11:26 AM
ABENAKI
PERSPECTIVES ON LOVE & FORGIVENESS IN VT. @ BROWNELL LIBRARY
Frederick Wiseman,
tribal historian, professor at Johnson State College, and author of The Voice of the Dawn, an Autohistory of the Abenaki Nation, leads the discussion of Abenaki
Perspectives on Love and Forgiveness in Vermont on Wednesday, January 21,
2009 at 7 p.m. in the Kolvoord Room at Brownell Library in Essex Junction. Free and open to the public.
Prof. Wiseman
focuses on the Abenakis and Vermont: Conflict
and Forgiveness over Indian Identity.
Traditional Abenaki concepts of
love, conflict, justice and forgiveness are quite different than those
developed in Western thought over the last millennia. For example, the distinctions between self,
romantic, filial and social love are not compartmentalized, but blur and can
extend to entities such as plants or landscapes not usually thought of as
sentient. This fundamental principal
affects Native conflict and resolution through justice and forgiveness. Professor
Wiseman will examine the 1995-2006 Abenaki conflict with the State of Vermont
over Indian identity, illustrating how when justice fails, something
approaching ethnic forgiveness can be used to establish mutual respect between
the dominant Anglo-Vermont culture and its indigenous population. Abstracts from Prof. Wiseman’s 2006 film
“Against the Darkness” will be used to illustrate the lecture.
This program is part of the ongoing “Let’s Talk About It: Love and
Forgiveness” series made possible by
a grant from the American Library Association and the Fetzer Institute.
Contact: Penny
Pillsbury, Library Director or Martha A.
Penzer, Project Director
Tel: 878-6955 or
Email: brownell_library@yahoo.com
Brownell Library
6 Lincoln Street
Essex Junction, VT 05452
Anne Liske
Sexual Violence Prevention Coordinator
The Anti-Violence Partnership at the University of
Vermont
443 Waterman Bldg, 85 S. Prospect
Burlington, VT 05405
January 21, 2009
7:00 p.m.
Abenaki
Perspectives on Love and Forgiveness in Vermont, a presentation by Frederick
Matthew Wiseman, tribal historian and Professor of Humanities at
Johnson State College. This event is taking place at Brownell Library, 6
Lincoln Street, in Essex Jct., Vermont.
February 1, 2009 -
October 31, 2009 Ongoing
Echo Lake Aquarium and Science Center, Burlington, Vermont
The ECHO Lake
Aquarium and Science Center presents 1609: The Other Side of History.
This video, produced by Fred Wiseman, looks at the discovery of Lake Champlain
by the French from a native perspective. ECHO will feature the video as part of
its offerings for guests throughout the year. Frederick Wiseman, PhD, was principle research scientist at MIT's
Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology and author of
scholarly publications on Mayan and Paleo-Indian paleo-ethno-biology. Now devoted
to Abenaki culture and history, he teaches at Johnson State College and is an
Abenaki Tribal Council member and director of the Abenaki Tribal Museum and
Cultural Center in Vermont.
February 1, 2009 -
October 31, 2009 Ongoing
Echo Lake Aquarium and Science Center, Burlington, Vermont
The ECHO Lake
Aquarium and Science Center presents 1609: The Other Side of History.
This video, produced by Fred Wiseman, looks at the discovery of Lake Champlain
by the French from a native perspective. ECHO will feature the video as part of
its offerings for guests throughout the year. Frederick Wiseman, PhD, was principle research scientist at MIT's
Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology and author of
scholarly publications on Mayan and Paleo-Indian paleo-ethno-biology. Now devoted
to Abenaki culture and history, he teaches at Johnson State College and is an
Abenaki Tribal Council member and director of the Abenaki Tribal Museum and
Cultural Center in Vermont.
February 15, 2009
The Burlington Free Press Newspaper, Pages 1D-2D
By Sally Pollak, Free Press Staff Writer
Indigenous
Expressions: New ECHO exhibit explores how indigenous people interacted with
the landscape
A new exhibit at ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center is
an exploration of native people’s history, culture and connection to the land
and water.
A great majority of the objects and artifacts in “Indigenous
Expressions” come from the collection of Frederick M. Wiseman, a humanities professor at Johnson State
College.
Frederick M. Wiseman, 61 years of age, gave scores of
pieces to ECHO as a permanent gift. Some objects are from his personal
collection; others originated in a program at Johnson in which
students make artifacts for donation to museums.
“I’m getting to that stage in my life that I’ve collected
a lot of these for my own research and now it’s time to let things go a little
bit,” Frederick M. Wiseman said. “And let them help other people learn about
the Abenakis.”
Frederick Matthew Wiseman has learned about the rich
native history of the region through years of collecting objects; he hopes the
history will be shared and better understood through the ECHO exhibit.
His travels around
Vermont and the region, driving trips with his wife to
look for native artifacts, have taught Frederick M. Wiseman about
the prevalence and significance of the local native culture.
“So many people say that there are no native people in
Vermont and this region,” Frederick M. Wiseman said. “If that is so, why are there so many
Native American artifacts that come out of people’s houses and antique shops?
Birch-bark sap bucket, from about 1880; wood
sap spile, from about 1880; French/Abenaki sugar mold, reproduction, 2005/2006; Sugar cone wrapped
in birch-bark, 2002.
Donated by Frederick Matthew Wiseman
Courtesy of ECHO
February 22, 2009
White Pine
Association hosts Snow Snake Competitions
North Haverhill, NH- The White Pine Association, a non-profit
organization will host the second annual snow snake competitions Sunday
February 22 at 1 PM in the field next to the Haverhill Town Building, Main
Street. The gym in the town building will be used for warm up and social
gathering. The White Pine Association will host a raffle; the Koasek of the Koas Abenaki Elders Council
will offer hot beverages and soups as well as a food sale. The events are free
and open to the public.
Fred Wiseman’s
films: Against the Darkness and 1609: The Other Side of History will
be shown in the gym. Other entertainment
TBA.
March 16, 2009
7:06 AM
From: Nancy Millette
To: Floyd Family
Subject: Did i
send you this?
DNA and Book
Signing coming up in North Haverhill
On Friday March 20, 2009
and Saturday March 21, 2009 National Geographic
DNA testing will be taking place at the North Haverhill Town Office Building.
On Saturday Trudy Ann Parker author of Aunt Sarah and Fred Wiseman author of several
books about the Abenaki will have a book signing for those interested. Fred Wiseman will also show his film “Against
the Darkness” at 3:00 p.m. and give a talk. All is free and open to the public.
The White Pine
Association is please to work with Dr. Schurr and National Genographic to
bring the DNA testing to the Newbury, Vermont and Haverhill, NH area. There has been some confusion to how
effective the tests will be for families who Native heritage goes from Female
to Male. Recently, the White Pine spoke with Dr. Schurr and he responded;
“In general, the
DNA analysis that we perform reveal participants' maternal genetic ancestry
(mtDNA), and, for males, also their paternal ancestry (Y-chromosome). It
indicates the maternal or paternal lineage that a person has inherited from
female and male ancestors extending back many generations”
Hours for the DNA
testing are Friday March 20 from 11 AM to 7 Pm and Saturday March 21 from 10 Am
to 5 PM. The programs are open and free to the public. For more information
please call 802-392-8006
Director of White Pine Association.
March 26, 2009
[Also published on March 31,
2009]
The Burlington
Free Press Newspaper
Indigenous Expressions
Speaker Series: Indigenous Identity in the 21st
Century Green Mountain State
4:00 p.m to 6:00
p.m.
ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center, 1 College Street in Burlington, VT
Join Dr. Frederick Matthew Wiseman, Abenaki
Historian, as he addresses key questions:
Unlike any other
minority, Native Americans cannot
self-identify, but must have their identity bestowed upon them by the
government.
So who is a
Vermont Indian?
Why can’t
Indigenous Abenaki Indians sell their arts and crafts as made-by American
Indians?
What does one
have to do to maintain a Native American identity in the 21st century?
ECHO will be open for free public viewing of the exhibit Indigenous Expressions: Native Peoples of
the Lake Champlain Basin from 4:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., speaker 4:30 p.m. to
5:15 p.m., questions and light refreshments 5:15 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
March 31, 2009
4:00 PM
ECHO Lake
Aquarium and Science Center presents Indigenous Identity in the 21st Century
Green Mountain State. Join Dr. Fred
Wiseman, Abenaki Historian, as he addresses key questions: Unlike any other
minority, Native Americans cannot self-identify, but must have their identity
bestowed upon them by the government. So who is a Vermont Indian? Why can’t
Indigenous Abenaki Indians sell their arts and crafts as “made by American
Indians?” What does one have to do to maintain a Native American identity in
the 21st century?
On this 400th
anniversary of the European Discovery of
Lake Champlain, there is still little agreement
among politicians, scholars, and Indians themselves about who the Vermont
Abenakis really are. Professor Wiseman looks at the underlying
issues involved with Vermont’s understanding of its indigenous peoples.
Illustrating his talk with clips from his 2006 movie “Against the Darkness,”
he explores the identity politics
that still bedevil relations and between the larger Abenaki community and their
Vermont neighbors, and offers some tentative solutions to this thorny problem
in Northeastern race relations. ECHO's Quadricentennial experience features
archaeological and interactive exhibits, events, speakers, and a contemporary
indigenous peoples’ Portrait Gallery, all celebrating the vibrant past and
future of our Native neighbors. ECHO will be open for free public viewing of
their exhibit INDIGENOUS EXPRESSIONS:
Native Peoples of the Lake Champlain Basin: 4:00 – 4:30 p.m.; Speaker: 4:30
– 5:15 p.m. Questions and Light refreshments: 5:15 – 6:00 p.m. Echo Lake
Aquarium and Science Center, Burlington, Vermont.
April 23, 2009
St. Albans, Vermont
Rachel May White
Bear will tells tale in Abenaki and
English on Saturday.
There will be Fiber Arts
demonstration and paper makak-basket
making and decoration for children.
The Festival will
screen Historian Frederick M. Wiseman's film ‘1609: the Other Side of History’ on
Friday at 1:00 p.m
April 24, 2009
12:13 p.m.
From: Donald Warren Stevens Jr.
To: Luke Willard
Cc: Nancy Millette; Chief April St. Francis - Merrill; Frederick M. Wiseman; Elnu
Abenaki
Subject: Re:
Vermont Native Community
Luke [Willard],
I understand you position also. I am trying to change
things as best I can. However, nothing will change if we do not at least try to
move forward together. It is really going to be important to work together now
more than ever!
I found out yesterday that Odanak just got their Federal
Recognition in Canada changed to allow Cards and full voting rights to citizens
outside of the reservation and full protection as tribal members. They also won
some land lawsuit they were looking for in Canada. Richard Skip Bernier informed Jeanne (nee: Deforge) Brink at the
meeting that she and his grandson Timothy DelaBruere can get their Odanak Status card and to fill out the application. They
also said that they are providing Odanak Status cards to 350 people in Vermont. They are
going to work closely with their members in Vermont to secure their rights.
This will be in your neck of the woods. I will be asking them to come to a
meeting sometime in the future to find out what their intentions are so I can
see how it impacts Vermont.
I hope that you understand that they are now going to
flex their muscle and use the Federal rights in Canada to transfer to the
United States. I hope you understand that they are now going to be a tribal
force in Vermont and who do you think they are going to go after?? I would bet the Abenaki Alliance of Vermont.
Who do you think will be talking to the Governor to work with the
commission on who should be recognized or not? If their Federal Recognition
transfers or is recognized by the United States, then Vermont has no choice but
to recognize them like we would the Mahicans. As was written in S.117, the Commission
has to work with All Native American Tribes and groups located in Vermont.
Guess who's coming to dinner with Genealogy in hand?
Food for thought...
