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Research Needed / Re: Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond: "Disputed History"
« Last post by Sparks on March 19, 2023, 03:44:18 am »
https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=20230309140942914

This article was published a week ago. It's much about Turpel-Lafond; many other names are mentioned.

Quote
Time to revoke: When honorary degrees bring dishonour
Nathan M Greenfield  11 March 2023

On 24 February, both McGill University in Montreal and Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada’s capital, rescinded honorary doctorates that had been granted to Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond.

A lawyer and former law professor, Turpel-Lafond was thought to be the first ‘Treaty Indian’ to be appointed a judge in Saskatchewan when she was appointed as an administrative judge in 1998. She served as British Columbia’s Representative for Children and Youth from 2006 to 2015. Additionally, Turpel-Lafond has worked on land claims in both the United States and Canada.

Last October, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) reported that its genealogical investigation into Turpel-Lafond’s ancestry, which had been questioned by some in the Indigenous community for decades, revealed that far from being a ‘Treaty Indian’, the term that denotes being a member of a First Nation recognised by the Canadian government, Turpel-Lafond’s ancestors were of European descent.

Since it came to light that Turpel-Lafond fabricated her Indigenous background and further investigations revealed she had made up part of her publishing record and some of her academic activities, she has joined a long list of luminaries in North America who have seen their honorary degrees revoked. They include Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein, Rudi Giuliani, former US president Donald J Trump and Ye, the American rapper formerly known as Kanye West.

For the many in Canada and especially for the Indigenous community, Turpel-Lafond did more than simply pad her résumé.

“I was angry, furious,” Michelle Good, a citizen of the Red Pheasant Cree Nation in Saskatchewan and a lawyer, told University World News when asked about her reaction to Turpel-Lafond having faked her Indigeneity.

“This is so representative of colonial violence,” said Good, author of Five Little Indians (2020), which tells the story of survivors of Canada’s infamous residential school system, which for more than a century took Indigenous children away from their parents and raised them according to the precepts of the Catholic, Anglican and other Christian faiths. The conditions in many of these residential schools and treatment of the Indigenous children were so deplorable that thousands died while under government-sponsored care.

“Aside from assuming the identity, she [Turpel-Lafond] made claims about experiencing some of the horrendous social violence that Indigenous people have suffered, which she did not. She did not, but that is why she was held in such high esteem: the claims to have come from this hardscrabble life, [to have] suffered abuses, experienced addiction issues and abuses in her family, and nonetheless was able to graduate law school at an incredibly young age and go on to this sterling career.

“The harm she’s done far outweighs the work she’s done,” said Good, who herself is a survivor of the ‘Sixties Scoop’, a government programme that between 1961 and the early 1980s removed 20,000 Indigenous children from their homes, in most cases without the consent of either their families or their communities, to be raised by white families.

The problem of ‘ethnicity shopping’  [Not quoted; about other pretenders.]

Curious claims
In the months since the revelation of Turpel-Lafond’s masquerade, she has returned honorary degrees bestowed on her by Vancouver Island University (Nanaimo, British Columbia) and Royal Roads University (Vancouver Island).

In mid-February, the University of Regina (Saskatchewan) revoked the honorary degree it had granted her in 2009. The university announced the revocation with a statement that acknowledged Turpel-Lafond’s years as a child advocate and her work for Indigenous rights, but said, “her accomplishments are outweighed by the harm inflicted upon Indigenous academics, peoples and communities when non-Indigenous people misrepresent their Indigenous ancestry”.

Statements by both McGill University and Carleton University had similar themes, with the former noting that the ad hoc committee formed to consider the issue “found evidence calling into question the validity of information about academic credentials and accomplishments appearing on Ms Turpel-Lafond’s curriculum vitae. It also recognised that her claims about being a Treaty Indian were the subject of important questions”.

The questions concerning the “validity of information about [her] academic credentials and accomplishments” refer to Turpel-Lafond’s claim to having earned an MA in international law from the University of Cambridge when, in fact, she had earned a diploma; and having earned her PhD from Harvard in juridical science in 1990 when she did not earn the degree until 1997. Further, she claimed to have written a book about customs surrounding Indigenous adoption; no such book exists.

CBC reported that on her 2018 CV posted online, Turpel-Lafond claimed to have supervised Carol Aylward’s LLM in 1993 when Aylward was a graduate student at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The now retired Aylward, who had directed the university’s Indigenous Blacks and Mi’kmaq Initiative, told CBC, “I don’t know why she would put that claim [on her CV]. It makes no sense.”

