TULSA (AP) — The Cherokee Nation is rolling out a public relations campaign this week in response to federal lawmakers who say the tribe should be denied benefits unless it recognizes descendants of the tribe’s former black slaves, known as freedmen.
But one freedmen rights activist accused the nation of resorting to “propaganda” to make its case.
The campaign includes two Web sites designed to address misconceptions about a 2007 special election where Cherokee voters decided to remove about 2,800 freedmen descendants and other non-Indians from tribal rolls, said Mike Miller, spokesman for the nation.
They also discuss what’s at stake if some lawmakers have their way: denial of $300 million in federal money that would go to the country’s second-largest Indian tribe. The money pays for health clinics, Head Start programs, elderly care and housing assistance.
Tribal leaders claim if funding is cut off, more than 6,000 nation employees could lose their jobs, touching off a ripple effect that would economically devastate northeastern Oklahoma.
U.S. Rep. Diane Watson, a California Democrat who claims Indian blood and Oklahoma ties, introduced the legislation last year to cut ties with the nation unless it recognized the freedmen descendants.
“People need a place where they can go for calm, rational facts on the issue, without hyperbole and without a political slant,” Miller said Wednesday. “What we’ve tried to put on here are some very straightforward things we’ve proven time and time again as facts.”
While the debate over who is a Cherokee citizen continues in federal and tribal court, the government’s proposal to punish the poorest of the tribe before the courts make any ruling is not the solution, Miller said.
“Enron probably did some things that Congress didn’t like, did they ever get a $300 million fine?” he said. “We’re talking about hurting people who have very few resources.”
Marilyn Vann, president of the Oklahoma City-based Descendants of Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes, criticized the campaign, calling it “propaganda” and added that “anybody with money can put information out there that’s not correct.”
“I am very disappointed they continue to waste the taxpayers’ money on these things,” Vann said. “As long as they have that money, they will continue to do it.”
For decades, descendants of freed Cherokee slaves fought to reclaim their citizenship, even though they were adopted into the tribe in 1866 under a treaty with the U.S. government.
A ruling in 2006 by the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court held that the Cherokee constitution assured freedmen descendants of tribal citizenship.
That led to a petition drive for a ballot measure to determine who is a citizen of the nation, which claims 280,000 members.
Last year, nearly 77 percent of Cherokee voters decided in a special election to amend the nation’s constitution to remove the freedmen descendants and other non-Indians from tribal rolls.
Critics of the vote said then it was hardly a mandate because only a fraction of the nation’s tribal citizens — about 9,000 — cast ballots.
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June 4, 2008
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