Be Well,
Don Stevens
April 24, 2009
5:02 PM
From: Fred Wiseman
To: Donald Warren Stevens Jr.; Luke Willard
Cc: Nancy Millette; Chief April Merrill; Elnu Abenaki
Subject: RE:
Vermont Native Community
Don't worry guys--
There is no mechanism in the BIA or any other Federal
Agency (except for Indigenous refugees from third world countries under the
State Department-- a few Mosquito indians came here under that a few years ago,
and for the Smithsonian which has unique and crazy rules) for any special treatment
of Indians or any indigenous peoples for that matter recognized or not in their
country of origin.
The Iroquois have used the Jay treaty of border crossings
in the past, but that was curtailed years ago and is being entirely cut off as
we speak.
So we don't have anything to worry about except arrogance
- and that is nothing new. There is no
"transferral."
Dr. Frederick Matthew
Wiseman PhD. Of Johnson State College, VT
April 25, 2009
7:55 AM
From: Nancy Millette
To: Frederick M. Wiseman; Donald Warren Stenves Jr.
donald_stevens; Luke Willard
Cc: Chief April Merrill; Elnu Abenaki
Subject: Re:
Vermont Native Community
I was thinking...if the "Vermont Native American Commission" [VCNAA]
is going to give so much attention and concern to Canadian Indians living in
the USA and VT perhaps they should also have a special seat for the Mexicans,
Aztecs and Incas living in VT?? They too, are from another country, and are indigenous
to their country, and living here. Perhaps we could have a fire dance celebration
on the state house lawn in honor of them?? Then we could celebrate the Canadian
Indigenous fur trappers who helped develop trade in Canada? Certainly the
Indigenous Tribes in the Alliance who are
indigenous to Vermont have no support, to honor our history and contributions
to this state....I find it quite insulting that the NA Commission is ready to
bow down and support Canadian Indians here however, here in Newbury, VT and Haverhill, NH
they turn their noses up on the family members who live 50 feet away from each
other on opposing river banks!
I am sure the BIA would think this is as ridiculous and
nothing more than a scare tactic as I do....
n [Nancy Millette – Lyons]
April 25, 2009
8:06 AM
From: Nancy Millette
To: [Milo Paquin] Wolfheart
Spirit dancstar@maine.rr.com; Andy
Fullerton amfonline@hotmail.com; [Eric Scott
Floyd] Floyd Family dfloyd@nycap.rr.com; jhp6@verizon.net; Mike Fenn
mfenn33@yahoo.com; RAVEN
KCHIMKASAS@gmail.com; Roger Longtoe
gitceedadann@yahoo.com; Shirl Hook
shirly480@gmail.com
Subject: council
notice
I still another another week or so to get settled and
Shirl is in NM for another couple of weeks but we will need to plan a council
meeting sometime mid to end of May.
I have been contacted by the DNA lab that did the
testing...seems many people have been calling and writing National Geographic
and the lab about their results. I have been asked to spread the word for
people to be patient and please do not call the lab. The scientists are in
Alaska right now and will not have all the testing results for a few weeks yet.
they will contact individuals as soon as they do. If you know people who were
tested please spread the word that it they will contact individuals and people
should just wait. Thank you
We can coordinate a date soon. I do not have everyone's
emails here. Seems moving has knocked out some of my addresses so if you could
please forward this to other elders council and tribal council members that
would be appreciated.
Thank you
Chief Nancy
April 26, 2009
8:05 AM
From: Nancy Millette
To: Donald Stevens
Subject:
suggestion
Don [Donald Warren Stevens
Jr.]
As your friend I am addressing you not as a chief....
I think you are addressing the Abenaki Alliance all
wrong. You are asking us to support you and the commission and pleading with us
to all get along. The alliance is very strong and very united. As a person who
is an 'outsider" and I say that ‘as not being a chief with a seat on the
alliance’ you should maybe think about Indian protocal. Ask the Alliance for an
opportunity for you to come and address the Alliance and ASK us for your help.
I will tell you right now (as you brought up the Mohawks, I will use that as an
example) If a citizen or even a USA political leader wanted to talk to or have
support from the Chiefs of Iroquois Confederacy they would ask in a traditional
way to have a meeting. I know for a fact that if a meeting was asked for at
Onondaga with the Conferedacy a runner and wampum string would be sent to
Akwesasne (the eastern door) and a messager from there would be sent to the
Onondage longhouse.
We too have protocal. You might do well to ask Frederick Matthew Wiseman on some guidedance of
protocol addressing the Abenaki Alliance.....
Just a suggestion...Nancy
April 28, 2009
The Burlington Free Press
Newspaper
By Joel Banner Baird – Free
Press Staff Writer
Champlain’s Journal: Explorer notes native agriculture
What the Abenaki saw in Samuel de Champlain
Abenaki historian and film
producer Dr. Frederick Matthew Wiseman will show clips of his film, “1609:
The Other Side of History” this afternoon as part of a talk about the
discovery of Lake Champlain by the French (the native Abenaki, of course had
known about the lake already).
The presentation is a part of
the “Indigenous
Expressions” exhibit at the ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center in
Burlington, Vermont.
4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. at the
ECHO Center.
May 01-02, 2009
The Vermont Quadricentennial
Celebration is hosting a conference on Indigenous people May 1-2, 2009 at
St. Michaels College in Vermont. There is interest in having a presentation on
intermarriage of Indigenous people in New France pre 1650.
Other speakers at this conference are slated to be: Kit Anderson (UVM), Julie Silverman (Echo), Sara Lyman, Eloise Biel (LCMM), Frederick Matthew Wiseman, Ted Timerick (film producer), some anthropologist from UVM, Dave Skinas (who will talk about the Alburgh site), Giovanna Peebles, John Crock and Marge Bruchac, Philippe Charland (Abanaki name places), Roger Longtoe, John and Donna Moody, perhaps David Stewart Smith.
Other speakers at this conference are slated to be: Kit Anderson (UVM), Julie Silverman (Echo), Sara Lyman, Eloise Biel (LCMM), Frederick Matthew Wiseman, Ted Timerick (film producer), some anthropologist from UVM, Dave Skinas (who will talk about the Alburgh site), Giovanna Peebles, John Crock and Marge Bruchac, Philippe Charland (Abanaki name places), Roger Longtoe, John and Donna Moody, perhaps David Stewart Smith.
May 03, 2009
The Boston Globe Newspaper
By Diane E. Foulds, Globe
Correspondent
For Abenaki Descendants, an Ancestral Revival: Adding
a Native Focus to Champlain Festivities
BURLINGTON, Vt. - His face
and scalp are the color of tomatoes. You do a double-take, then wonder whether
it might be a severe sunburn. But the crimson is body paint, a mixture of red
ochre and bear grease rubbed over the skin the way North American natives must
have done.
The Elnu tribe will hold two waterfront encampments, June 12-13, 2009
in Vergennes (outside the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, 4472 Basin Harbor
Road, 802-475-2022, www.lcmm.org) and July 9-12 in Burlington (outside the ECHO
Lake Aquarium and Science Center, 1 College St., 802-864-1848, www.echovermont.org). Activities will include singing, dancing, storytelling,
genealogy, gourd art, and traditional crafts. Free. www.elnuabenakitribe.org or
vtindigenous.com.
"Red ochre is a power
color," says Roger Longtoe Sheehan, a native artisan and performer from
the town of Jamaica, Vermont. "It's a life force color. It's a protective
color, too," he adds, and probably where European colonists came up with
the term "red man."
Roger “Longtoe” Anthony Sheehan, 47, is chief of the Elnu tribe of southern Vermont, an Abenaki band of about 50 largely
family members who are learning about
their long-vanished language and culture. After researching woodland
survival skills, they practice them at wigwam encampments where entire families
convene to grind corn, cook meals, sing tribal songs, and create tools and clothing
from natural materials. It's an attempt to reconstruct how their ancestors
lived.
Among other things,
Sheehan and his tribe have taught themselves to waterproof canoes, smoke bears
out of trees, and mix ceremonial paints. Learning the language has been more
difficult, as native speakers are scarce.
The Elnu have studied and
reenacted Abenaki life from the 17th century to the Civil War, though lately
they have been concentrating on 1609. On July 14, 2009 of that year the first French
explorer, Samuel de Champlain, paddled south into the island-flecked body of
water that would become known as Lake Champlain.
For Frederick M. Wiseman, an Abenaki historian who teaches in the
humanities department at Johnson State
College, the findings were a revelation.
"It's really
convinced me that almost everything we think we know [about Abenaki history] is
actually only partially correct," he said.
Frederick Matthew Wiseman, 61, himself an
Abenaki, has written three books for the Champlain celebration. He also has
produced films, borrowed from his own
artifact collection to create museum exhibits, and perhaps most important,
rallied the state's disparate indigenous groups.
"I am the gadfly that
keeps telling everybody that we've got to have a native voice in it," he
said, an undertaking that admittedly has turned out to be "a long,
involved, and sometimes painful process."
A few tribal members, he
explained, are disinclined to celebrate a European "conqueror" whose
arrival irrevocably disrupted native life, though most agree with more recent
interpretations that depict Champlain as more tolerant and respectful of the tribes
than his English counterparts. As Frederick Matthew Wiseman sees it, what's more important is
what the quadricentennial offers: a rare opportunity to tell the lake's history
from a native perspective. By contrast, during the 1909 celebrations, actors
dressed up in Indian costumes and
performed "Hiawatha." (No Fred is incorrect, those actors were Kahnawake Mohawk Indians! He should know this had he done proper research.)
This time the pretense is
gone. When the Elnu set up camp on the lake, they strive to re-create the kind
of indigenous village that Champlain might have happened upon in 1609.
For tribe member Vera
Longtoe Sheehan, 41, a graphic artist, that means tanning deer hides,
decorating buckskin leggings with porcupine quills, finger-weaving quivers and
sandals from strands of Indian hemp and dogbane, and daubing her own and her
children's skin with ceremonial paint, not to scare off intruders, but "to
bring the creator's attention to ourselves, and for spiritual protection."
Such survival skills began
to vanish, as her cousin, Roger Sheehan, explains, "when the first
European showed up here and handed us an axe. Because the day we got an axe, we
stopped using the stone-axe."
May 05, 2009
Donald Stevens resigns as VCNAA Chairman. “During the first term on the commission, the tribes were in direct conflict with some members of the commission which caused a lot of tension with the Native Community. As a commission, we became ineffective and unable to carry out our charge effectively due to these conflicts. Subsequently, the former chairman and other members resigned or left office due to this inability to move our people forward.” Don Stevens served on the VCNAA for a mere 8 months, from September 2008 until May, 2009 as Member and later as Chairman of the VCNAA.
No, what it was in reality was there were some orchestrating chaos on the VCNAA on the behalf of the 4 groups seeking to CONTROL the VCNAA on their behalf for gaining State Recognition. Don was and is deceptive in the reasoning behind WHY the VCNAA could not carry out their duties. It was because everyone of the 4 groups in VT wanted Jeanne Brink, Judy Dow and Tim DelaBruere off the Commission altogether.
The former chairman and other members resigned because they wanted to dictate and control, on the behalf of the "tribes" that they were in or allied with, and when they couldn't they resigned in protest; much like a child having a rotten spoiled temper-tantrum.
May 5, 2009
6:30 PM
Dr. Frederick Matthew Wiseman, of Johnson State College
will present Champlain and 1609 from the Abenaki Perspective. Plattsburgh,
NY Public Library, 19 Oak Street, Plattsburgh, NY. Admission is free. For more information
call 518-563-0921 or 518-536-7442.
