Captivity and slavery among Native Americans
The indigenous peoples of North America had utilised a form
of captive-taking and involuntary labour long before European contact. But
this form of bondage was neither trans-generational nor permanent.
Captive-taking was most often used to replace a dead loved one within the
family with a new person. The captive would then take on this deceased person's
sexual or labour-related capacities.
Through
various avenues, such as "sexual relationships”, adoption, hard work,
military service, or escape, captives could enhance their status or even assume
new identities." After European contact in the 1500s, white
Europeans persuaded Native Americans to enslave members of other
Native American tribes using the European method of slave-trading, which
focused on the accumulation of captives for sale and thus, profit, rather than
for population augmentation.
The Native American slave trade thrived for over a century,
but began to be largely phased out in the early to mid-18th century. An
important factor in its decline was the Yamasee War of 1715-1717. After
colonists in the English colony of Carolina began defaulting on some of their
trade agreements and enslaving even members of their ally tribes, the Yamasee
Nation began to question its own alliance with Carolina. Along with the Lower
Creeks and the Savannahs, the Yamasees declared war on Carolina, killing 400
colonists, approximately seven percent of the white population. The Carolinian
colonists put together a force of black slaves, militiamen, volunteers and
friendly Native American nations, which defeated the Yamasees and their allies.
While the Yamasees lost, they succeeded in forcing European
colonists to reconsider the risks inherent in the system of Native American
enslavement. If Native Americans became angry at the terms of enslavement or
allied Native Americans were accidentally enslaved, they might once again
retaliate militarily. In addition, enslaved Native Americans often successfully
escaped from their owners, as they were familiar with the geography and could
elude slave catchers and return to their homelands.
Therefore, after the Yamasee War, the African transatlantic
slave trade to the North American colonies drastically increased to account for
the loss of Native American slaves.
Some members of the Five Tribes became owners of enslaved
black women and men themselves, as they increasingly adapted to Euro-American
norms, such as style of dress and governmental structure. Beginning in the late
1700s and intensifying in the early 1800s, members of the Five Tribes used
enslaved black women and men as domestic and agricultural labourers. For
example, Chickasaw planters exported an estimated 1,000 bales of cotton in
1830; this cotton was picked and processed by black slaves. Comparatively, in 1826, the state of Georgia
produced 150,000 bales of cotton.
In 1860, about 30 years after their removal to Indian
Territory from their respective homes in the Southeast, Cherokee Nation
citizens owned 2,511 slaves (15 percent of their total population), Choctaw
citizens owned 2,349 slaves (14 percent of their total population), and Creek
citizens owned 1,532 slaves (10 percent of their total population). Chickasaw
citizens owned 975 slaves, which amounted to 18 percent of their total
population, a proportion equivalent to that of white slave owners in Tennessee,
a former neighbour of the Chickasaw Nation and a large slaveholding state.
This made the Chickasaws the largest slave-holding nation
of the Five Tribes, in proportion to their population. National laws restricted
the movement of enslaved people, preventing them from learning to read and
write, and prohibited interracial relationships.
However, as in the US, the majority of people in these
nations did not own slaves. Large-scale crop production and the system of
slavery that made it possible and lucrative were mainly adopted by wealthier
Native families, whose prosperity allowed them to influence the political,
social, and economic affairs of their nations. Thus, an influential proportion
of tribal citizens stood to lose a vital part of their economic resources if
emancipation took place.
The Five Tribes involved themselves in the Civil War militarily
to preserve their practice of slavery and to fight for political autonomy.
Members of all nations served on both the Union and Confederate sides of the
war, and a number of battles took place within Indian Territory. After the war,
the treaties signed between the US and all five of these slaveholding Native
American nations, called the Treaties of 1866, ended wartime hostilities and
freed and enfranchised people of African descent. These treaties were part of a
larger American mission to take over Native American land, and also included
land cessions and American settlement and railway construction in Indian
Territory.
Citizenship rights
While the former slaves of the Cherokee, Creek, Seminole,
and Choctaw Nations became tribal citizens due to the Treaties of 1866,
throughout the 20th century, all of the Five Tribes eventually rescinded the
tribal membership of these freedpeople and their descendants. Although their
former slaves had lived among them for generations, sharing land, history, and
trauma with them, the Five Tribes claimed that they were interlopers who had no
place among them because they had no Native ancestry.
The descendants of these former slaves fought back, filing
several lawsuits. On August
31, 2017, the descendants of people enslaved by members of the Cherokee Nation
were victorious. The US District Court in Washington ruled that these
descendants should have citizenship rights in the Cherokee Nation. Now the
descendants of people enslaved by the Creek Nation have filed a similar suit,
hoping to find commensurate validation.
So, when we observe and honour the anniversary of the 13th
Amendment, let us remember that not all people of African descent had the same
experience of freedom. Those African Americans living among western indigenous
nations waited until the summer of 1866 to gain their freedom, and even then, they
fought to find true liberation from economic, social, and political duress.
Just as our current moment sees white and black Americans
arguing over the memory of the Civil War and the removal (or not) of
Confederate monuments, so discussions of slavery in Native American nations and
the historical relationships between the Five Tribes and people of African
descent are also fraught with many difficult issues.
The story of the people of African descent owned by Native
Americans is unique, but also simply another tale of coercion and community in
the diverse African American experience.
Source: Al Jazeera

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