Reznet

Learn, Practice. Succeed. Study Journalism at AIJI. Application deadline is Feb. 1, 2008

RedClout image

Next President Could Lift Hopes With Indian Apology

No votes yet
  • Print

Much like an abusive spouse wanting forgiveness for years of abuse, the U.S. Senate has taken up consideration of a formal apology to Native people for their deplorable treatment at the hands of the federal government.

But like the abusive spouse — whose words are so often hollow and lacking the necessary action needed to ensure real change — the apology the U.S. Senate is considering carries no weight, no real promise of reform.

Only more rhetoric.

The Indian apology is part of a Senate resolution introduced by Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., and is attached as an amendment to the Indian Health Care Improvement Act. The Senate is expected to take up debate on the act again Monday.

Without binding reform measures or the weight of a sitting president behind it, the apology not only lacks substance but also the chorus of support needed to truly make it the first step toward healing between Native people and the U.S. government.

But what if a sitting president were to support such an apology?

It's not likely President Bush, who opposes passage of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act and recently proposed slashing funding to many Indian social programs in his annual budget, would ever support anything resembling a concession to Native people.

Of course Bush won't be inhabiting the White House much longer.

So what of the next president?

Only three viable presidential candidates remain in the race. All of them — Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) — have voiced support for Native issues during their time in the Senate.

And while it's safe to assume the eventual Democratic nominee would support an apology to Native people, what about the Republican nominee? Certainly the relationship between conservatives and Native people has been a tempestuous one.

That said, McCain could be the first Republican president in a long time to take steps to correct that dysfunctional relationship.

In a May 2005 interview with the Associated Press, McCain said he supported a resolution the Senate was considering at that time that also would have issued a formal apology to Indians.

"Reviewing the history of this government's treatment of Native peoples makes painfully obvious that the government has repeatedly broken its promises and caused great harm to the nation's original inhabitants," McCain told the AP back then.

With the presumptive Republican presidential nominee having expressed support for an Indian apology in recent years, the chances the next president would support such an apology seem increasingly likely.

The idea of a president standing before the entire world and acknowledging this country's mistreatment of its first inhabitants is inspiring.

If that were to happen, it would change this hollow apology now being considered into something more. Something likely to elicit hope within even the most cynical of us.

And while it still would ring hollow without immediate action toward real reform, it could light a fire.

And that fire could, finally, give form and substance to this promise of change.

Kevin Abourezk, Oglala Lakota, is a reporter and editor at the Lincoln (Neb.) Journal Star. He is a reznet assignment editor and teaches reporting at the Freedom Forum's American Indian Journalism Institute.

To send Kevin Abourezk a message please click here

resolution is public statement

although a wooden indian nickel, it does not deny a fact of mistreatment and corruption within indian agencies which allowed history to be previously written by american historians and sold to all as american history and read by previous indian generations which only fueled cultural decline demeaning individual perspectives and awarenenss

Apology what the ...fu?

What could they(Great white father) muster up for an apology. Like the abusive partner this is all in hopes to get back in bed. Beware this hollow promises is only the disguise of something worse. Do we want whites walking around thinking they made up for what they did? If you ask me forgiveness is out of the question. I try as much as I can not to live in interface with these people, even when I have to be around them I wear a shield. They are the evil scourge of the Earth and they wont be happy until they get to Mars. A better way existed here that would have ensured the future to our children, but the dirty pig raising bastards stewed up some diseases. The rest is history.

Apology to Native Americans

Show me the Money !

Post new comment

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <cite> <code> <p> <i> <u> <strike> <ul> <li> <ol> <a> <img> <sup> <sub> <hr> <table> <caption> <tbody> <tr> <td>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

Captcha
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.

  • Tell us what you think about the 'Navajobama' T-shirt, and we'll send your comments to the manufacturer—and to the Obama for President campaign. (No profanities, please.)
  • A Native American gay wedding ceremony takes place at a Two Spirit gathering in Montana.
  • Omission disappoints Native Americans attending the presidential candidate's speech in Wisconsin. Others express concern over Obama's stance on Indian gaming.
  • Here's how our petite, 5-foot-4 Navajo reporter managed to elbow her way through a mob of crazed sports journalists and ask the Super Bowl superstar what he knows about Indian people. And as for that football player who looked down her blouse ...
  • Floyd Red Crow Westerman's death has left a void in Indian Country and a burden Native people must find a way to shoulder in his absence.

Sponsors:


Copyright © 2008 Reznet.
Reznet is a project of The University of Montana School of Journalism.
Comments?