June 23, 2009
The Burlington Free Press Newspaper
The Vermont Indigenous Celebration: Celebrating 11,000 years of
Cultural Endurance
Burlington, VT— Join the Abenaki people of Vermont for a
four-day celebration of history, culture and survival. July 9-12, 2009 we
will be sharing our history, culture and arts at one of the premiere signature
events of the Vermont Quadricentennial Celebration. ECHO
Lake Aquarium and Science Center/Leahy Center for Lake Champlain in
Burlington makes the perfect backdrop for this celebration because many of our
ancestors lived and died alongside of Bitawbagw (Abenaki for “The Lake in Between”), known today as
Lake Champlain. Indigenous
Celebration made possible by a grant from the US Department of Education
through the support of US Senator, Patrick Leahy.The Native American Quadricentennial Advisory Panel (NAQUAD) has
been working with Vermont Quadricentennial
Commission and state officials in planning the Vermont Indigenous Celebration Signature Event since 2004.
According to Dr. Frederick Wiseman, Tribal Historian and Quadricentennial
Commission member, this event, “…is our
way of showcasing the fact that Vermont has and has always had a vibrant Native
American community.” The Vermont Indigenous Celebration will feature
presentations by citizens of the following Abenaki bands - Missisquoi, Koasek
of the Koas, Nulhegan Band of Abenakis, the Elnu Abenaki Tribe of the Koasek and
the Koasek Traditional Band.“We hope that the visitors to
Vermont’s waterfront will in early July of 2009 will come away with a newfound
understanding and respect for the original people of what is now called
Vermont,” explains Dr. Wiseman.
June 25, 2009
The Burlington Free Press Newspaper
Winooski Riverwalk Festival and Sojourn Arrival
10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Champlain Mill in downtown
Winooski, Vermont
Music by the Medicinals 12:30
p.m.
A talk by Frederick Matthew Wiseman of the Abenaki Cultural Center at
3:00 p.m.
Riverwalk tours at 10:00 a.m.
The Winooski Riverwalk Festival is a collaborative effort with the Winooski Community Partnership.
Part of the Winooski River
Sojourn. Free Event. 655-4878.
July 03, 2009
The Burlington Free
Press Newspaper
The 400th: Today at Burlington
Waterfront Festival
The 13-day
Burlington Waterfront Festival runs through July 14,
2009.
Congressman Peter Welch helps
Abenaki representative Frederick Matthew Wiseman of Swanton, Franklin County,
Vermont light his Tiki torch Thursday as they participate in the Lake Champlain
Quadricentennial Celebration opening ceremonies at City Hall Park in
Burlington, Chittenden County, Vermont.
July 05, 2009
By Stefan Hard – St.
Albans Staff Writer
Heritage lives in the St. Albans area: Abenaki culture, classic
architecture and railroad history make it vibrant
Photograph of Frederick M. Wiseman in his Abenaki Museum.
A combination of
authentic artifacts and re-creations
draws visitors into the world of northwestern Vermont's original inhabitants at
the Abenaki Tribal Museum in Swanton.
First inhabitants
For more on the
region's American Indian history, get back on Route 7 (Main Street) and drive
about eight miles north to Swanton. At the edge of town, you'll cross the broad
Missisquoi River near where archaeological evidence has been found pointing to
human habitation going back at least 10,000 years. It is quite possible that
some of the Abenakis living in Swanton — or Missisquoi, as some of them prefer
to call it — are the direct descendants of those hunting deer, gathering wild
onions and cooking dinner along the river since shortly after the last Ice Age.
Just as you get into Swanton village, on the left side
of Grand Avenue, is the Abenaki Tribal
Museum, which contains a combination
of actual Abenaki artifacts and re-creations, many from the private collection of Johnson
State College professor Fred M. Wiseman.
February 22, 2010
1:13 PM
From: Lydia Mackey ;
To: Douglas Lloyd Buchholz
Subject: Frederick
Matthew Wiseman, PhD
Attached:
Wiseman_Divorce_1, 2, 3 PDF’s
Good afternoon Douglas,
Attached please find the second marriage record and both
divorce records on file in Vermont for Frederick
Matthew Wiseman. According to those documents, his birthplace was Maryland and his first marriage took place in Louisiana, which is why we did not
have either of those records on file.
Please let me know if you have any questions!
Best,
Lydia Mackey
Vermont State
Archives and Records Administration
March 12, 2010
www.vermontnewsguy.com
By Jon Margolis
Tribal Recognition
The outcome was never in doubt and the vote was
unanimous. Still, after it was cast, the committee members gave themselves a
quiet round of applause. They thought they’d done something important.
Maybe they had, even though it isn’t clear whether the
bill they reported out last week will become law, and even if it does, it’s
direct, material, impact will be quite limited.
It’s the indirect, not-so-material impact that might be
historic.
The bill was S-222, “An act relating to recognition of
Abenaki bands and groups as tribes.”
Considering that a four-year-old statute (S.117, signed
into law May 3, 2006) already recognized the Abenaki and other Native Americans
living in the state as a “minority population” it’s reasonable to ask why the
new bill is necessary at all, much less why it arouses enthusiasm.
But in the view of the Abenaki and their supporters,
notably Senator’s Vincent Illuzzi, a
Derby
Republican, and Hinda
Miller, a Burlington Democrat, there were two flaws in the earlier law. One
is very practical: the language didn’t meet the federal requirements to qualify
the works of Abenaki artists and craftspeople as “Native American.” The
designation can bring higher prices. Besides, being recognized as a minority group isn’t the same as being recognized
as a tribe. This year’s bill grants formal recognition as tribes to the
state’s four Abenaki bands – the St. Francis Sokoki Band in the Swanton area;
the Koasek Traditional Band around Newbury; the Nulhegan Band of the Northeast
Kingdom; the ELNU Abenaki Tribe in southern Vermont.
If the law passes, each of these bands will be empowered
to “refer to itself as a recognized tribe,” according to the bill.
Actual recognition as a tribe is one of the federal
Bureau of Indian Affairs requirements for the “Native American” arts and crafts
designations. But to the Abenaki, the new bill may be less important for what
it would officially do for them than for what it would effectively say to them:
You are here. And you are here not just as individual members of “a minority
population,” but as distinct communities.
The long-term social and political consequences of that
statement are uncertain, and their benefits open to debate. There are, after
all, several other “minority populations” in Vermont, none of which get a
similar official designation.
On the other hand, the Abenaki were here first, perhaps
since as early as 1100. Unlike the other minorities (or the majority, for that
matter) some of whom came here because they were systematically mistreated
elsewhere, the Abenaki were systematically mistreated right here in Vermont, so
mistreated that at one point they were all but obliterated.
Or, in the view of some scholars, actually were
obliterated, at least ceasing to exist as tribe within Vermont’s borders. Such
was the conclusion of a report issued by the Vermont Attorney General’s office
in 2002, when one of the Abenaki bands petitioned for tribal recognition from
the federal government.
In a summary of the report it filed with the Bureau of
Indian Affairs, the Attorney General’s office noted that “around the time of
the American Revolution, ((Abenaki) retreated to (their) home base in
Quebec. Then, over the next two hundred
years, there were very few observations of Indians in Vermont, and these were
mostly sightings of visiting Indians.” In the 19th Century, the report said,
the ancestors of the petitioners “were indistinguishable from the general
population in Vermont,” and that while some “appear in the census records…they
are not listed as Indian.”
Assistant Attorney
General Michael McShane said
these comments were made solely in the context of the specific guidelines for
federal recognition, and did not mean that state officials were denying the
existence of the Abenaki now or in the past.
“The question is what do you use for the definition of a
tribe?” McShane said. “The Federal
Government says it has to have been an autonomous and
existing entity from colonial times to the present in an organizational sense.
That they failed to prove. But nobody’s saying there aren’t people who live in
Vermont who have claimed, probably legitimately, Native American ancestry.”
The distinction seems to make sense in law, especially to
officials who worry that federal designation could lead to gambling casinos and
land claims as has been true in other states. But some Abenaki were simply
insulted.
“They said the
Abenakis were genetic, political, and cultural fakes,” said Fred Wiseman, a
Johnson State College professor and Abenaki activist. Though not the message
state officials intended, it seems to have been the one many Abenaki heard, and
their resentment was intensified by turmoil in the state’s Commission on Native
American Affairs, which went through three directors in four years.
Whether there has been a continuing Abenaki community in
Vermont could be one of those questions that can never be conclusively
answered. That 2002 Attorney General’s report was based on
standard historical research, which failed to find documentation that such a
community existed. So perhaps it didn’t. Or maybe, even before the
discredited “eugenics” movement of the 1920’s victimized so many
Indians; the Abenaki were hiding signs of their identity, to the
point of not telling Census Bureau agents that they were Indians.
It’s happened before. In 15th Century Spain, Jews
converted to avoid getting burned at the stake, lived outwardly Christian
lives, but secretly observed Jewish rituals at home.
Whatever happened in the past, no one doubts that there are now several thousand Vermonters who have
some Abenaki ancestry and those who consider themselves Abenaki.
That could explain why there was no opposition when the
Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing, and General Affairs approved
the bill last week.
But there are still complications, based on the
continuing worry that something in the bill might provide a pathway for federal
recognition of a Vermont tribe. Michael McShane said he asked the committee to
remove two sentences that he feared might “open up the whole question of
federal recognition.”
The committee did not comply.
“It’s his (Michael McShane’s) job to worry,” said Hinda
Miller, the bill’s chief sponsor. “We appreciate him being the watchdog. We did
our own research. We don’t think this will be a real problem.”
Hinda Miller and Mark Mitchell of Barnet, an Abenaki and a former head of the Native American
Commission, both said it would be all but impossible for
any Abenaki band to meet the criteria for federal recognition, and that, at any
rate the state could block Indian gambling casinos or land claims.
Michael McShane was not so sure.
“You get into this whole very complicated issue,” he
said. “States may be able to regulate some of it. This defies easy answers.”
Hinda Miller said the bill would probably be on the
Senate calendar today (Friday). There is a companion measure in the House (H.
124, sponsored by Rep. Michel Consejo
of Sheldon Springs.
Whatever happens, the Abenaki will once again be defined
by others. “Indians don’t have the right
to self-identify,” Frederick Matthew
Wiseman noted. “We have to be recognized by white people.”
March 14, 2010
The Burlington Free Press Newspaper
ABENAKI
RECOGNITION: Would recognize four bands of Abenaki as tribes for purposes
of federal certification of arts and crafts. Vote 5-0 Senate Economic, Housing
and General Affairs.
May 07, 2010
Bernard “Bernie”
Mortz voted in as Koasek Council Member, while at the same time still
holding onto his ‘title’ of “Koasek”
“War Chief.”
May 12, 2010
11:49 AM
From: Bernie Mortz
To:
nmillettedoucet [Nancy Millette-Doucet]
Cc: Brian
Chenevert; Fred Wiseman
Subject: Re: Dear
Brian
“Gee Nancy,
I didn't realize I was being tested. Yes I did relay your
comments and suggestions back to Brian
[Chenevert].
Your suggestion on using the Nathan Pero's original Tribal name instead of
what it is now. Again, mentioned your eagle feathers. For your benefit, I have
always remained neutral in this battle between you and Brian [Chenevert]. I take
offense that you suggest this as a test. You remember the letter you sent me
saying our friendship is over because of something I supposedly said. When it
was yourself talking to your trusted Eric
Scott Floyd who let out whatever info
you were talking about. I let it ride. I do take serious offense to threats of
our Chief and Sub chief being shot if they enter "Your Territory" I
told you in front of your husband [Mark E. Doucet] that
kind of talk is out of line and can only create trouble. If you were my chief I
would do the same for you. I relayed that message to Brian [Chenevert] to let him
know what you really feel and how bitter you are over everything past.”
Bernie Mortz
May 12-13, 2010
8:57 PM - 9:19 AM
From: Bernie Mortz
bdmortz
To: Brian
Chenevert brialcay and Paul J.
Bunnell bunnellloyalist
Kwai Kwai Brian Chenevert and Paul Bunnell,
No need to apologize to me at all. I am involved. The
shooting comment pissed me off. Even her husband [Mark E. Doucet] shook his head.
