There seems to be a big shake-up in Cherokee culture in general now;
I have read in several sources of the identification of their
ancestral homeland, a mountain in NC, with remains and conditions as
discovered being pretty much as the legends have always said existed,
and now there is a fight going on within the Cherokee about what to
do with it; some want to keep it private, a sacred tribal spot;
others want to build at least part of it, develop it and make it a
tourist destination. Which, personally, I find appalling. The world
will never run out of places and excuses for yet another 'tourist
destination'; culturally sensitive and sacred places are vanishing
like the Dodo. There needs to be a time when any people must keep in
mind what is left to future generations, and not just the short-term
gain.
Nancy
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I was never lost, but I was bewildered once for three days.
--Daniel Boone
On Mar 3, 2007, at 11:27 AM, Debra Jackson/Harold Forsythe wrote:
> The term "badge of slavery" was used in John Marshall Harlan's
> famous dissent in Plessey v. Ferguson (1896) over racial
> segregation. Since it was used in a dissent, it is barely a term
> of art in constitutional law, let alone a title for a doctrine.
> One might as well argue, as some on the far right have, that
> citizenship acquired under the 14th Amendment is a badge of
> slavery. Moreover, the Cherokee were not required to sign the
> treaty, they could have taken the consequences of not signing it.
> American Indians will probably never take the 'coercion' legal
> argument to court for fear that whites will make similar claims to
> disallow Native American treaty claims.
>
> In any case, a treaty that is over 140 years old will almost
> certainly stand. The legal issue will be about what the treaty means.
>
> I remember reading in John Rembar's The Law of the Land, that
> equity does not favor those who sleep on their rights. A major
> question that will undoubtedly come up in court is why the
> Cherokees in 2007 are voting to remove people from the tribal
> structure who have been free men and women within the Cherokee
> Nation since Cherokee self-emancipation (that you refer to.)
>
> Harold S. Forsythe
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