The Indian Child Welfare Act at 30 is available on Amazon.com |
By Trace A. DeMeyer
We must understand history to see where we've been and where we are today to face the future.
The
effects on STOLEN GENERATIONS are still being felt in 2012. In Indian Country,
Native adoptees are still called Lost Birds or Split Feathers or Lost Ones. Many
adult adoptees are still lost to their families and tribal nations. A lost
child will remain lost with sealed adoption records. Today's legislators and
lawmakers obviously do not know or recognize the crimes committed against
Indian people that still affect us.
As I discussed in my books, many children were stolen, literally
abducted. This was legal since it was done with the government's approval,
programs and funding. Those social workers who drove to reservations and
snatched children were never charged with kidnapping. Some siblings were taken
but then split up in foster care and later adoptions. How did this serve the
children? It didn't.
Some Native mothers were pressured in hospitals to give up their newborn babies to social workers (some were nurses and nuns) trained in mental humiliation. These heartless individuals were not criminally prosecuted for coercion or harassment of these mothers.
Great crimes against Indian people, first taking land then children, went on for centuries and tribes were losing. After years of trying to stop it, finally in 1976, Indian leaders went to Congress and told them what was happening to their children which lead to the passage of the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978. There was never prosecution of the real criminals.
Finally, I ask those people who adopted us, did you have any idea what was happening to Indian people and their children? Did you know about the wholesale removals of Indian Children now described accurately as cultural genocide? Did you even inquire as to why this baby or child was given up? Did you investigate or ask to meet with our parents? What did the adoption industry or social workers say to you about this? Were you complicit and aware of the adoption industry's Indian Adoption projects and programs?
These are real crimes and atrocities against Indian People yet no one involved has been charged or put in prison?
Today there are non-Indians lobbying to end the Indian Child Welfare Act. This group of non-Indians feels they will be better parents to Indian children. They want no restrictions in order to adopt Indian children. Their attempt to change federal law must not happen. Indians must stand together to prevent this group from the only law that protects children from the Adoption Mafia.
(I will be on Jay Winter Night Wolf's
Radio Program on Nov. 30, at 7 pm (Eastern Time). Listen in at http://www.wpfwfm.org)
I just found out through my newly-found father that we are part Comanche through his mother, my grandmother. If that is the case, I want my ICWA rights! Oh ya, that's right, I was born in 1969 before ICWA was enacted.
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