• A_Union_of_Kobolds@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    What it really means when they’re “part Cherokee”: “one of our ancestors had sex with a Black person and we’re all too ashamed to admit it, so we told you you’re part Cherokee to make you feel better.”

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      Oh that’s Seminole. Which most racist people are too ignorant to realize meant runway slave (In this context, the majority of Seminole were/are straight up indigenous), and thus actually a black ancestor they didn’t want to acknowledge. But they had to put something on the family tree in the family bible. That’s a fun one to find in the South East US.

      Cherokee is usually a straight up fiction. Personally I think the idea got popularized because people like feeling special and native Americans were big news in the 1970’s. Racists also jumped on it as a means of showing native Americans didn’t deserve special rules or treatment.

  • BranBucket@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    In Oklahoma, if you can trace your ancestry back to someone who was on the Dawes Rolls, you can apply to be a member of the Cherokee Nation regardless of your percentage of native ancestry. So there are a lot of people who are effectively white, but are part of the Nation and consider themselves part Cherokee.

    This is distinct from the “part Cherokee” or “descended form a Cherokee princess” claims that were used to try and legitimize white supremacy in the south.