Perhaps the most curious fabrication on Turpel-Lafond’s CV was her claim that she had been granted an honorary degree by First Nations University of Canada (Regina, Saskatchewan), as many in the Indigenous community would know that this university does not grant honorary degrees.

Celebrities who fell from grace.  [Not quoted; about other pretenders.]
Previous revocations in Canada  [Not quoted; about other pretenders.]
A chequered history  [Not quoted; about honorary degrees.][/b]
Vetting the candidates  [Not quoted,][/b]
Honorary degrees come with a responsibility  [Not quoted,][/b]
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Research Needed / Re: Siobhan Marks Our Grandmothers Strap Dress
« Last post by educatedindian on March 11, 2023, 08:05:30 pm »
I'm curious how Siobhan sharing her research that she did on the strap dress has anything to do with the issue of whether/what % of ancestry she has. I am not aware of her 'manufacturing' or selling strap dresses (in contravention of the IACA1990 Act) but maybe she is, go ahead, report her to those authorities. What I DO know is that almost all of the research she did on strap dresses was with museums that have strap dresses in their holdings, and that information (from museums) was most likely research by white historians and archivists. Her workshops are no different than one of those individuals sharing their research with the general public or with Native American groups who want to hear it. I attended one of her strap dress workshops, because I know her and also because I am aware that the Cree women from northern Canada (some who are my own Cree ancestors) historically wore strap dresses and distinctive hoods. Siobhan conducts a good workshop, and is very respectful of the knowledge she has gathered. On another note, If Siobhan is in any position to hire or fire people, confront the agency that employs her or on which she holds a committee/board seat,,, etc. The blood quantum question is a minefield, the administrators of this site have not, as far as I know determined a cut-off % /timeline to determine who is in or who is out.

We don't determine that, or even say we should have any say in that. Each tribal nation or community has its own standards.

Obviously they are going to be different, sometimes different within that nation in different time periods. This thread has stayed under Research because there are very different opinions within the same community.

We, NAFPS, don't research anyone just for BQ, ancestry, or claims of it. It must be shown they benefit, money, power.
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Research Needed / Re: Siobhan Marks Our Grandmothers Strap Dress
« Last post by Waubizee on March 10, 2023, 07:12:40 pm »
I'm curious how Siobhan sharing her research that she did on the strap dress has anything to do with the issue of whether/what % of ancestry she has. I am not aware of her 'manufacturing' or selling strap dresses (in contravention of the IACA1990 Act) but maybe she is, go ahead, report her to those authorities. What I DO know is that almost all of the research she did on strap dresses was with museums that have strap dresses in their holdings, and that information (from museums) was most likely research by white historians and archivists. Her workshops are no different than one of those individuals sharing their research with the general public or with Native American groups who want to hear it. I attended one of her strap dress workshops, because I know her and also because I am aware that the Cree women from northern Canada (some who are my own Cree ancestors) historically wore strap dresses and distinctive hoods. Siobhan conducts a good workshop, and is very respectful of the knowledge she has gathered. On another note, If Siobhan is in any position to hire or fire people, confront the agency that employs her or on which she holds a committee/board seat,,, etc. The blood quantum question is a minefield, the administrators of this site have not, as far as I know determined a cut-off % /timeline to determine who is in or who is out.
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Research Needed / Re: Walking Crow
« Last post by advancedsmite on March 08, 2023, 04:48:40 am »
Anthony "Walking Crow" Rodriguez has a public profile and family tree on ancestry.com. I think an ancestry.com account is needed to view.

Anthony Rodriguez Public Ancestry.com Profile: https://www.ancestry.com/profile/07e5290b-0006-0000-0000-000000000000?compareToTestId=349E1ADE-C53E-441C-9E8F-D8948BC3DB2A



He was interviewed by SDVoyager Magazine in 2018. See link and interview excerpt below.

4/5/2018: SDVoyager "Meet Anthony Rodriguez of Anthony J Rodriguez, Walking Crow~ Transformational Sacred Drum Medicine"
Direct Link: http://sdvoyager.com/interview/meet-anthony-rodriguez-anthony-j-rodriguez-walking-crow-transformational-sacred-drum-medicine-los-angeles-often-travel-cities-work/
Archive Link: https://web.archive.org/web/20230308041519/http://sdvoyager.com/interview/meet-anthony-rodriguez-anthony-j-rodriguez-walking-crow-transformational-sacred-drum-medicine-los-angeles-often-travel-cities-work/

Quote
Anthony, can you briefly walk us through your story – how you started and how you got to where you are today.

