas’ multi-million indigenous populations. Or, (2) Racial mixing has greatly
increased the numbers of indigenous people within the Americas since 1492.
The second
theory, however, has contributed to a Native American identity dilemma for
people without and within those ethnic groupings. It is also difficult to identify Native
American phenotypes especially in states with a high percentage of American
Indians and Mexicans. For example in Albuquerque , New Mexico ,
I found it hard to make a visual distinction between both populations. Although most Mexicans are from the same indigenous
genetic pool as other Native Americans, in Albuquerque there were incidents of animosity
between both groups. This dilemma caused
a prominent Native American artist in another locale whose son had been beaten
up by Mexican youths, to state, “Why would they beat up my son? Don’t they know that Mexicans are also Indians?”
East of the Mississippi River , the ability to
identify who is an Indian is even more difficult.
The Native
American identity problem began after 1492 when Columbus believed that the
Caribbean’s Taíno and Island Carib were the Indians from Asia’s
subcontinent. Although there is documentation
that indigenous Americans had been arriving on European shores at least since
the Roman Empire , their sustained impact on
the rest of the world began in earnest in 1492.
According to Dr. Jack D. Forbes, author of The American Discovery of Europe,
“What we do know is that two or more Americans, at least a man and a woman,
reached Galway Bay, Ireland, [in two dugout logs] and there seen by Christoforo
Colomb (Columbus) long prior [around 1477] to his famous voyage of 1492.” Dugout canoes are from the east coast North
America, South America and the Caribbean so it
is unclear exactly from whence these Americans came. It is believed that indigenous Americans
either came east to Europe at varying times
via their own volition and/or were hijacked by Atlantic storms. Oceanic tempests and Atlantic currents had
floated American trees into Galway
Bay where there was once
a local business in American driftwood lumber. Today, heavy Atlantic shipwrecks
still end up on Ireland ’s
coast. Descriptions of people arriving
at various times from the west going eastward, both dead and alive, matched the
phenotypes of various indigenous Americans.
At that time, it was very unlikely for people from Asia to have been
blown ashore on Western Europe and the Azores . In Europe, they were mistaken for people from
“Catayo” or Cathay (meaning China ),
and India . Later, Columbus’ encounter with the people of
the Lucaya Bahamas convinced him that they were Indians from Asia’s subcontinent.
Were ancient American phenotypes similar?
It is obvious to the casual observer that the
Inuit (“Eskimo”) are decidedly different in appearance from the Olmec and Maya
of the Yucatan, or the Cherokee, Iroquois and Algonquians of North America’s
Eastern Woodlands. The pre-Columbian diversity in skin color, hair
texture, facial and physical composition varied greatly among peoples of the
Americas. Even in two isolated and recently contacted Amazon tribes
phenotype decidedly differed. One group was tall, slender and yellowish
(the Zo'e) wearing lip plugs; while the other was
shorter, muscular, brown skinned and
seemed
not knowing how to make fire. Although many people believe that Native
Americans belong to one monolithic “race”, DNA studies tell us
differently. Geneticists trace all indigenous Americans back to six
“original mothers”.
A study released on March 12, 2008 “identifies
the six surviving Native American mtDNA lineages that are dated to
approximately 20,000 years ago, designated as A2, B2, C1b, C1c, C1d and D1.
Today's study also confirms the presence of five more rare, less known and
geographically limited genetic groups: X2a, D2, D3, C4c and D4h3.”
Who or what is a Native
American? Can the average American identify a Native American? The
influx of European, African, Asian and “Hispanic” admixtures has made the
answer more complex.
Who is a Native?
The answer to
this question lies in how the sovereign tribes of the United States and the Bureau of
Indian Affairs (BIA) define a Native American.
First, tribes have varying criteria for membership that range from ½ to
1/16 “Indian blood” (See the July 22 blog article on “Blood Quantum”). Tribes themselves define who is eligible for
membership in the Native American family. Similar to loosing American
citizenship, tribes can excommunicate blood members for reasons that go against
the American Constitution. Federally recognized tribes are sovereign nations.
Second, in a
case brought before the BIA, a man in North Carolina tried to discredit his
wife who identified herself as a Native American by calling her a Negro (since
she was mixed). The federal agency
replied to his charge. In their response,
the BIA stated in essence that they did not care about the other racial
composition of a Native American.
Although many Americans harp on the notion of the authenticity of “full
bloods”, there are both tribal and federal acceptances of the multiracial
composition of individuals who call themselves Native Americans. This self-identification factor in sovereign “Indian
Country” confuses the average American. Hollywood further muddied
the issue by painting Italian, Irish and Jewish actors brown (such as Jeff
Chandler, Burt Lancaster, Audrey Hepburn, Paul Newman and others) while casting
them in leading roles as either Native American full bloods or “half
breeds”. A founding member of a District
of Columbian indigenous American organization once told me that a person who
wants to identify as a Native American, regardless of blood quantum, must be publicly
acknowledged as a Native American by members of both the Indian and non-Indian
community.
The Crossover
From the time
of 17th century Jamestown , Virginia up to today’s Vice-Presidential nominee Governor
Palin’s Alaska ,
Native Americans populations continue to be both hated and expendable. The English from Jamestown went out twice yearly to kill
Powhatan men, women and children in attempts of early ethnic cleansing. This practice caused some Virginia Indian
families to go underground and as they say, “hide in plain sight”. Also, societal, economic and peer pressures
have caused many Native Americans to identify themselves as black or
white. In spite of gaming windfalls,
Native Americans are still on the lowest end of the American society’s economic
and health ladder. In some parts of
Virginia and Washington , DC , Indians were forced to be reclassified
as colored, mulatto, Negro, and later black.
They were threatened with physical violence or loss of their jobs if
they publicly acknowledged their Indian heritage. Some lighter skinned descendants of these
Native American families moved out West into the Sun Belt to pass as tanned
whites. Since it has become safer to
identify with one’s Native roots in recent years, some of these family members have
now enrolled in Native American tribes. Historically,
many Native American families from the times of the Southern plantation system
could only live in black neighborhoods. Dr.
Walter Plecker, an avowed white supremacist and advocate of eugenics
compounded the case against Native American identity by fiercely recommending
the enforcement (by incarceration) of Virginia ’s Racial Integrity Act of March 20, 1924.
A
Washingtonian relative in her 80s told me of the case of Sacagawea H. a
Delaware Indian childhood friend whose family owned a store in D.C.’s Georgetown , who committed
suicide. Attempts to identify herself as
a Native American in Washington ,
D.C. met with typical skepticism. My source said that as proof of her Native
American ancestry, “The chief of a Delaware
tribe attended her funeral.” Another
story is of a Mattaponi woman who was denied a
federal job for “lying” on an employment form by stating in the “Race” category
that she was an Indian. Also, consider
the case of a prominent New York
gallery owner who identifies herself as black.
Her full-blooded Indian parents had escaped with their lives from the
persecution of Cherokees in the South.
They were spirited away to the North by a sympathetic sea captain. They could only live in an African-American
community in Boston .
Or the saga of prominent sisters from
the Cherokee Reservation in North Carolina who
were misidentified as attractive “Negroes” in black entrepreneurial Washington , D.C. ’s
early U Street
corridor. Maybe someone should write an
Oscar awarding song titled “It is hard out
here to be an Indian.”
Nice post, thanks for sharing.
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Benito Juarez a Zapotec Indian, president of Mexico 1858 - 1872
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