In her reply to me, she says she was “only kidding and I don’t even know how to
load a gun.” Guess she thought better afterwards. Her husband [Mark Doucet]
even shook his head. It seems to be a common thread with this Alliance. Hope
you don’t mind but I took the liberty to Cc a copy of my letter to Nancy Millette-Doucet
and to Frederick M. Wiseman
PhD so he can see what’s still going on behind his back. She bounced all
over the place babbling about Brian Chenevert, Paul Joseph Bunnell and Karen nee:
Bordeau - Majka – Mica. I didn’t realize that Haverhill, NH was recognized by the State of Vermont because of its close proximity. What’s up with
that? Somebody needs to be called on that. And yes I have a copy of her rolls
she sent me way back to show me who left with her and trying to coax me into
her bullshit band. I know she still has her eyes on Nathan Elwin Pero she would love
to have a valid Native Vermonter on her rolls. Well I guess I know where that
relationship with the Nancy Millette-Doucet went. The last thing a War Chief wants to hear, even in jest is a threat of life, to his
people and friends.
Bernie Mortz
May 14, 2010
S.
222
Signed into Law by Governor James Douglas.
Luke Willard,
Chief Nancy Millette-Doucet,
Senator Hinda Miller, Donald Warren Stevens, Jr. ,
Charlie
Lawrence “Megeso” Delaney, Jr.
Former members of
the 7-member VCNAA (Commission) were Judy
Dow, Brad Barratt, Jeanne Brink, Timothy de la Bruere.
MAY 15, 2010
Against all odds,
new law advances Abenaki recognition: Rookie lawmaker takes heat in effort to
gain recognition for Vermont tribes
Charles Delaney-Megeso (right) of Burlington
speaks with Gov. Jim Douglas in his ceremonial office at the Statehouse in
Montpelier on Friday. Douglas signed a bill that helps the Abenaki come closer
to state recognition. [Vermont Senator Hinda Miller with Luke Andrew Willard,
Nancy (nee: Millette) Doucet, and Don Stevens Jr. along with Frederick Matthew
Wiseman in the background.]
Vermont Governor
Jim Douglas signs a bill that offers partial state recognition for Abenaki
tribes at his ceremonial office at the Statehouse in Montpelier, Vermont on
Friday.
[From left to right: Luke
Andrew Willard, Senator Hinda Miller, Nancy (nee: Millette) Doucet, Frederick
Matthew Wiseman, and Charles Lawrence Delaney Jr.]
May 15, 2010
The Burlington Free Press Newspaper, Pages 1A-4A
By Terri Hallenbeck – Free Press Staff Writer
Rookie lawmaker
takes heat in effort to gain recognition for Vt. tribes
MONTPELIER — It would be easy to argue that Rep. Kesha
Ram, the Legislature’s youngest member in her first term in office, had no
business weighing in on the centuries-old
issue of official recognition for Vermont’s Abenaki that had eluded a long
line of her predecessors.
Before it was over, the 23-year-old lawmaker from
Burlington, Vermont managed to become the target of a torrent of e-mails and blog
postings filled with anger and hate. She was accused of being a racist. There was talk of marching on Montpelier
to ruin her career.
She also helped forge an agreement that just might
succeed where previous efforts have failed. Vermont Governor Jim Douglas signed
the bill into law Friday morning with several Abenaki leaders looking on.
“We have a very bright and positive future ahead,” said Nancy (nee: Millette) Cruger – Lyons - Doucet, chief of the Koasek Traditional Band of the Koas in
Newbury, Vermont … even as she and fellow Abenaki acknowledged the bill was not
quite what they had hoped for.
“It’s not what we wanted,” said Frederick Matthew Wiseman of
Swanton, tribal historian for the Missisquoi
band of the Abenaki who helped negotiate the bill,
but he added, “We’re satisfied.”
Vermont Senator Hinda
Miller, D-Chittenden, who started the renewed effort to solve the
recognition conundrum, summed up why the issue is so difficult. “It’s not only
legislation and a bill,” she said. “It deals with the hearts and souls of people.”
Last summer, Hinda
Miller, a veteran of the 2006 and 2008 efforts, hosted a potluck
dinner with representatives of four core Abenaki groups and several legislators
to launch a new effort.
May 26, 2010 (or May 03, 2006?)
Vermont Finally Recognizes the Abenaki
Author: Maryann Ullmann
CSQ Issue: 30.3 (Fall 2006) Two Countries, One People
Former Governor Howard Dean and
Attorney General William Sorrell opposed state recognition, fearing that it
would aid the tribe’s petition for federal recognition, which, in turn could
lead to land claims and casinos. The attorney general’s office claimed that the
modern-day Abenaki were frauds because there was not adequate historical proof
to support their ties to their ancestors.
Missisquoi Abenaki historian Fred
Wiseman contends that the attorney general’s conclusion is politically
motivated and that Vermont’s effort to disprove the existence of the tribe was
attempted ethnocide.
While the Abenaki are
demonstrating that their culture is alive and well, the new state law is an
overdue step toward restoring justice to the tribe and healing a long-standing
tension with the state. “I am proud of it,” says Diane Snelling. “It took way
too long happen. It’s about respect for everyone’s culture.”
September 03, 2010
MONTPELIER, Vt. – Governor Jim Douglas has appointed nine
new members of the Vermont
Commission on Native American Affairs, the first step in
establishing a program for state recognition
of Native American tribes in Vermont.
A new law that set up the recognition process revised the
makeup of the panel and increased the number of members on the commission from
seven to nine, and also imposed a Vermont residency requirement for the first
time.
“These new members of the Native American Commission
represent a broad cross-section of Native
American communities and geography, and will bring a
fresh perspective to the task at hand,” said
Giovanna Peebles,
State Historic Preservation Officer and director of the Vermont Division for
Historic Preservation.
The new law, passed this spring by the Legislature,
requires that eligible applicants must have lived in Vermont for a minimum of
three years and said that appointments should “reflect a diversity of
affiliations and geographic locations in Vermont.”
Melody (nee: Walker) Brook - Jeffersonville, VT ELNU
Shirly (nee: Hook) Therrien - Braintree, VT KOASEK
Dawn Macie -
Rutland, VT NULHEGAN
Takara Matthews
- Richmond, VT KOASEK/ELNU
Charlene McManis
- Worcester, VT GRAND RONDE
Nathan E. Pero
- West Fairlee, VT KOASEK
David Vanslette
- Swanton, VT ST. FRANCIS - SOKOKI
Luke A. Willard
- Brownington, VT NULHEGAN
Fred W. Wiseman
- Newport, VT. ST. FRANCIS - SOKOKI
The VCNAA will implement the new process for recognizing
Native American tribes in Vermont that includes review by the commission, an
independent review committee of experts, and approval by the legislature.
“In addition to acknowledging their heritage, state
recognition will allow Native Americans in Vermont who make and sell
traditional crafts to be labeled as Indian- or Native American-made, an
important distinction for those who purchase such items,” Peebles said.
Under the new law, creation of the Commission, “helps
recognize the historic and cultural contributions of Native Americans to
Vermont, to protect and strengthen their heritage, and to address their needs
in state policy, programs, and actions.”
To learn more, please visit the Vermont Division for
Historic Preservation website at www.historicvermont.org or the VCNAA
website at www.vcnaa.vermont.gov
The Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs, had now been supplanted by the 4 groups by the Abenaki Alliance's representatives who re-positioned themselves, in which to CONTROL and DIRECT the Recognition Process, as much as they could. In essence to strategically facilitate self-recognition.
September 04, 2010
The Burlington Free Press Newspaper, Pages 1B-2B
By Terri Hallenbeck
Governor Jim
Douglas Appoints new Native American Recognition Commission
A new Native American Commission was appointed Friday
amid hopes that it will avoid disputes that paralyzed its predecessors and find
a way to allow Abenaki to achieve long-elusive state recognition.
Nine members were appointed by Gov. Jim Douglas after the
Legislature passed a new law this year ordering the commission to be
reconfigured, and giving the new panel a process to recommend official state
recognition for individual Abenaki bands.
“I’m very encouraged,” said Donald Warren Stevens
Jr., a Missisquoi Abenaki who served as Chairman of the previous
commission and helped push for the new commission. “I think you’ve got a great
mix.” Donald Stevens Jr. had warned Gov. Jim Douglas when he signed the law in
May that the new process toward granting recognition wouldn’t work unless he
appointed good people to the panel. The new commission is particularly notable
for the number of young members, said Fred
Wiseman Sr., Missisquoi historian who also pushed for the new commission.
Wiseman’s son, Fred W. Wiseman is appointed to the VCNAA.
The new law sets out a process by which the new
commission will turn to a panel of three experts to study bands’ applications
for official recognition. Based on the experts’ advice, the commission will
make recommendations to the Legislature on who should be recognized. The
Legislature would make the final decision.
The new law expanded the commission from seven to nine members; required members to be residents of Vermont for at least three years; and set the panel’s makeup to be diverse geographically and by native affiliation. The panel will elect its own chairman.
The result with Friday’s announcement was a mix of members affiliated with the Elnu, Missisquoi, Nulhegan, Koasek bands, along with unaffiliated and one non-Abenaki Native American. It includes the chief of one band and members of all the bands that were part of an alliance that the larger bands have formed as well as members who are not part of the alliance. Donald Stevens Jr. said, “Several bands are working to prepare their applications for recognition in time for next legislative session.” “I know several of them are busting their butts right now,” he said.
The new law expanded the commission from seven to nine members; required members to be residents of Vermont for at least three years; and set the panel’s makeup to be diverse geographically and by native affiliation. The panel will elect its own chairman.
The result with Friday’s announcement was a mix of members affiliated with the Elnu, Missisquoi, Nulhegan, Koasek bands, along with unaffiliated and one non-Abenaki Native American. It includes the chief of one band and members of all the bands that were part of an alliance that the larger bands have formed as well as members who are not part of the alliance. Donald Stevens Jr. said, “Several bands are working to prepare their applications for recognition in time for next legislative session.” “I know several of them are busting their butts right now,” he said.
Native American
Commission
Nine new members of the Vermont Commission on Native
American Affairs were appointed Friday by Vermont Governor Jim Douglas:
Melody (nee:
Walker) Brook, Elnu Abenaki, Jeffersonville, Vermont
Shirly (nee: Hood)
Therrien, Koasek, Braintree, Vermont
Dawn Macie,
Nulhegan Abenaki, Rutland, Vermont
David Vanslette,
Missisquoi Abenaki, Swanton, Vermont
Takara Matthews,
Abenaki, Richmond, Vermont
Fred W. Wiseman,
Abenaki, Newport, Vermont
Charlene McManis,
Confederated Tribe of Grand Ronde, Worcester, Vermont
Luke Andrew
Willard, chief of the Nulhegan Abenaki, Brownington, Vermont
Nathan Elwin Pero,
Koasek, West Fairlee, Vermont
September 06, 2010
8:48 PM
From: Donald
Warren Stevens Jr.
To: gjbwdbx1; djayburbo; dburbo; mrtankless; bjparrott; pscs1955;dianalynn "Lyn Finly"; "Mary Kinville"
; "joyce mcentee"; jgmcentee; "leonard burbo"
Subject: Tribal
Enrollment Form
To all my relatives,
I will be assuming a leadership
role in the Nulhegan Tribe in which our ancestor Antoine Phillips Sr. was Chief back in the 1800's. I would like to
get you and your family all enrolled before our recognition application goes to
the State of Vermont for consideration. If you are interested in becoming
a Tribal member, please fill out these forms, sign them, and get them back to
me or the Tribe. I at least need you to acknowledge your intentions.
If you have any questions, do not hesitate to drop me an
email. Please follow the instructions so that I can get you on our
roles. We need to have all of our Tribal roles up to date by October 01, 2010. Please send this to your family and
any relative related to Grandma Burbo
or Antoine Phillips Sr. You can list children that are born to you
or adopted. Please do not list step-children if they have not been legally
adopted as minors.