I was on the phone speaking to a man I sponsor as I am sober many years. My girlfriend at the time was listening to my side of the conversation and when I got off the phone she said: “you should become an energy healer.” My first thought was, “what is that?” As I had never heard the term before and she explained. I looked up energy healing school on google and found one not far from me. I went for an introductory class and was not impressed at all. Later my girlfriend sent me for a healing session with someone who I didn’t know was a graduate and a teacher at that same school. That healing session changed my life and the life of thousands and I am writing you right now because of it.

My experience was so profound that I signed up for classes received my certificate and have been working as a Transformational Energy Healing Practitioner ever since. The Shamanic side of what I do came as I moved in my life and different medicines presented themselves and I said yes to them i.e. the gathering and bundling of ceremonial sages and plants. Shamanic drumming, the making of Shamanic drums, the teaching of others how to change and manifest a new life, my own personal philosophies, various ceremonies before, during and after all my events. I’ve created a way to purge, heal and transform the emotional, physical and spiritual body based on the work I’ve done on myself.

I am an ordained minister, Blog Talk Radio and TV host, a seer, public speaker, intuitive, Medicine Man, Shaman, Healer, Mentor, Coach and Teacher. I work privately and in groups, I have created Men in Self-Care MISC and I am a motivational speaker at he the private a public and corporate levels. I am currently preparing to travel the United States to teach and help as many as possible to come out of their darkness Gu to their light Ru… GURU! Into the lightness of their being and who they are and who they have always been in the lightness of their soul.
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Research Needed / Walking Crow
« Last post by debbieredbear on March 07, 2023, 08:39:58 pm »
This guy has the usual nuage gobbledygook going on. I couldn't find any mention of tribal affiliation.  "Ceremonies" start at $250.00 USD.

https://www.sacreddrummedicine.com/

Quote
~ Walking Crow a Transformational Shamanic Healer, Life Coach/Mentor, Medicine Man, Drum Maker, Seer, Story Teller, Philosopher, Speaker, and Media Host whose emphasis is working with those who want to change their lives. His work in private practice includes workshops that teach others how to be in their bodies and come to peace with life’s traumas through the Chakra system and subtle energy of the emotional body.

 

As a Shamanic drummer ~ Walking Crow uses Shamanic Drumming to help others journey into other dimensions to find their spirit guides, spirit animals, gifts, healings or just to find answers in an organic way.

.

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Frauds / Re: Larry Lewis AKA Mashu White Feather
« Last post by Sparks on March 06, 2023, 08:32:12 pm »
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Non-Frauds / Re: TAAF - The Tribal Alliance Against Frauds
« Last post by Sparks on March 06, 2023, 08:26:30 pm »
This Facebook page posts material similar and even identical to what the NAFPS Forum is all about;
https://www.facebook.com/TAAF-The-Tribal-Alliance-Against-Frauds-346096246518240
[…]
They also have a website: https://nativeamericanfrauds.com/

New Facebook URL: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100067952795892

Website gone; there is a new one: https://tribalallianceagainstfrauds.org/
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Followers of fraud Albert Villoldo, Munay Ki faux Lakota, faux Aztec, faux Inca.

-------
https://sacredpathjaguar.com/
Women's Turtle Lodge
Sweat Lodge 
Drumming Circle w/ Teachings   
Munay-Ki: Despacho Ceremony Fire Ceremony Jaguar Out of the Tree
Energy Healing
Cacao Ceremony

Jaguar Clan Grandmothers
Sally Moon  Munay-Ki, Peruvian Indigenous Curandero Tradition
W!ld Moon Couture since 1995
Reflections of Your Soul   
Auspicious Journey Within
How To Heal Yourself 
Manifest Through Sacred Sex 
Kalpulli Ehecatl
Community of the Wind
Sacred Path of the Jaguar Tour Leader, since 1992

Miriam Garay Foronda 
Turtle Lodge: Water Pourer
Native Roots School, Ancestral, Folk & Herbalism School, Taos NM
Master Degree in "Transformation Education"

 Dr. Linda Stewart, EdD/LMFT Founder & Executive Director of Magnolia Women's Recovery Programs. Oakland, CA   
Munay-Ki, Peruvian Indigenous  Curandero Tradition 
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Research Needed / Re: Diane Little Eagle
« Last post by Sandy S on March 05, 2023, 12:25:26 am »
Alaska Professional license search https://www.commerce.alaska.gov/cbp/main/search/professional for Diane A. Little Eagle:

