A Sorry Saga
Obama signs Native American apology resolution; fails to draw attention to it
By Rob Capriccioso, Indian
Country Today
WASHINGTON – Is an apology that’s not said out loud really an apology? What if the person expressing the apology doesn’t draw attention to it?
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Photo courtesy Pete Souza/White House President Barack Obama signed off on the Native American Apology Resolution Dec. 19 as part of a defense appropriations spending bill, but little has been publicized about it |
Those are
questions that some tribal citizens are asking upon learning that
President Barack Obama signed off on the Native American Apology
Resolution Dec. 19 as part of a defense appropriations spending
bill.
The resolution originated in Congress and had passed the Senate as
stand-alone legislation in the fall. The House ended up adding the
resolution to their version of the defense bill in conference.
Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., originally introduced the measure
intending “to officially apologize for the past ill-conceived
policies by the U.S. government toward the Native peoples of this
land and re-affirm our commitment toward healing our nation’s wounds
and working toward establishing better relationships rooted in
reconciliation.” His bill passed the Senate in 2008 and 2009.
The version signed by Obama became watered down, not making a direct
apology from the government, but rather apologizing “on behalf of
the people of the United States to all Native peoples for the many
instances of violence, maltreatment, and neglect inflicted on Native
peoples by citizens of the United States.”
The resolution also includes a disclaimer: Nothing in it authorizes
or supports any legal claims against the United States, and the
resolution does not settle any claims.
Even with the more general language, the apology is historic, but
the White House has made no announcements to date about it. Nor has
Obama expressed an apology to any tribes or Indian citizens, despite
saying on the presidential campaign trail that he thought an apology
was warranted.
At the White House Tribal Nations Conference on Nov. 5, Obama noted, among other observations, that treaties were violated with tribes and injustices had been done against them, but he did not offer an explicit apology.
The resolution
Obama signed specifically “urges the President to acknowledge the
wrongs of the United States against Indian tribes in the history of
the United States in order to bring healing to this land.”
So, by signing the document as part of the defense spending bill,
did Obama fulfill the resolution? Or, does he have an obligation to
say the apology out loud and to let tribes know he signed the
resolution?
According to White House spokesman Shin Inouye, there are “no
updates at this time” on how Obama might proceed.
Inouye also confirmed that a press release was issued by the White
House regarding the president’s signature of the defense
appropriations bill, but not one on the apology resolution – nor did
the defense release mention that the apology was part of that
legislation.
When other countries have apologized for travesties against their
own indigenous populations, their leaders have been more up front
than the Obama White House to date.
In June 2008, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper gave a widely
noted speech to parliament and tribal leaders, apologizing to
survivors of the country’s residential boarding school system. It
was well-received by many First Nations individuals, and some said
it helped them feel a sense of healing.
Before that, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd apologized in
parliament to all aboriginals for laws and policies that “inflicted
profound grief, suffering and loss.”
Past presidents of the United States have also been willing to offer
apologies to harmed groups.
In 1997, President Bill Clinton said during a press conference that
the government was sorry for its role in the Tuskegee syphilis
experiment on African Americans. And President Ronald Reagan made a
formal statement when he signed the Japanese Internment Apology law
in 1988, which carried with it financial restitution.
The up-in-the-air quality of the current Native American resolution
and the federal government’s handling of it is concerning to some
Native Americans.
Robert T. Coulter, executive director of the Indian Law Resource
Center, said there has been an “overwhelming silence” regarding the
resolution.
“There were no public announcements, there were no press
conferences, there was no national attention, much less
international,” said the Citizen Potawatomi Nation member.
“You might think that something would be announced, that something
would be said about it. After all, they’re apologizing to Native
Americans, and yet, I don’t know that people have really heard about
it.
“What kind of an apology is it when they don’t tell the people they
are apologizing to? For an apology to have any meaning at all, you
do have to tell the people you’re apologizing to.
“I have had my doubts on whether this is a true or meaningful
apology, and this silence seems to speak very loudly on that point.”
Still, Coulter said the resolution doesn’t have any legal meaning,
no matter if Obama and Congress members say it out loud or not.
“The real test is if Congress actually takes action to back up the
apology – will it approve the Cobell settlement, will the
Indian health bill become law?”
Washington state Rep. John McCoy, a citizen of the Tulalip Tribes,
said he was happy that Obama signed the apology, but he would like a
verbal statement.
“The president has been pretty busy with high priority stuff, but
I’d hope that he’ll select a time and place to make an announcement.
I’m sure many tribes will bring this issue to the forefront with
him."
McCoy believes tribal citizens should take the development as a win,
and move on in a meaningful way.
Chris Stearns, a Navajo lawyer and former Clinton administration
official, believes Obama will call attention to his signing of the
resolution at some point, but there are political realities: First,
this is a congressional resolution shepherded by Brownback, so Obama
might want to let him take the lead; and second, this is an election
year, if Obama were to make a big deal out of an apology, it could
be painted by opponents as a weakness or political correctness.
No matter the politics of the situation, some tribes aren’t waiting
for a statement from the president. Some have already inserted their
histories into the congressional record, and plan to bring that
record, coupled with the resolution, to state and local leaders,
using the documents to remind and educate them on tribes’ historical
presence and sovereign status.
Source: http://www.indiancountrytoday.com/home/content/81343107.html
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