We will need a copy of your birth certificate, mother and
father's birth certificate. You need the birth certificates that link to Grandma Burbo or the Phillips bloodline.
I have received the Birth Certificate of Aunt Mary Lemons
so I will not need this from Carrie or Bobby. However, I will need yours and
your children’s. I also have my mom's so Joyce, I will only need yours, the
kids, and grandkids...
My address is:
Don Stevens
156 Bacon Drive
Shelburne, VT 05482
Be Well,
Don Stevens Jr.
September 12, 2010
7:58 AM
From: ETPVT [Ralph Skinner Swett]
To: Donald
Warren Stevens Jr.
Subject: Clan of
the Hawk Congratulations
To: donald_stevens
My dear don [Donald Waren Stevens, Jr.],
Congratulations on your election as chief of the Nulhegan
Band. I hope that we all can work for
unity in the future.
My best to you,
Chief Lone Cloud [Ralph
Skinner Swett] and all from the Clan of the Hawk
September 12, 2010
12:37 PM
From: Douglas Lloyd Buchholz
To: Kesha Ram
Richard Bernier
Cc: Lynn
Menard-Mattheson
Subject: Re: Fw: Clan of the
Hawk Congradulations
Kesha Ram,
Thought you would just love to review this recent
development. How they now move to make themselves try and look legitimately
"historical”. Problem is Old Peter Phillips lineage lived mostly around
Burlington, Chittenden County, Vermont to Danville, Caledonia County, Vermont -
Route 15 areas; not Orleans County, Vermont historically speaking before ca.
1985.
Secondly Old Peter Phillips, brother Old “one eye'd” Mike
Phillips lived in Hudson Falls, New York mostly. Sure they would visit the Lake
Memphremagog area at times perhaps but Kesha Ram, we know from Winifred Yaratz book that they are
attempting to claim the Phillips Coos Deed as if they descend from King Phillip
of New Hampshire, WITHOUT any evidence that they do genealogically connect to
that historical deed.
You can bet your bottom dollar this is about a Land Grab
by these "new" Tribes/Incorporations.
Just thought I would let you know about the recent news
eh. Hope all is well with you Kesha, etc.
Kindly,
Douglas Lloyd Buchholz
September 12, 2010
From: Kesha Ram
kesha.ram
To: [?]
“Did you all know this? This must be some kind
of joke...”
September 12, 2010
5:10 PM
From: Kesha Ram
kesha.ram
To: Douglas Lloyd Buchholz
“This is quite interesting and bewildering news. Thank you
for keeping me in the loop, Douglas.”
Rep. Kesha Ram
Clerk, Committee on General, Housing, and Military
Affairs
Vermont House of Representatives, Chittenden 3-4:
Burlington
www.kesharam.org
(802) 881-4433
September 12, 2010
6:06 PM
From: Douglas Lloyd Buchholz
To: Kesha Ram kesha.ram
Subject: Re: Fw: Clan of the
Hawk Congratulations
Oh Kesha Ram,
I am sad to say this, but the data documents and awareness I have is far from
what is on this blog so far. It does get deeper for sure. Grab your hipwadders
girl because you’re the ONLY ally I got these days to inform the State of Vermont what these groups of alleged and reinvented Abenakis have in
store for the state.
Donald Warren
Stevens Jr. just was appointed Chief
of this Nulhegan group that was (?)
led by Luke Willard very recently.
They are going after the "King Phillips Deed of Coos
County" over here in NE VT and Northern NH. It’s an old tactic a
few groups have tried before....but these contemporary groups are not just
smiling nicely for the camera's.....they DO have a malicious agenda. They are
attempting to hood wink the State and BS a whole lot of people Kesha Ram. I
hope that my blog content will help people understand what is REALLY going on
here, BEFORE it is too late to do anything about it. I will keep in communication with you of
course.
Kindly,
Douglas Lloyd Buchholz
September 12, 2010
The law also set up a process for tribes to be recognized
by showing that they meet certain criteria documented by genealogical and
membership records and other factors.
Applications will be reviewed by a three-member panel of experts. Based on the panel's findings, the commission will make recommendations for recognition to the Legislature, which has the final say.
"I have a lot of hope that the Legislature will act quickly because this has been a very long, long process that has taken many years, and has aged people," said commission member Luke Willard, of Brownington, the former chief of the Nulhegan band of Abenaki.
Applications will be reviewed by a three-member panel of experts. Based on the panel's findings, the commission will make recommendations for recognition to the Legislature, which has the final say.
"I have a lot of hope that the Legislature will act quickly because this has been a very long, long process that has taken many years, and has aged people," said commission member Luke Willard, of Brownington, the former chief of the Nulhegan band of Abenaki.
September 13, 2010
Brownington, Orleans County, VT
Members of the Abenaki Tribe at Nulhegan-Memphremagog (a
Coosuk band) spent Saturday, the 11th, celebrating after a Tribal Council
meeting that brought history to full circle. After several years as chief, Luke
Willard has stepped down after being appointed by Governor James Douglas to the
Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs.
At Saturday's Tribal Council meeting, Mr. Willard relinquished
his duties as chief. Although being fairly new to the tribe's ranks, former
Missisquoi St. Francis-Sokoki member Donald Warren Stevens Jr. was nominated and elected to lead the tribe.
A
former commissioner himself, Donald Warren Stevens Jr.' ancestry dates
back to Chief Antoine Phillips who was born at Lake Memphremagog two centuries
ago. This is
what brought Don Stevens to enroll his family with the tribe, whose members
reside in the Lake Memphremagog and Nulhegan River basins of the Northeast
Kingdom of Vermont.
Donald Warren Stevens, Jr. is not the first Phillips descendant to follow in the footsteps of the family's patriarch. According to Phillips oral history, Peter Phillips (son of Antoine Phillips Sr.) led his people and only a few decades ago, Richard “Blackhorse” Wilfred Phillips, held the torch for a time. In regards to the tribe's decision, Luke Andrew Willard states, “Aside from Don's experience in native affairs and his passion for the cultural revival and well-being of the Abenaki people of Vermont, the Phillips family, or more specifically, the descendants of Chief Antoine Phillips, have deep roots in this territory and have been a major presence here for centuries. Don Stevens continued, speaking of Willard, “By stepping down as chief and taking on the duties of the Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs, Luke Willard is showing the native community his willingness and desire to work with all Abenaki in the State of Vermont while fulfilling a promise that he made when he became chief... 'No Abenaki left behind'.”
It seems fitting and almost poetic that the tribe who has identified themselves occasionally as “Old Philip's Band” (because of the Memphremagog and Nulhegan basin territory that was granted by Coosuk Chief Philip in the late 18th century), is now led by... a Phillips.
Donald Warren Stevens, Jr. is not the first Phillips descendant to follow in the footsteps of the family's patriarch. According to Phillips oral history, Peter Phillips (son of Antoine Phillips Sr.) led his people and only a few decades ago, Richard “Blackhorse” Wilfred Phillips, held the torch for a time. In regards to the tribe's decision, Luke Andrew Willard states, “Aside from Don's experience in native affairs and his passion for the cultural revival and well-being of the Abenaki people of Vermont, the Phillips family, or more specifically, the descendants of Chief Antoine Phillips, have deep roots in this territory and have been a major presence here for centuries. Don Stevens continued, speaking of Willard, “By stepping down as chief and taking on the duties of the Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs, Luke Willard is showing the native community his willingness and desire to work with all Abenaki in the State of Vermont while fulfilling a promise that he made when he became chief... 'No Abenaki left behind'.”
It seems fitting and almost poetic that the tribe who has identified themselves occasionally as “Old Philip's Band” (because of the Memphremagog and Nulhegan basin territory that was granted by Coosuk Chief Philip in the late 18th century), is now led by... a Phillips.
Don Stevens Jr. - Dawn Macie - Luke Willard
This was a hijacking of the Philip Deed of June 1796 by SOME of the Descendants of the Phillips Family.
Winifred Yaratz 2006 book was based on subjective un-validated oral histories that were dubious/unsubstantiated.
September 19, 2010
5:59 PM
From: Mary Kinville wkinkville
To: Jdowbasket [Judy Dow]
Cc: wkinkville
Subject: Fw: Tribal Enrollment Form [See September 06, 2010 8:48 PM] From Donald Warren Stevens Jr. soliciting Phillips family descendants to enroll/join the Nulhegan group.
September 28, 2010
Luke Andrew
Willard Appointed Chairperson of VT Indian Commission
By Mark Mitchell
The newly formed Vermont
Commission on Native American Affairs, (VCNAA), met for the first time this
afternoon in Montpelier, Vermont.
Luke Willard was appointed "Chair" in a unanimous decision by commission members.
Luke Andrew Willard recently relinquished his duties as chief of the Abenaki Tribe at Nulhegan-Memphremagog.
Luke Willard was appointed "Chair" in a unanimous decision by commission members.
Luke Andrew Willard recently relinquished his duties as chief of the Abenaki Tribe at Nulhegan-Memphremagog.
From their press release Luke A. Willard stated “Common sense tells me that it would be
difficult to wear both hats”, speaking of the time commitments and difficult
tasks that the VCNAA Commission will
be facing since the Vermont Legislature established a Criteria for Vermont
Tribes to gain State Recognition.
Takara Matthews
nominated Luke Willard for the
position of VCNAA Chairman and Shirly Hook seconded. There was
member Consensus and Luke Willard was
elected the Chairman. The Chairman proceeded to conduct the rest of
the meeting.
Luke
Willard appointed Melody Walker Brook
to head a working group that will gather information on scholars to fill
recognition subcommittee positions required in statute. Scholars should have
experience with archaeology and Vermont history.They should also be aware that they will have to deal with political issues. Fred Wiseman noted that Scholars may be difficult to find. Giovanna Peebles
agreed to present a list of potential Scholars
to the Commission. Dawn Macie
and Shirly Hook agreed to assist Melody Walker – Brook in this
work. The working group was authorized by member Consensus to gather
information on Scholars.
Letters of intent to apply
for Vermont State Recognition were presented by Melody Walker, Elnu Abenaki and
Shirly Hook, the latter being a member of the Koasek Abenaki. Dawn Macie being of the Nulhegan said
that the Nulhegan Abenaki will also
be presenting a letter of intent. Diane
McInerney will scan and send the letters to all Commission members and
place the originals in the VCNAA public file.
They ONLY intended to submit their Intent-Letters seeking VT State Recognition when they 'padded' the VCNAA with their own people!
October 01, 2010
Shelburne Resident
Named Abenaki Chief: Abenaki Tribe at Nulhegan-Memphremagog Makes History
Members of the Abenaki Tribe at Nulhegan-Memphremagog (a
Coosuck band) spent Saturday, September 11, 2010,
celebrating a Tribal Council Meeting that brought history to full circle. After
several years as Chief, Luke Andrew Willard has stepped down following his
appointment by Governor James Douglas to the Vermont Commission on Native
American Affairs. While there was no requirement to do so, Luke A. Willard acted out of respect for the charge and duties of
the Commission, which will place heavy demands on his schedule.
Shelburne, Vermont resident Donald Warren Stevens,
Jr., former Missisquoi St. Francis-Sokoki member, was nominated and elected to
lead the tribe. A former commissioner himself, Don Stevens’ ancestry dates back
to Chief Antoine Phillips who was
born at Lake Memphremagog two centuries ago. This is what brought Don Stevens to enroll his
family with the tribe, whose members reside in the Lake Memphremagog and
Nulhegan River basins of the Northeast Kingdom [Orleans
County, VT].
Don
Stevens is not the first Phillip’ descendant to follow in the footsteps of the
families’ patriarch. According to Phillip’s oral history, Peter Phillips Sr. (son of
Antoine Phillips Sr.) led his people and
only a few decades ago, Richard
“Blackhorse” Wilfred Phillips, held the
torch for a time.
