International Spiritual Monument at Standing Rock
December 21-24, 2016
December 21-24, 2016
Respect-Inclusion-Complementarity-Self Determination
Noon of Iteohuitziltonal Nahui Acatl Xihuitl December 22, 2016
INCLUSION
When the United Nations passed General Assembly resolution 1514 in 1960, declaring “All peoples have the right of self determination”, one of the arguments put forward by the member states of the UN was to clothe the concept of territorial integrity of the states themselves as being protected under the same principle. In fact, section 6 of the same resolution GA1514 states:
“Any attempt aimed at the partial or total disruption of the national unity and the territorial integrity of a country is incompatible with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations.”
Nowhere is this more evident than by the blatant efforts by the anglophile bloc of government states (US-Canada-New Zealand-Australia) to block the full recognition of the Right of Self Determination in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The position of these government states is an attempt to place the right of self-determination of Indigenous Peoples as existing only within the parameters of domestic policy and legal systems, even though these same systems are products of colonization itself.
The political arguments on both sides of the issue are in conflict, not just because of the doctrines of power that gave birth to the concepts of dominion which define the states and the social relations of their member constituencies, but also because the framework for resolution of the issues within the UN system is incompetent to address the spirituality of the earth based territorial reality of the Indigenous Nations, and the system itself is incoherent according to the geographic sciences of modern times.
Emergence of the Fourth Principle
It is an incontrovertible fact that the transfer of territorial jurisdiction from Indigenous Nations authorities to dominion concepts of control and allegiance by the states is historically flawed and legally suspect. There are unquantifiable elements. The case of the Western Shoshone is contemporary evidence that this is not just history but reality in the context of the hemisphere of the Americas, yet there is a larger issue.
The social and geographic realities of the Indigenous Peoples as Nations continue to exist as a political anomaly in terms of the international legal system of the United Nations. Specifically, in this hemisphere of Abya Yala [the Americas] not only is this true in the face of centuries of colonization but also in terms of the options for relief from the crime.
Self definition being the precept of self determination, the three options of GA 1541 do not adequately describe the outcome of principles of self-determination which would define the Indigenous Peoples and our continuing relationship to our ancestral territories and surviving traditional societies.
With the proclamation that colonization was a violation of International Law by
the adoption of UN General Assembly resolution 1514 in 1960, one of the
criteria established to resolve the issue of violation of the Right of Self
Determination was called INTEGRATION into the settler state.
The process called for the colonized peoples of a non-self -governing
territory to participate in a plebiscite to express their willingness and CONSENT
to “INTEGRATE” and subsume their ancestral collective territorial rights and responsibilities
to the “metropolitan state” and render allegiance to the state as subjects,
nationals, or citizens.
The time has come to clarify that ever since first contact
in this hemisphere, the Original Nations have always considered the invading
immigrant settler state constituencies as fellow Human Beings, children of a
common Creator. We have always and still until the present moment, include them
in our shared global understanding of who WE are as Human Beings, beings that
are struggling to BE HUMAN, literally “Children of Earth”.
But much like Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. said to his friend Harry Belafonte when speaking of the efforts of the African American civil rights struggle to INTEGRATE into the US society, “I fear we are trying to integrate into a burning house”, we as Original Nations of Mother Earth must also clarify:
ALL PEOPLES should be INCLUDED with EQUALITY IN LAW into the global family of humanity, but WE DO NOT CONSENT to process of forced ASSIMILATION or of INTEGRATION that denies our collective INTERNATIONAL PERSONALITY as the Original Nations of the Great Turtle Island Abya Yala.
But much like Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. said to his friend Harry Belafonte when speaking of the efforts of the African American civil rights struggle to INTEGRATE into the US society, “I fear we are trying to integrate into a burning house”, we as Original Nations of Mother Earth must also clarify:
ALL PEOPLES should be INCLUDED with EQUALITY IN LAW into the global family of humanity, but WE DO NOT CONSENT to process of forced ASSIMILATION or of INTEGRATION that denies our collective INTERNATIONAL PERSONALITY as the Original Nations of the Great Turtle Island Abya Yala.
We do not consent to being integrated as ethnic groups or minority populations of the settler state systems of the United Nations.
