Ex-Olympian forced to choose between marriage and Mohawk status in Kahnewake
By Linda Diebel
She could have love or community--not both.
And all because she fell in love with a white man.
Her heart and soul lie in Kahnewake on the south shore of Montreal. She understands her responsibility to perpetuate her line in a society where everyone knows the rule: don't "marry out."
The problem, she argues, is the Indian Act created a mindset in aboriginal peoples that blood is everything. They've absorbed a concept imposed by 19th century federal bureaucrats who thought they knew best.
Says Horn-Miller: "It disconnected people from our traditional system of self-government and impacted upon our identity and cultural knowledge."
Aboriginal scholar Marlene Brant Castellano agrees aboriginal traditions were different. Professor emeritus at Trent University, long-time activist and officer of the Order of Canada, she notes that, historically, when a census of Indians was taken in the 1800s, it was clear their approach to who should belong was inclusive.
What should be a happy time for the couple, with Morgan competing and Horn-Miller under contract as a CBC commentator, carries the stress of her decision.
Filmmaker Tracey Deer, a Kahnewake Mohawk, understands the dilemma. Of Kahnewake, she says: "There hasn't been a positive step forward for 100 years in terms of membership. We all want to belong and it is psychological torment to deny some people that right."
Deer's documentary, Club Native, tells the story of disenfranchisement, including that of her own sister and her sister's baby, whose birth was filmed.
"We are told over and over again, 'don't marry a white man.' And if we do, so many people are obsessed with it," says Deer. "It's all about keeping the blood pure and generations of people are not being treated equally."
If the Kahnewake Mohawks want to remain "pure" for some reason, couldn't Horn-Miller marry and remain a member while the tribe excluded her husband and children? I don't see what the tribe gains by expelling her. Are people worried that having a non-Indian around will corrupt their beliefs and practices?
For more on the subject, see Defining Who's an Indian and Native Documentaries and News.
Below: "Waneek Horn-Miller, a Mohawk, and her fiance Keith Morgan, at their Montreal home, May 29, 2008. Horn-Miller may lose native community status because of her impending marriage to Morgan, a white man." (Ian Barrett for the Toronto Star)
Wow, racism like that doesn't belong in the 21st century.
ReplyDeleteMoving story. I hope Waneek follows her heart.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to hear the Mohawks' reasoning before I call it "racism." But it's troubling, to be sure.
ReplyDelete"I'd like to hear the Mohawks' reasoning before I call it "racism." But it's troubling, to be sure."
ReplyDeleteWhat else do you call removing someone's tribal membership for marrying someone of a different race?
"We are told over and over again, 'don't marry a white man.' And if we do, so many people are obsessed with it," says Deer. "It's all about keeping the blood pure and generations of people are not being treated equally."
That mentality's about as racist as it gets.
I was with a traditional Pueblo man until racism like this tore us apart. Interracial relationships are not an Extinction Level Event.
ReplyDeletegot a stereotype of the month for ya
ReplyDeletehttp://64.207.181.50/solutions/sol102201.htm
Substitute 'Whites and Indians' for 'gays' and this comic perfectly sums up the Tribe's stance on interracial marriage:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.sinfest.net/archive_page.php?comicID=1616
What would you call blood-quantum rules that let only certain people become tribal members? Race-based decision-making, to be sure, but "racist"?
ReplyDeleteTracey Deer isn't a tribal spokesperson. When a tribal spokesperson says something similar, then we can talk.
"What would you call blood-quantum rules that let only certain people become tribal members? Race-based decision-making, to be sure, but "racist?"
ReplyDeleteI don't think that's racist, I do think that removing someone's membership for marrying a non-Indian is racist. I've never claimed that blood-quantum rules are racist.
Well, punishment for fraternizing with someone of the wrong skin color has been an odious part of some of the worst racist movements, after all.
ReplyDeleteToo much tradition. Too much culture. Do we really know who we want to be, inside? If you want something, you have to be willing to risk something. And if you REALLY want something, you have to be willing to risk everything. Gotta be the scariest thing in the world. Can happen only once in your lifetime and if your lucky, twice.
ReplyDeleteIt's really simple. If she loves him then she just go and live with him and his people. Why make conflicts in the community? Why does she feel she needs to bring him here? We don't want him. She doesn't lose her status if she marries him but she will not be allowed to live here with him. We will not change the rules just for her own individual needs. What kind of role model will she be, what message will she be giving to the young ones. Sure just bring all your non-native boyfriends and girlfriends to reside here until we are no more, because they have no place to go? Selfish if you ask me. Mohawk land is for Mohawk people. It's not about hating races. You would charge me with trespass if I set up household in your home without your permission. Canada has immigration in place, they surely don't ask us who is allowed to live in Canada but everyone wants to have a say on who can live on Kahnawake.
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