• @ArgentRaven
    cake
    link
    English
    1510 months ago

    57% of which tribe? With more than half, I would expect you to have a fairly strong upbringing in the tribe with various customs and your parents likely know how to get you enrolled.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      510 months ago

      Not always that simple. My father has tried for years but gets stonewalled because of who his father was, my grandfather was disowned for marrying a white woman rather than leave her a single mother. In the end I think being cut off like that is what killed my grandfather really.

      • @freecandy
        link
        English
        -4
        edit-2
        10 months ago

        @lemmy.dickbutt/autobio50words

    • @weariedfae
      link
      English
      17 months ago

      Some tribes have been in legal battles over the past few decades because they’re trying to disenroll people no matter how “native” they are. IIRC at least one tribe was limiting membership to only the descendants of the families that signed a specific treaty and then only if they had the paperwork to back it up. Which, if you know anything about the history of natives in this country, is really fucked up to require.

      Not the one I remember but here’s an example of a tribe disenrolling people regardless of their “blood quantum”:

      https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/politics/united-nations-watchdogs-raise-concerns-about-nooksack-evictions-again/