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Abenaki in Quebec take identity fraud concerns to the United Nations

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Ka’nhehsí:io Deer

A digital billboard lit up New York City's Times Square last week with a message from two Abenaki communitie­s in Quebec: that they are the "sole guardians of Abenaki iden‐ tity."

A delegation of the Abenaki Council of Odanak, Wôlinak and the Assembly of First Nations QuebecLabr­ador brought the same message to the 23rd session of the United Nations Perma‐ nent Forum on Indigenous Is‐ sues, as part of ongoing ef‐ forts to denounce Abenaki groups recognized in the United States.

"Our nation faces a great injustice," Rick O'Bomsawin, chief of the Abenaki of Odanak, told the United Na‐ tions floor last week.

"Who has the right to say who your people are? My na‐ tion is strong. We know who our people are but yet we have no voice because of this border that was created."

Since 2011 and 2012, the state of Vermont has legally recognized four groups as Abenaki tribes. O'Bomsawin and his say many of the groups' members have no In‐ digenous ancestry and as a result, "exploit" and "unjustly represent" the nation.

"We went to the United Nations for the purpose of making this issue known worldwide," said Sigwanis Lachapelle.

Lachapelle, 26, and her cousin Isaak Lachapelle-Gill, 24, were a part of the delega‐ tion and spoke at a side event called "Identity fraud and Indigenous self-determi‐ nation: Abenaki youth per‐ spectives."

"How can the Wabenaki nation claim self-determina‐ tion, autonomy, and self-gov‐ ernment when our funda‐ mental rights are constantly being trampled underfoot by individual­s and groups pre‐ tending to be us?" asked Lachapelle-Gill.

"The answer is clear, we must anticipate and counter this trend to preserve the essence of our identity and sovereignt­y."

Tribes recognized in Ver‐ mont

Traditiona­l Abenaki territory, or Ndakinna in their lan‐ guage, stretches from southern Quebec to northern Massachuse­tts, spanning Vermont and New Hamp‐ shire.

Due to colonizati­on and war, Abenaki were forced north of their homelands and settled in what is now

Odanak and Wôlinak, near Trois-Rivières, Que. The two communitie­s have over 3,000 members, with most living off-reserve.

In 2011, the Nulhegan band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation and Elnu Abenaki tribe received state recogni‐ tion in Vermont. A year later, the Abenaki Nation of Mis‐ sisquoi and the Koasek Abenaki of the Koas followed.

As legally recognized groups, they are allowed to sell Native American artwork, repatriate human remains, influence state-wide curricu‐ lum, access funding for social programs and receive free hunting and fishing licences.

In 2005, the Abenaki Na‐ tion of Missisquoi failed to meet four of the seven man‐ dated criteria for U.S. federal status. The U.S. Bureau of In‐ dian Affairs determined that the 1,171-member band could not prove its members descend from a historical tribe, its existence as an American Indian ''entity'' on a continuous basis since 1900, nor that it maintained politi‐ cal authority over its mem‐ bers.

Research from Darryl Ler‐ oux, an associate professor at the University of Ottawa, found that the majority of those members had no Abenaki ancestry, but rather are descendant­s from French-Canadian immigrants to the United States

He published his findings last year in a peer-reviewed article "State Recognitio­n and the Dangers of Race Shifting" in the American Indian Cul‐ ture and Research Journal.

The genealogy has not been independen­tly verified by CBC News.

'Many tribes'

Leadership of the Vermontrec­ognized Abenaki call the accusation­s of race-shifting inaccurate and laterally vio‐ lent.

"It is ludicrous to think that one tribe would claim to have the sole governance over an entire culture when history shows there were many tribes within the Abenaki Nation on both sides of the Canadian border," wrote Don Stevens, chief of the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation and executive director of Abenaki Helping Abenaki Inc., in an emailed statement to CBC In‐ digenous.

Rich Holschuh, a spokespers­on for the Elnu Abenaki band and chair of

the Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs, emailed a statement to CBC Indigenous calling for inclu‐ sivity and the need for coex‐ istence.

"While there may be dif‐ ferences in our respective journeys, the future of our children will depend on how we conduct ourselves," wrote Holschuh.

"This is a great responsi‐ bility and we choose to work together to revitalize these relationsh­ips with gratitude and respect."

Barred from participat‐ ing in state recognitio­n process

Denise Watso is among a few hundred members of Odanak living in Albany, N.Y. She opposed the state recog‐ nition process back in 2011, but said the Vermont senate barred non-Vermont residen‐ ts from testifying.

"We couldn't speak. We couldn't speak on our own behalf," she said about the process.

She said many legislator­s, including Gov. Phil Scott, have refused to address the issue.

"They're still not listening. They've had time and they've had our voices years," said Watso.

"We're projecting this out to the world that this is just a total injustice where we still can't have our voices heard. No one is listening. Vermont legislator­s are not listening. The governor of Vermont is not listening."

O'Bomsawin said he's made numerous requests to meet with the governor, to no avail. Scott's office did not all these respond to requests for com‐ ment.

The two Abenaki youth hope speaking at an interna‐ tional forum will help gain al‐ lies for their cause and will continue mobilizati­on efforts to have their communitie­s known and recognized south of the border.

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