In regards to the tribe’s decision, Luke A. Willard states, “Aside from Don Stevens’ experience in
Native Affairs and his passion for the Cultural
Revival and well-being of the Abenaki people of Vermont, the Phillips
family, or more specifically, the descendants of Chief Antoine Phillips Sr., have deep roots in this territory and have been
a major presence here for centuries. I can’t think of a better way to honor
that history.”
Humbly accepting the tribe’s appointment, Don Stevens
says, “As chief I will do what is best for our tribal members and work for the
greater good of the Abenaki people. I will work with anyone who is willing to
advance our people forward. We need to heal our nation and remember that we are
the same people with the same struggles. I look forward to celebrating our
customs and traditions as a people and leaving the politics to those at the
Vermont State House.”
Don Stevens continued, speaking of Luke A. Willard, “By stepping down as chief of the Nulhegan and
taking on the duties of the Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs, Luke Willard is showing the Native
Community his willingness and desire to work with all Abenaki in the State of
Vermont while fulfilling a promise that he made when he became chief …. “No
Abenaki left behind.”
It seems fitting and almost poetic that the tribe who has identified themselves occasionally as “Old Phillip’s
Band” (because of the Memphremagog and Nulhegan basin territory that was
granted by Coosuck Chief Philip in the late 18th century), is now
led by … a Phillips.
Actually this is a deceitful distortion: The Phillips family by majority lived and resided in Lamoille, Chittenden and Franklin Counties prior to 1980. Antoine being born at Lake Memphremagog ca. 1787 is also a huge distortion. Antoine Phelps/Philips/Phillips was born ca. 1810-1814 based on the 1850 Census for Highgate, Vermont. He was identified, not as Indian, but as a Black man. Indeed his Y-DNA Haplogroup is B-M181 (from Africa). His wife was a FRENCH WOMAN, Catherine Emery dit Coderre (not Cadaive). And most certainly Antoine Phillips Sr. nor any of his descendants were related to the Chief Philip of Upper Coos, NH ca. 1796. Don Stevens, Jr. simply distorts his own ancestors to fit his political agenda.
November 2010
Frederick M. Wiseman (Humanities) played a major role drafting the
proclamation signed by Gov. Jim Douglas in which the Governor declared November 2010 as Native
American Heritage Month. Fred spoke at UVM November
15, 2010 on “Written out of
history: A look at K-12 curriculum as it relates to indigenous cultures.”
January 15, 2011
By Professor Frederick Matthew Wiseman, PhD.
The “Short and
Skinny” of it…
Every spring, since April of
1995, Vermonters are treated to verbal assaults against Vermont Abenaki
people who have the audacity to ask that their state acknowledge them as Indians. Originally these attacks were by state officials
such as Governor Howard Dean or Attorneys General Bill Griffin and Bill
Sorrell.
This state-sponsored molestation has abated.
Unfortunately, with the withdrawal of a common enemy to Vermont’s Indigenous people,
the vacuum has been filled by individuals, because of personal or community
animosity, who choose to deny the ethnic identity of their neighbors, and even,
unfortunately, their family.
The reasons for this hatred are varies, feelings of
personal insult, jealousy that someone else is going to get a “bigger piece of
the pie,” uncertainty about their own ethnic identity, or in some cases a
misplaced desire to protect Vermont against the “casinos and land claims”
stereotype promulgated by the State in the 1995-2006 period.
There are also groups of people who believe that if the
local Vermont Native people’s legitimacy
can be destroyed, this leaves the state open for land claims by other groups
from elsewhere who believe Vermont was their original “homeland.” (i.e. he's speaking of ODANAK)
Although these people claim objectivity as they demand
the evidence and paperwork supporting recognition, their mind was made up long
ago against any group seeking state recognition, and merely need this
information to develop a counter-argument.
In 2010, the Vermont General Assembly created a fair and
equitable process for establishing the legitimacy of claims for recognition as
an Indian tribe. There are safeguards in
place to prevent any abuse of the recognition process, including:
1. A rigorous and thorough set of criteria for recognition. The criteria was loosey-goosey!
2. Charging the Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs to
thoroughly review the applications. LIE Review their own fellow race shifting identity thieves!
3. An advisory panel of three scholars in appropriate field to also
review and approve the applications and auxiliary documentation. Scholars that were allied to the 4 groups!
4. Public hearings on each application to give voice to advocates and
opponents of recognition.
Opponents such as Denise Watso and other Abenakis could not testify or were allowed to speak!
5. Review and approval by the legislature. Review my ass, the Legislature did NO review at all!
They most certainly did no diligent in depth sourcing or validation of any of the 4 groups!
None of the people or organizations writing negative
letters to the editors, or “hate-website” blogs; or lobbying legislators
believe friendly to their cause have participated in this lengthy and complex
process to show why any applicant for recognition should be denied that
status. Because they were not allowed to participate! So why should they trouble the
readers of your newspaper with such ethnic loathing?
"ethnic loathing" "lateral violence" "weaponized genealogy" "hate-blogger" etc.
February 08, 2011
The Caledonian- Record Newspaper, Page A5
By Robin Smith – Staff Writer
Native Recognition Bills Move to Legislative
House Floor
NEWPORT CITY – Bill that would recognize a Native
American tribe [Nulhegan group] based in
Brownington, Orleans County, Vermont and another [Elnu
group] in Jamaica, Vermont, Windham County, Vermont has moved to the
House floor for legislative consideration.
The bills would give Vermont state recognition to the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki
Nation, with most members living in the Newport-Derby area and the Elnu Abenaki.
Vermont Senator Vincent Illuzzi, R-Essex-Orleans,
speaking at a legislative breakfast Monday morning said he supports both
legislative bills and is co-sponsor of similar bills in the Legislative Senate.
With Vermont state recognition, members of the tribes
would be able to put “Made by Vermont Abenaki” on anything they produce.
Congress set up the requirement for state or federal
recognition of tribes before any group can put Native American labels on
products.
That federal law (IACA)
Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 went into effect to stop products
made overseas from being labeled made by Native Americans, he said.
The legislative bills have come under fire from some
Native American groups, which have sad that anything other than the strict
recognition of Native American tribal genealogy is not valid.
Vermont State recognition requires subjective historical evidence of Native American
heritage of tribe members, not necessarily genealogy.
One critic of the bills has been Richard “Skip” Bernier of Coventry, Orleans County, Vermont. He
spoke for several minutes at the legislative breakfast at the Eastside
Restaurant Monday morning. When he didn’t post a question for the guest
lawmakers, moderator Bill Davis cut him off and refused to let him
continue.
Richard “Skip”
Bernier is a member of the Odanak community of the Abenaki
Nation, a small reservation in Quebec, Canada next to Pierreville,
Quebec, Canada.
People are worried that Odanak will press land claims in
Vermont, he said. He pointed out that the Odanak people voted against having a
casino on their reservation in Quebec.
So, playing
up this "business" against Odanak, Ph.D. Frederick Matthew Wiseman and members of the Vermont
“Abenaki” groups and their allies, created and promoted the MYTH that Odanak
wanted to do a Vermont land claims, and build a casino within Vermont.
February 08, 2011
10:29 pm
From: Denise L. Watso
To: VT Digger via http://vtdigger.org
Dear Friends and Family,
I have underlined some of the most outrageous statements
from a news article below, written by Paul
Lefebvre with an obvious slant towards the self identified groups in
Vermont.
Statements such as “I am Indian at heart” and now
comparing selling baskets with the “Indian Brand label” Facebook Chief-Luke Willard, “makes baskets more
marketable” is an offensive and ignorant statement to all First Nations people.
“I really don’t think there is a full-blood Abenaki out there,” Donald Stevens.
This statement is even more offensive to our Abenaki and
Indian brothers and sisters, whose parents and grandparents are living today,
who endured the hardships these self-identified groups could not begin to
comprehend.
Our government and all First Nations people need to stand up for our aboriginal rights
today! State Recognition is a National
Aboriginal Rights issue. Non-Indians are attempting to take the back door
into States to gain Recognition on flimsy Laws that, if passed, could give
State Recognition to any person who states the phrase – “I am Indian at Heart”.
Imposed borders do not separate our families, Vermont’s
state imposed borders and Vermont
Senator Illuzzi’s denial of our right to represent or testify is
reprehensible to the rights of all Indian Nations.
Self Proclaimed Chiefs – Donald Stevens; Facebook Tribe – Luke Willard; Reenactor – Roger
“Longtoe” Sheehan; Nancy Millette-Doucet-Lyons-etc;
April St. Francis - Merrill; in VT have been allowed to
misrepresent our purpose of opposing Recognition for non-Indians in the State
of VT.
The State is allowing non-Indians to testify, BUT NOT
allowing the Original Inhabitants – Abenaki People, to go before the Committee
to testify on our own behalf.
How, in the last couple years do we now have so many
“tribes” in Vermont? This is impossible. These groups are NOT Abenaki. Any
social club in VT could be granted recognition as an Indian given the vague
criteria and non-transparent process uncovered in VT.
I was actually outraged to read this article, comparing
Indian people to the sales of a Brand, like maple syrup, just plain ignorant.
Denise L. Watso
Abenaki Nation
March 06, 2011
The Barre-Montpelier Times
Argus Newspaper, Pages A1-A4
By Daniel Staples – Staff
Writer
For Native groups, recognition challenged
MONTPELIER - Opponents of a bill in a Senate committee
that would give state recognition to two groups claiming to be bands of Abenaki
Indians say the process has most recently been compromised by ethics violations
against two scholars working with the Vermont Commission on Native American
Affairs.
David Skinas, state
cultural resources specialist for the Natural Resources Conservation Service
division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and David Lacy,
an archaeologist with the Forest Service for the USDA, were cited in February
for misusing official USDA letterhead to give their responses to the
applications.
Lacy reviewed the Elnu Tribe; Skinas, the Koas Abenaki
Tribe.
State recognition would mean a chance to seek federal
money for schools with Abenaki children, as well as a chance to have arts and
crafts identified as official Abenaki handiwork under the Indian Arts and
Crafts Board of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
To Douglas
Lloyd Buchholz of Lancaster, N.H., the fact of the decisions by Skinas and Lacy were presented on official letterhead give the appearance the
USDA was complicit in the decisions of its employees, who were only supposed to
be advising as experts in their fields. It was not. [Actually,
the issues is an ethics violation... period, in that using the USDA Letterhead
made it IMPLY that the USDA endorses these State Incorporates as
"tribes" already ... that being the case, LOOK at the SOURCE of where
the Federal Grant Monies are coming from to these Alleged and Reinvented
"Abenaki" Groups/ Incorporate's since 1976!]
Luke Willard,
chairman of the VCNAA [Vermont Commission on
Native American Affairs], defended the process [of course, he would 'defend the process' because he,
along with Professor Wiseman ... along with others ... 'cooked up' the criteria
process to in essence ... by creating it in the first place, manipulating
it, and subsequently make sure that their 'Alliance' in whole or in part, could
pass that criteria, granting themselves, Vermont State Recognition...], saying
the "letterhead had no bearing on the decision of the commission to
approve the applications."
Luke Willard
said the VCNAA voted on the application before the ethics violations had come
to light.
In the VNCAA meetings minutes from February 15, 2011 however, the violations did appear
to be a concern. At the time, Willard said, "our process and the
individuals (Skinas and Lacy) themselves have been harmed by this," and
that "even on personal time Lacy can't participate anymore."
Two of the four tribes that are seeking recognition
currently have applications that have passed the House of Representatives and
have passed to the Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing and
General Affairs.
