[August 1st
marks the 150th anniversary of Cherokee
Chief John Ross’s death. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy Ross and other
native leaders, leading up to a weekend Guest Post from one of our most
talented and significant Native Studies scholars.]
On how a
trailblazing leader reflects the best and worst of contemporary native
communities.
Wilma
Mankiller (1945-2010) is sometimes erroneously referred to as the first
female Principal Chief of a Native American tribe (that hyperlinked New York Times obituary refers to her as
such); both Alice
Brown Davis of the Seminoles and Mildred Cleghorn
of the Apaches led their tribes in the 20th century, and many
other women led tribes in earlier eras. Yet Mankiller, who served as the
Cherokee’s Principal Chief from 1985 to 1995, was indeed that tribe’s first
female chief, as well as a groundbreaking late 20th century American
leader and activist in every sense. She published the bestselling autobiography
Mankiller:
A Chief and Her People (1999), received the
Presidential Medal of Freedom from Bill Clinton in 1998, was inducted into
the National
Women’s Hall of Fame, and garnered numerous other accolades and successes. She
was more than deserving of consideration as one of the nominated “Women on 20s,”
before Harriet Tubman received that honor earlier this year.
If we step back
from those unquestionable, individual successes and accomplishments to consider
Mankiller’s tenure as Principal Chief through a communal lens, she likewise
accomplished a great deal that embodies the best of late 20th and
early 21st century Native American communities. From the outset of
her service (which began in 1985 when she was deputy chief and principal chief Ross
Swimmer moved to a position with the Bureau of Indian Affairs; Mankiller
was subsequently re-elected in both 1987 and 1991), Mankiller emphasized
community development on a number of levels. She created the Cherokee
Nation Community Development Department, which helped initiate local infrastructure
and economic projects such as building a hydroelectric facililty and
establishing tribally owned businesses (and continues its work
to this day). She also revived the tribal high school, advocated for more
sovereignty in the tribe’s relationship to the US government, and made
increasing the tribe’s population a priority, with a resulting tripling
of Cherokee citizenship over the course of her tenure. In all these ways,
Mankiller helped push back on both the continuing vanishing of Native Americans
from our collective narratives and the very real conditions on reservations and
in tribal communities, making the Cherokee a highly visible and vibrant community
through her efforts.
As with any leader,
Mankiller’s service was not without its controversies, and the most prominent
embodies a much less attractive side of contemporary native communities. One of
her first efforts as tribal leader was to establish a law that excluded (disinrolled)
the Cherokee Freedmen from tribal citizenship; the Freedmen
are descendents of the African Americans who were held as slaves by the
tribe prior to the Civil War and became both free and Cherokee citizens after
the war (thanks in part to the 1866
Reconstruction Treaty about which I wrote in Monday’s John Ross post). The aftermath
of this law has continued to unfold for both the freedmen and the tribe,
including a 2006 Cherokee Supreme Court decision that reinrolled the freedmen and
a 2007 amendment of the tribal constitution that disinrolled them once more,
among other controversial moments. While of course every tribe has the right
and responsibility to decide
who qualifies for membership—and while the stakes are certainly real and
high for such decisions—it’s hard for me to see the disrollment of the Cherokee
Freedmen as anything other than a continuation of the oppression that first brought
the slaves into the tribe. And more broadly, such decisions emphasize present
community at the explicit expense of history—and at their best, Mankiller and her
efforts wedded the present to the past, as all great leaders do.
Last leaders
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Native American leaders or figures you’d highlight?
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