Inclusion, not assimilation.
Self Determination, not integration.
Architectures of the States
and the
***********************
The Geography of Self
Determination
Tupac Enrique Acosta
When the United Nations passed General Assembly resolution 1514 in 1960, declaring “All peoples have the right of self determination”, one of the arguments put forward by the member states of the UN was to clothe the concept of territorial integrity of the states themselves as being protected under the same principle. In fact, section 6 of the same resolution GA1514 states:
“Any attempt aimed at the partial or total disruption of the national unity and the territorial integrity of a country is incompatible with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations.”
In essence, these two statements
from the seminal document that made colonization a crime for the first time in
international law established an inherent conflict in the UN processes that
now, half a century later, have come to a definitive point in terms of
historical resolution.
Nowhere is this more evident than by the blatant efforts by the anglophile bloc of government states (US-Canada-New Zealand-Australia) to block the full recognition of the Right of Self Determination in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The position of these government states is an attempt to place the right of self-determination of Indigenous Peoples as existing only within the parameters of domestic policy and legal systems, even though these same systems are products of colonization itself.
The political arguments on both sides of the issue are in conflict, not just because of the doctrines of power that gave birth to the concepts of dominion which define the states and the social relations of their member constituencies, but also because the framework for resolution of the issues within the UN system is incompetent to address the spirituality of the earth based territorial reality of the Indigenous Nations, and the system itself is incoherent according to the geographic sciences of modern times.
What is lacking is a mechanism to
define the issues in common terms, outside of the intellectual framework of
colonization and dominion. What is missing is a clarification of the concept of
territorial integrity, as a
dimension of ecological and social sustainability and not a bastard relic from
the intellectual Regime of Doctrines spawned by the Divine Right of Kings.
Emergence of the Fourth Principle
GA 1514 was followed by GA1541,
which specified principles that defined three options for the attainment of “a
full measure of self-government”, as the only contemplated political
trajectories at the time for relief
from colonization. These are:
(a)
Emergence as a sovereign independent State;
(b)
Free association with an independent state; or
(c)
Integration with an independent state.
It is an incontrovertible fact that the transfer of territorial jurisdiction from Indigenous Nations authorities to dominion concepts of control and allegiance by the states is historically flawed and legally suspect. There are unquantifiable elements. The case of the Western Shoshone is contemporary evidence that this is not just history but reality in the context of the hemisphere of the Americas, yet there is a larger issue.
The social and geographic realities of the Indigenous Peoples as Nations continue to exist as a political anomaly in terms of the international legal system of the United Nations. Specifically, in this hemisphere of Abya Yala [the Americas] not only is this true in the face of centuries of colonization but also in terms of the options for relief from the crime.
Self definition being the precept of self determination, the three options of GA 1541 do not adequately describe the outcome of principles of self-determination which would define the Indigenous Peoples and our continuing relationship to our ancestral territories and surviving traditional societies.
The Emergence of the Indigenous
Nations is a daily occurrence, one which is manifested in accord with natural
laws of reciprocity and harmony with the natural world, which includes our
fellow human beings. This ancient
tradition is the shared cultural infrastructure of our confederations of
families, clans, communities Pueblos and Nations. It could be characterized as
a State of Integrity, which is not independent but interdependent within the
network of ecosystems that describe our traditional homelands, sacred sites,
territories and nations.
Thus the Emergence of the Fourth Principle for decolonization: INTERDEPENDENCE, self-determination as an expression of community ecology and environmental
sustainability. It is a particular and universal principle that may serve as a
threshold concept to arrive at that ancient place once called the New World, if
only we could create and travel guided by maps of the geography of
self-determination.
Embassy
of Indigenous Peoples
802 N. 7th Street Phoenix, AZ 85006
802 N. 7th Street Phoenix, AZ 85006
c/o
TONATIERRA
P.O. Box
24009 Phoenix, AZ 85074
tonal@tonatierra.org
tonal@tonatierra.org
www.tonatierra.org
Peoples Protectorate of the Colorado River
Huehuehuetlapallan
World Water One
www.www.www
Peoples Protectorate of the Colorado River
Huehuehuetlapallan
World Water One
www.www.www
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