"I'm not troubled by it," said Senator
Vincent Illuzzi, chairman of the committee reviewing the bills to give
recognition to the tribes applying. [Of course
not, Illuzzi didn't need to be concerned, because once the
reconstructed/restructured appointee's of the VCNAA gave their nod approval to
the application(s), then the VT. Legislature didn't really need to do a single
thing more; as written and passed into law, S.117-turned-into-Act 107,
wherein once approved by the VCNAA, all the applicant(s) need have to do, is
wait a couple years quietly, and the "Abenaki" petitioning group(s)
would AUTOMATICALLY gain VT Legislative State Recognition and become a VT
State-Sanctioned Alleged and Re-Invented "Abenaki"
"Tribe" ! The VT Legislature nor Illuzzi needed say nothing after the
biased, unfair, non-transparent restructured VCNAA appointee's 'gave themselves
their own State of VT "Abenaki"/"Native American Indian
Tribe" Status!] "My focus would be to consider the
methodology used to review the genealogies and documentation and not to take
into consideration an internal federal issue. ...I expect we will vote on these
two bills before the end of the session."
Illuzzi was made honorary Chief "Fighting Wolf" by the Clan of the Hawk in 1998. All four
groups currently seeking recognition were either created by members that were
once part of that clan - including Willard - or have close ties.
Willard said Bureau of Indian Affairs' laws were put in
place to keep Native American arts and crafts authentic and to keep their sales
from being undercut by foreign facsimiles. He said more recently the BIA
has used the law to "go after" non-federally or state-recognized
Native people from labeling products as "Native American."
Luke Willard
said that members of these groups who are artisans would like to be able to
sell their wares as "authentic" Abenaki.
"It's worth more money," Willard said,
"These groups would use the label much in the same way that Vermont maple
producers label their bottles as 'Vermont made'."
Additionally, if these groups are identified by the
state, Willard said, they also could apply for federal grant money under the
Title VII Indian Education act. Those monies do not go directly to tribes, but
instead goes to supervisory unions. [Such
as Jeffrey Benay (whom operates as the Franklin County
Director of Indian Education ... and his wife, Julie Beauvais nee:
Jameson - Benay ... who was Principal at the Swanton, VT Elementary
School before 2011 ... brings to mind the saying "one had washes the other
to get the dirt off"]
"Not all tribes will be seeking this money,"
said Willard, because not all of these groups will have the student populations
to apply for the funds.
At a recent VCNAA meeting Luke Willard, who is chairman of the council, said in the Swanton
area, where tribal recognition has meant extra funding, the graduation rate for
those with Abenaki heritage has show significant improvement.
However, those opposed to giving recognition to these
groups are asking hard questions, including: How can these groups file
incorporation papers with the state just a few years prior to seeking
recognition and then solicit membership for the organization?
"These are just groups of people with no
documentation, and made-up names, that form corporations and try to gain
recognition," said Jeff Hill of
Brandon, who, as a consultant and strategist, has worked with tribes for 20
years compiling and reviewing the genealogy used to get federal recognition for
Native American tribes. He is an opponent of the recognition's.
Not first struggle
Buchholz, an outspoken opponent of the application
process, has been following the process closely and reporting his findings on
the blog, "The Reinvention of the Alleged Vermont and New
Hampshire Abenakis." He said that the ethics violations are just
the "icing on the cake" [retrospectively-speaking
that was misquoted, as I stated to the reporter, that it was "merely
the tip of the iceberg"] for a process that has been flawed from the beginning when Act
107 was signed into law by Gov.
James Douglas last year.
One of the merits of Act 107, which sent the recognition
process into motion in Vermont. is a stipulation that if the Legislature does not
act on petitions, a tribe would be recognized two years after its petition was
received.
Douglas Lloyd Buchholz said the VCNAA, which was
re-created by Act 107 (the first VCNAA was established in 2006 but failed to achieve tribal recognition for any
groups and disbanded due to internal conflicts
[actually it was because the representative
Chairperson's ... Mark Mitchell/Paul Bell/Charles Delaney/Donald Warren Stevens
... who have 'working relationships' with the late "Chief" Homer W.
St. Francis/ Homer's daughter April Rushlow - Merrill ... and advocated for
this particular group of Alleged and Re-Invented "Abenakis ...
'representation on-the-sly, April St. Francis-Merrill's interests, and when
these Chairperson(s) could not 'control' the VCNAA appointed representative's
Judy (nee: Fortin) Dow, Jeanne (nee: Deforge) Brink, and or Timothy De La
Bruere ... the 'membership' and or 'advocates' of the created 'VT Indigenous
Alliance' would vocally complain about the VCNAA 'not doing anything' etc. The
former initial VCNAA did not fail because of 'internal conflicts, but rather
was hijacked by overt clandestine blatant manipulations by agents of the
concocted 'VT Indigenous Alliance'] is plagued with 'insider
dealings" and "weak documentation" that is being used to push
the applications through the legislature.
However, Luke Willard countered that many of the
corporations filing for recognition have been at the process for more than 30
years and are trying very hard to make sure that the process is transparent and
unbiased.
Willard was the former chief of the Nulhegan Tribe in
Newport, which is one of the other groups seeking state recognition, but
stepped down from that position when he was elected chairman of the
restructured VCNAA last October. Willard also said any person connected to a
tribe seeking recognition recuses themselves from voting on applications. Yet,
this does not prevent that person from advocating elsewhere and communicating
with said applicant, by telephone, fax, or email.
Many of the same persons currently leading the groups
that would like to gain recognition were part of or connected to the St.
Francis/Sokoki Band of the Abenaki, who unsuccessfully sought federal
recognition and were denied through the BIA in June 2007.
In the federal decision not to grand the St. Francis
group recognition, the BIA wrote that "the available evidence does not
demonstrate that they have historical or social connection to any western
Abenaki entity in existence before 1800 or even before 1974! ... and the petitioner
does not have documentation to support it being a tribe before 1976." The
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of the the Abenakis DID NOT nor COULD NOT identify a
single person being Indian/ Native American/ Le Sauvage or Abenaki EXCEPT for
identifying the William Simon Obomsawin descendants [Jeanne
(nee: Deforge) Brink, etc] who were (according to April Merrill) that
these persons were NOT really 'members' of the petitioning group. These
"Abenaki" group's USE Odanak descendant people such as Jeanne Brink
and Trudy Call - Parker in their groups, toting historical and contemporary
connection(s) to Odanak allegedly; and yet at-the-same-time maliciously vilify
alleged Odanak interest(s) in the Vermont State Abenaki Recognition Process ...
and that Jeanne Brink, and Timothy De La Bruere are alleged themselves
malicious and manipulative 'agents' of Odanak sitting on the VCNAA (at the
time) against the VT indigenous Alliance groups in Vermont?! That ... Odanak
Chief Nicolas Panadis and the Benedict's, Watso's, and Obomsawin's (including Richard 'Skip'
Bernier and his relatives in Orleans County, VT ... were and are allegedly
merely New Vermont's 'Abenaki Expatriots’ and or ‘Bi-Nationalists'?
Opponents of recognition's before the Senate
committee are asking why groups using some of the same documentation that was
used for federal recognition should be considered tribes under the new
standards set out by Act 107.
As defined by Act 107, the application process would be
supervised by the VCNAA and require each group to submit documentation,
approved by three independent scholars, to validate its claim.
Once that has been accomplished, it would be left to the
commission to review the claim and petition the legislature for recognition on
a tribe-by-tribe basis.
Conflict of interest
The question Buchholz and others are asking is:
How is it that these groups, which make up the 'VT
Indigenous Alliance' that was created in part by Frederick Wiseman -
one of the scholars who looked over the documentation for the applications and
have members sitting on the commission - could be unbiased or objective in
their decisions relating to the applications?
Wiseman gave the leaders of the tribes of the VT
Indigenous Alliance documents that set out what information they should include
in their applications, and then claimed to be objective in his discussions
concerning those tribes when they had utilized the information that he had
given them for that purpose.
There is very little
information not in their particular "recognition" application's, that
was not previously included in Wiseman's 2010 Decolonizing the Abenaki: A
Methodology for Detecting Vermont Tribal Identity:
Wiseman's son, Frederick Wiseman Jr. also sits on the restructured VCNAA, as
an appointee placed there by former Governor James Douglas.
Wiseman St. was also a member of the St. Francis/Sokoki
Band of Abenaki led by April St. Francis Merrill, who has recently been charged
with felony exploitation of a vulnerable adult by the Franklin County Sheriff's
Office.
The said criminal charge(s)
have since been dropped, allegedly temporarily, the said criminal charge(s)
have yet to be placed against April St. Francis-Merrill in a court of law again
by Franklin County State's Attorney, Mr. Jim Hughes or any other Judicial
Officer in the State of Vermont. Who 'leaned' on Mr. Jim Hughes and who is the
State of Vermont 'protecting' now? Brings to mind "One hand tries to wash
the dirt of the other, to try and appear as if the hands were always
clean?" Hmm.
Willard said one of the problems for the commission was
finding expert scholars who are informed about the issues while not connected
to the groups.
Every so-called
'Expert' 'scholar' that the restructured current VCNAA and the 'VT Indigenous
Alliance' has chosen ... has had and or continues a 'working relationship' with
the groups, that comprise the VT Indigenous Alliance groups whom seek VT State
Recognition!
"Within the scholarly
community there are only so many scholars to draw from," said Luke Willard.
"My motivation is
first and foremost that these incorporations are not tribes," said Douglas
Buchholz.
Buchholz has been
following the process and says that these groups solicit membership and have no
proof of their ancestry other than "the confabulated stories that have no
basis in historical record."
According to Buchholz, the
genealogy used for the applications, which has been redacted from the
applications that are seen by the public and was left for only the scholarly
panelists to review, already has been scrutinized by other scholars and found
to be lacking.
Buchholz also reiterated
that his opposition to these recognitions in no way minimizes the alleged
legitimacy of the heritage of the fraction/minority
of the members [such as Jeanne Brink/Trudy
Parker/Lynn Murphy etc or those descended from an actual historical Abenaki Community such as
Odanak or Wôlinak] of these groups.
March 07, 2011
9:16 AM
FROM:
daniel.staples@timesargus.com
TO:
douglaslloydbuchholz@yahoo.com
----Original
Message-----
From:
Fred Wiseman
To: daniel.staples@timesargus.com
Cc:
catherine.nelson@timesargus.com; john.mitchell@timesargus.com; 'luke
willard'
Sent:
3/6/11 [06 March 2011] 1:15 PM
Subject: **SPAM**
your article
Dear Mr. Staples,
So you used Douglas Buchholz
as your source in today's article on recognition.
The whole article
is very strange, but I will focus on one assertion which involves my supposed
conflict of interest -- which you declined to investigate with regards to
professional ethics regarding conflict of interest in the disciplines of
geography anthropology, history or folklore - the applicable fields to the
professional/academic evaluation of data such as the recognition applications.
I want you to
think about this assertion that you wrote.
"Wiseman gave the leaders of the tribes
of the VT Indigenous Alliance documents that set out what information they
should include in their applications, and then claimed to be objective in his
decisions concerning those tribes when they had utilized the information that
he given them for that purpose."
You fail to note
the source of this "leaked" document, which was originally sent to Brian
Chenevert and Representative Jim Masland, when I offered to help them seek
recognition last spring. You will see
above the line where I gave the tribes the info, that I was offering it to them
as well. I offer my help to any Native
group seeking recognition or with any other kind of problem that my expertise
is applicable to. So the preamble of the
document proves an absence of bias. My
loyalty is always to the data, not the political entities that choose to use
it.
Unless,
perhaps Douglas Buchholz
altered the document before sending it to you
?
[Dr. Frederick M. Wiseman ‘projecting’ his own scholarly inappropriate
conduct onto my person]
You should have
contacted me early on to give you the original document to determine if it was
altered, or if it was not, you should have published the reason why I sent it
to a group that had written horrible things about the alliance in the VERY
recent past (of May, 2010).
So without any
significant investigation into the complex back story to all of Douglas Buchholz's
attempted "gotcha politics" you published his nonsense is if it were
data.
