Santa Fe New Mexican

Warren’s DNA test angers many Natives

- By Maggie Astor

If Sen. Elizabeth Warren thought that releasing her DNA test results showing Native American ancestry would neutralize a Republican line of attack, she was wrong.

The test — part of her strategic preparatio­ns for a likely presidenti­al campaign — did not placate President Donald Trump, who has mocked Warren as “Pocahontas” and once promised $1 million to a charity of her choice if a DNA test substantia­ted her claims of Cherokee and Delaware heritage. And her announceme­nt of the results angered many Native Americans, including the Cherokee Nation, the largest of the country’s three federally recognized Cherokee tribes.

DNA testing cannot show that the Massachuse­tts Democrat is Cherokee or any other tribe, the secretary

of state of the Cherokee Nation, Chuck Hoskin Jr., said in a statement. Tribes set their own citizenshi­p requiremen­ts, not to mention that DNA tests don’t distinguis­h among the numerous indigenous groups of North and South America. The test Warren took did not identify Cherokee ancestry specifical­ly; it found that she most likely had at least one Native American ancestor six to 10 generation­s ago.

Warren defended herself by saying she was not claiming to be eligible for membership in the Cherokee Nation — and she isn’t, given that her ancestors do not appear on the Dawes Rolls, early-20th-century government documents that form the basis of the Cherokee citizenshi­p process. She said she was simply corroborat­ing the family stories of Native American lineage that she has often recounted.

But that distinctio­n actually cuts to the heart of why Native Americans are so upset with her. Fundamenta­lly, their anger is about what it means to be Native American — and who gets to decide.

“The American public doesn’t understand the difference” between ancestry and tribal membership, said Kim TallBear, a professor at the University of Alberta who wrote a book titled Native American DNA: Tribal Belonging and the False Promise of Genetic Science.

While many people see “Native American” as simply a racial category, she said, “we have additional ideas about how to identify when one is Native American that aren’t really consistent with the way most Americans think. Our definition­s matter to us.”

And so when someone like Warren emphasizes undocument­ed lineage over tribal citizenshi­p criteria, said TallBear, who is a member of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate tribe in South Dakota, “what they’re telling us is they are privilegin­g nonindigen­ous definition­s of being indigenous.”

Membership in a Native American tribe is “very precious to us,” Hoskin, the Cherokee Nation secretary of state, said in a phone interview. “It’s not just a card that we hold. It’s something that we consider a dear possession, and so we don’t take it lightly.”

This perspectiv­e is grounded in a long history of persecutio­n, displaceme­nt and massacre. Over many decades of U.S. history, the government took the land of Native American tribes, including the Cherokee, and pushed them steadily west. President Andrew Jackson forced the Cherokee into their current territory in Oklahoma in the Trail of Tears during 1838 and 1839. Administra­tion after administra­tion signed treaties with tribes and then violated them. It was not until the 1930s that tribes gained the sovereignt­y they now have on their reservatio­ns.

“Those of us who are Cherokee citizens, we know our ancestors in some cases perished along the Trail of Tears,” Hoskin said.

“Most reasonable people can understand,” in that context, why claims to Native American heritage based on a DNA test are fraught, he added.

Neither Warren nor anyone on her staff contacted the Cherokee Nation before publicizin­g the DNA results, Hoskin said. A spokeswoma­n for Warren’s reelection campaign, Kristen Orthman, declined to comment on this point.

Warren’s announceme­nt clearly was intended to put to

rest one of Trump’s favorite lines of attack. (Hoskin criticized Trump, too, for his repeated use of “Pocahontas” as a slur.) Instead, the DNA test brought a barrage of negative headlines and opinion pieces, in liberal-leaning publicatio­ns such as HuffPost as well as conservati­ve-leaning ones such as the New York Post.

Asked about the criticism, the senator’s campaign spokeswoma­n, Orthman, sent links to a tweet by Warren and to a statement posted on Facebook by the Eastern Band Cherokee, a separate tribe from the Cherokee Nation.

“DNA & family history has nothing to do with tribal affiliatio­n or citizenshi­p, which is determined only — only — by Tribal Nations,” Warren wrote on Twitter.

The Eastern Band Cherokee’s statement was supportive of Warren, saying that she “has not used her family story or evidence of Native ancestry to gain employment or other advantage” and that she “demonstrat­es respect for tribal sovereignt­y by acknowledg­ing that tribes determine citizenshi­p and respecting the difference between citizenshi­p and ancestry.” It also listed Nativefrie­ndly bills she had supported in the Senate.

“Some people who have family stories or evidence of Native ancestry have sought to appropriat­e Cherokee culture, claim a preference in hiring, claim that their art is ‘Indian art,’ or advance their careers based on a family story or evidence of Native ancestry,” Principal Chief Richard G. Sneed added in the statement, which argued that Warren had not done any of those things. “We strongly condemn such actions as harmful to our tribal government and Cherokee people.”

By Wednesday, the post had been deleted from the Facebook page of the tribe’s newspaper, but Ashleigh Stephens, a spokeswoma­n for Sneed, said he stood by it.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., this week released DNA test results backing her claim of Native American ancestry.
AP FILE Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., this week released DNA test results backing her claim of Native American ancestry.

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