License #:
    ACUA25
Program:
    Acupuncture
Type:
    Acupuncture
Status:
    Active
Issue Date:
    06/15/1995
Effective Date:
    09/12/2022
Expiration Date:
    09/30/2024
Mailing Address:
    FLAGSTAFF, AZ, UNITED STATES
Licensure Basis Type:
    Credentials

*Primary Source verification: License information provided by the Alaska Division of Corporations, Business and Professional Licensing, per AS 08 and 12 AAC.
Owners
Owner Name   Entity Number
DIANE A. LITTLE EAGLE
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Frauds / Lewis Anthony Rath & Jerry Chris Van Dyke AKA Jerry Witten
« Last post by educatedindian on March 05, 2023, 12:09:16 am »
https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/visual-arts/2-wa-artists-plead-guilty-to-faking-native-american-heritage/?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=owned_echobox_f&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR0wpDtnf2LqdPBKOTyXZQrZe7g_vHvfyxozKuTfVjObh8jF3-Jp_jcNYYE#Echobox=1677817112

2 WA artists plead guilty to faking Native American heritage
March 2, 2023 at 6:06 pm Updated March 2, 2023 at 6:32 pm 

By Jerald Pierce
Two Western Washington artists have pleaded guilty after being charged for faking Native American heritage to sell art, despite neither having tribal enrollment or heritage.

In two separate cases, Lewis Anthony Rath, 53, of Maple Falls, and Jerry Chris Van Dyke (also known as Jerry Witten), 68, of Seattle, were charged, both in late 2021, with violations of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act, a statute aimed at ridding the Indigenous arts and crafts market of counterfeits. Both men are set to be sentenced May 17.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service investigations, which began in February 2019, found that Van Dyke, under the name Witten, had represented himself as a Nez Perce artist when selling his artworks, despite later admitting to USFWS agents that he was not a tribal member. Carved pendants said to be based on Aleut masks were among some of his faked works. On Wednesday, Van Dyke pleaded guilty to misrepresentation of Indian produced goods and products, which can include a sentence of up to one year in prison.

“We are glad to have reached a just result with Mr. Van Dyke’s misdemeanor plea,” said Vanessa Pai-Thompson, Van Dyke’s attorney, in a statement. “Mr. Van Dyke did not commit his offenses out of greed and I look forward to sharing more about him at sentencing.”

In 2021, Van Dyke told investigators that the idea to represent his work as Native American was Matthew Steinbrueck’s, the owner of Raven’s Nest Treasure. Van Dyke sold work under the name Witten at the Pike Place Market shop, The Associated Press reported at the time. When speaking with the AP, Steinbrueck denied the claim.

When reached for comment, Pai-Thompson declined to comment further on Van Dyke’s claims or Steinbrueck’s potential involvement.
Steinbrueck could not be immediately reached for comment.

Though the eventual sentencing will be up to U.S. District Judge Tana Lin, Van Dyke and the prosecutors are recommending no prison time under Van Dyke’s plea agreement.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, an investigation into Rath, which started in May 2019, found Rath to be falsely representing himself as a member of the San Carlos Apache Tribe when undercover agents purchased Rath’s artworks, including carved totem poles, masks and a necklace, from Raven’s Nest and Ye Olde Curiosity Shop. Agents executing a search warrant on Rath’s Whatcom County home and studio then found feathers from protected birds such as golden eagles and other migratory birds like hawks, jays and owls in Rath’s possession. The feathers have since been forfeited to the government.

Rath pleaded guilty to misrepresentation of Native American produced goods and products and unlawful possession of golden eagle parts, both punishable by up to one year in prison, as well as unlawful possession of migratory bird parts, which is punishable by up to six months in prison.

Reached for comment, Rath’s attorney Gregory Geist said his client is remorseful and open to doing “anything he can in the future to address the impact and harm he caused,” including participating in “a restorative justice process.”

Meridith Stanton, director of the U.S. Department of the Interior Indian Arts and Crafts Board, which is responsible for enforcing the Indian Arts and Crafts Act, said in a statement that the board is pleased to see Van Dyke and Rath “brought to justice for their roles in selling fake Indian artwork.” Stanton called cases like these critical to preserving the integrity of authentic Native American art, the economic livelihoods of Indigenous artists and the cultural heritage of the Nez Perce Tribe and San Carlos Apache Tribe.

In a statement, U.S. Attorney Nick Brown added that false claims like these can take sales away from artists working to support themselves utilizing skills and techniques handed down for generations.

“Stores and galleries need to partner with artists to ensure those artisans and craftsmen advertised as Indian artists truly have tribal status,” Brown said.
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