This article does not merit a reasoned rebuttal, but in
the future, you need to be more careful in your choice of sources -- which in
this case clearly has a bias against me (as you can see if you have cared to
look at Douglas Buchholz's
hate blog) and follow up with confirmation of
information regarding the targets of your accusation(s) (of conflict of
interest in this case).
I don't know about newspaper journalism, but this type of
writing would never be tolerated in any kind of academic discourse.
Fred M. Wiseman, Ph.D.
March 09, 2011
The Littleton Courier Record Newspaper
By Frederick Matthew Wiseman
Indian Identity: NEK
has much to gain by celebrating its Native population
To the Editor:
There seems to be some confusion in the Northeast Kingdom
regarding individual and community Indian identity. There have been letters to
the editor and articles regarding The Nulhegan Band and it ethnic legitimacy,
in which my work has been mentioned.
Since 1989, I have researched,
taught undergraduate and graduate-level courses and published books and
scholarly articles on the Abenakis and their neighbors, as well as worked with
Vermont state officials on Native issues ranging from legislative recognition
to education, to the celebration of the 400th anniversary of the discovery of
Lake Champlain -- and would like to offer another, more "external"
perspective on your local debate.
On the most basic level, S.117 passed by the Vermont General Assembly in 2006, gives all people who profess a native identity
protected minority status; and so that point of identity is moot. However,
there is lingering debate as to whether there is a viable indigenous Native
community in the Northeast Kingdom. By indigenous, I mean with a local history
and culture not derivative from anywhere else -- "home grown." If
there is a community, it must first have behaviors, beliefs and traditions that
any anthropologist would recognize as "Native."
It is interesting that in my research on Northeast Kingdom
culture, most people who are practicing these "Native behaviors" are
unaware that they are doing anything native, or special. It is just what they
and their ancestors have always done. This prevalent belief is refreshing and
indicative of deep-time local culture and tradition, rather than borrowed or
"fake" ethnicity.
Some of these newly revealed (to historians and
anthropologists) behaviors and traditions of the Northeast Kingdom include:
1) Distinctive horticultural mounds and
distinctive crops in its agriculture
2) Native style
fish spears and a unique communal tradition for fishing for walleyes;
3) Native style game lures such as bark
moose calls and shadow decoys;
4) A land tenure system identical to that
of the Penobscot Indians of Maine
5) Communal memory of bark
"longhouses" and current wigwam architectural technology
6) Medicinal technologies including healing
wands similar to the "spirit root clubs" that figure in Maine
Indian museum exhibits
7) Multi-family
gatherings where these native traditions are passed down.
Interestingly many of these documented Native behaviors
and technologies, while present in rural Maine, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia
communities, seem absent in the more compressed Canadian Native enclaves such as Odanak, Quebec. So I find the assemblage of
traditional Native cultural data convincing. But a mere assemblage of people
doing Indian things is not an Indian community; it needs a definitive
Native-style geographic character. In this, the Northeast Kingdom is quite
similar to that of the Penobscot Indians of Maine before they were concentrated
onto their reservation near Old Town. Maine.
This is a series of semi-autonomous extended families
arrayed across the upper Missisquoi, Lake Memphramagog shore, to the Clyde and
Nulhegan drainages, each of which has a slightly different historical and
geographic adaptation. From cursory
study of the complex inter-family politics in the area, leadership
seems to have been more vested in individuals from a constituent band than
inter-band "chiefs," a social system also historically characteristic
of Northeastern North American Indigenous bands.
But a viable ethnic community, especially one so spread
over several river drainages, cannot be merely a mish-mash of families; it must
have a level of genetic or cultural integration and separation from the
"outside" Vermont community. The extended Indigenous families have
always maintained communication through multi-family gatherings, and ties of
intermarriage that separates them from their neighbors. The modern Nulhegan
Band has managed to celebrate rather than suppress the traditional
semi-autonomous band structure and so it has flourished; although some extended
families have chosen to remain apart. As a result, the Band has documented over
75% percent of its population as related by blood or marriage, a sure sign of
an historical and viable community in the Northeast Kingdom.
By any measure, geography, ethnography, folklore and
history, there is a distinct local
Native strain in your area. It needs not appeal to Maine or Canada or
anywhere else for its authenticity -- it has been there all along. With
legislative recognition by statute, this divisive silliness about who is or is
not Indian in your area will be over. The Northeast Kingdom has much to gain by
celebrating its Indians -- and needs not look elsewhere than its old home soil.
Fred M. Wiseman, Ph.D.
Swanton, Vt.
NOTICE how Professor Wiseman 'twists' the linguistics around...he does not mention "Nulhegan" or "Abenaki" here BECAUSE he knows full well, these people have dubious questionable genealogical connection(s) to the bona-fide Abenaki People, so instead he switches to the terminology "indigenous ... Native ... community"
March 09, 2011
The Caledonian-Record Newspaper, Page A4
In My Opinion – Letters to the Editor
By Frederick Matthew Wiseman
Letters to the Editor
Much to gain by celebrating Native population
Same article as above.
April 01, 2011
The Newport Daily Express, Page 04
By Denise Watso
"Experts"
allow false claims to slip by
Experts assembled by the Vermont Commission on Native
American Affairs failed to identify even the most obvious flaws in applications
for state recognition submitted by the "Nulhegan" and
"Elnu."
The "Elnu" application reviewers; David Lacy,
Frederick M. Wiseman, and Eloise Beil
failed the review process and thereby failed in their duty to properly check
evidence submitted by the self-identified group "Elnu." The review,
application process and State Recognition Bill is biased and filled with real
and perceived conflicts of interest, among the Commission members, reviewers and
Mr. Illuzzi.
How many more documents in the review(s) have gone
unchecked?
1) The
self- identified group "Elnu" submitted as evidence a transcriptions
of an October 1863 Civil Ware conscription list taken from an Alburgh history
book - the Alburgh VT Land and Miscellaneous Records Book as proof that Charles
Partlow, an ancestors of some Elnu club members, was Indian.
However, it is clear from the original record located at
the Alburgh Town Clerk's Office that the self-identified applicant, experts and
commission have not bothered to read the actual record, nor the history book
cited as evidence. The original document clearly indicates that Charles Partlow
and three other men are NOT listed as Indian. Indians being paid for their
wartime service were NOT recorded on either document submitted, therefore the
applicant is allowed to take the history book citation out of context and
"experts" simply ignored the evidence submitted.
2) On pages 25 & 61 of
the "Nulhegan" application, there are references to Nancy Snow, a
woman falsely claimed by Luke Willard as his Abenaki ancestor and falsely
identified as a granddaughter of Helen (Otôdoson) Saziboet. You may wish to
consult http://www.nedoba.org/gene_fake.html for an investigation of these
fraudulent claims. Clearly, Willard and the "Nulhegans" are not in
any way related to the Otôdoson family.
We would add that Helen (Otôdoson) Saziboet is a
great....grandmother of Denise Watso and Jacques Thériault Watso, and many
other historically-known Abenaki people. According to the Warrensburgh (NY)
News (June 08, 1922) she died at Saratoga Springs, NY, where many members of
her family lived either seasonally or year-round. Another of Denise and
Jacques's direct ancestors, Louis Watso, walked from Lake George to Saratoga
Springs to attend the funeral. Louis Watso and Helen (Otôdoson) Saziboet were
brother and sister. Their father, Swassin Otôdoson, was buried in Barton, VT.
What kind of review was conducted by the Vermont
Commission on Native American Affairs, their panel of experts, and the Vermont
legislature? And what other false claims are shrouded in the secrecy imposed by
legislators last year, when they passed the final version of their state
recognition bill?
Citizens of Vermont and historically known Abenaki people
deserve better than an inadequate review of inaccurate claims being made in
applications as part of a process created by an unjust law that clearly
violates our Abenaki aboriginal rights.
The process has allowed these groups to continue to
fraudulently claim to be our ancestors’ relative
descendants without any credible evidence presented in an open and
transparent manner.
For more information, contact:
Denise Watso,
Liason, Abenaki First Nation
Jacques Thériault
Watso, Councillor, Abenaki First Nation
April 01, 2011
The Newport Daily Express, Page 04
By Denise Watso
State Recognition
Process Riddled With Conflicts of Interest
Vermont's ill-conceived approach to its indigenous people
fails Vermont voters and the Abenaki people and must be reconsidered. Instead,
the Vermont Senate seems intent on making matters worse.
In 2010, Vermont passed into law a "state
recognition" process administered by a new reconstructed commission which
was intended to be composed of Native American people. However, none of the
commission members can prove any Abenaki ancestry and Chairman Willard's claims
descent from the Otôdoson (Watso). A
fraudulent claim by Luke Willard to our family name and has been publically
disproven.
Instead, the commission members were almost entirely
selected from potential applicant groups, representing real conflicts of
interest which cannot surmounted by recusal from matters directly relevant to
the applicant groups to which they belong. Each commission member is committed
to recognizing all four + of the organizations applying for recognition this
year (and in 2012).
Conflicts of interest are also real and apparent within
the group of "experts" assembled by the commission to review applications
for recognition. Today - Mr. Lacy and Mr. Skinas were chastised by their
Federal agency for using USDA letterhead against Federal policy and both were
forced to step down, although the reviewers were allowed to pass by the
Commission and Senator Illuzzi. All of the "experts" have conflicting
roles and long standing relationships with these groups.
A brief summary of the real and apparent conflicts on the
review panel:
David Lacy has
worked with members of the "St. Francis/Sokoki" in his role as Green
Mountain National Forest archaeologist.
David Skinas, another
archaeologist and Federal employee, actually sits on the Board of Directors of
the Abenaki Self-Help Association, Inc., a non-profit corporation run by the
"St. Francis/Sokoki."
Eloise Beil
has worked with the "Elnu" in their capacity as re-enactors working
for her employer, the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum.
Frederick M. Wiseman,
a member of the "St. Francis/Sokoki has collaborated with "Elnu"
members at the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum and has similar relationships
with other groups.
Historian Kevin Dann does not appear to have as close a
relationship with the applicant groups, although his review of the
"Nulhegan" application was mostly devoid of substance. He prefaced
his response, however, with a set of comments about OUR ancestors, NOT those of
the "Nulhegan."
There has been no adequate review of applications for
state recognition. This is clear from a close reading of the public portions of
the applications themselves, the reviews of the "experts" assembled
by the VCNAA, and the VCNAA's report to the legislature. The applications are
characterized by inaccurate information and wild leaps made to convince people
that our history is theirs. It is not. The entire application process is
nothing more than a grant process, with letters of support and no credible
substantiated evidence, proven by citations allowed i.e. Wikipedia, and the
Internet used as "sources of evidence". One source, "Charles
Partlow" ancestral proof submitted by the "Elnu", has already
been entirely overlooked and ignored by this "expert" review panel,
while we have provided the document that proves otherwise.
Faced with the truth about these applications, Senator
Illuzzi and the Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing & General
Affairs, are now considering legislation "Relating to Exempting from
Public Disclosure Records Related to Tribal Recognition." As certain
genealogical information has already been exempted from public review by an
11th-hour amendment to last year's law, it appears that the committee is now
moving to completely remove the state recognition process from public scrutiny.
The committee seeks to deprive Vermont voters and the Abenaki people of the
open government, transparency and accountability that we typically expect of
democratic' governments.
We ask all Vermonters to stand with us in opposing the
conflicts of interest and increasing secrecy of the state's recognition
process, led by Senator Vincent Illuzzi, the Commission (VCNAA) and these
fraudulent "Abenaki" groups seeking to defraud the State of Vermont
and Abenaki Nation citizens. We ask all Vermonters to take a stand for justice,
historical truth, and respect for the Abenaki people and our history.
For more informaiton, contact:
Denise Watso,
Liason, Abenaki First Nation