The
curriculum vitae of Nan Marie Greer, Ph.D. at
eight pages long, is as long your arm (or more probably, your legs). It seems there’s
nothing she can’t do, and she does it all extremely well. Currently, an
adjunct lecturer at the University of Redlands in
California, Greer teaches cultural and environmental anthropology in addition
to indigenous land rights.
Nan reached out to me and my husband
a few years back, introducing herself. She wanted help exploring the indigenous
rights of the Jewish people, which she felt needed to be—deserved to
be—enshrined in law. Impressed with her sincerity and her knowledge, we
promised to do whatever we could to help her.
This two-part interview lays out Nan
Greer’s vision for the people of Israel. That vision points to a resolution to territorial disputes between Arabs and Jews, the protection of both Jewish and Arab rights, and the rights of indigenous peoples everywhere. Of course it all sounds far-fetched until you
read what Nan Greer has to say. And then it all makes perfect sense.
Judean
Rose: What does it mean to be an indigenous people? Are the Jews an indigenous
people?
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Dr. Nan Marie Greer, Ph.D. |
Nan Greer: The ILO Convention 169
and the U.N. working definition are the most utilized and notable documents referring to
indigenous people, with the U.N.D.R.I.P.
established to identify rights of indigenous people under international law.
ILO Convention 169, finalized in 1989 has not been revised to contain the U.N.
definition of indigenous, listed on their websites and formal documents. However, ILO Convention 169 states: “Article
1: This convention applies to…”, it DOES NOT state, this convention “DEFINES”
indigenous.
All but one organization
of the U.N. maintains the definition developed by Martinez Cobo
as published in U.N. documents and websites. UNESCO is NOT
consistent with other U.N. organizations, and fails to utilize the U.N. working
definition of indigenous.
For the purposes of
international litigation, a working definition of indigenous people was
established and published in U.N. policy documents and websites deriving from
José Martinez Cobo’s definition:
1)
Self-identification
as indigenous people at the individual level and accepted by the community as
their member;
2)
Historical
continuity with pre-colonial and/or pre-settler societies;
3)
Strong link to
territories and surrounding natural resources;
4)
Distinct social,
economic, or political systems;
5)
Distinct
language, culture, and beliefs;
6)
Form non-dominant
groups of society; and,
7)
Resolve to
maintain and reproduce their ancestral environments and systems as distinct
communities.
Critical to this
definition is the identification of indigenous people having a language and
belief system distinct to the area claimed in its ancestral land rights, and
not generalizable to other areas, such as Arab-Muslim groups claiming lands in
multiple nation-states throughout the Middle East.
Judean
Rose: Why is it important for Jews to be accepted as an indigenous people? What
are the implications of being indigenous to Israel?
Nan Greer: Currently,
the observer state of Palestine has introduced several measures that are
replicas of specific articles of rights in the UNDRIP However, they have never
signed the UNDRIP, nor attempted to use the UN definition of indigenous in
international circles - wisely so, as they fall outside the bounds of this
critical, widely-used, and internationally recognized definition.
While the P.A. has not
pushed for legal recognition of its Arab-Muslim people as indigenous, they have
been awarded approximately U$1.8 billion for legal fees directed at attacking
Israel in international and national courts. If both Israel and the
international community allow populations of merely “long-standing presence” to
declare themselves indigenous, while not having a language, culture, or
religion distinct to the geographical locale/nation-state, it allows them to
jeopardize indigeneity everywhere. This
ultimately leads to the justification of colonial domination of indigenous
people throughout the world - a risk that is simply not acceptable to the U.N.
and the international community.
As such, the opportunity
exists for Israel to protect the indigenous Jews, and to delineate and protect
communities of long-standing presence in a manner not recognized under current
colonial and political formations. Indeed, much of the Arab-Muslim population
has been colonized by highly politicized P.A. structures aimed at the
elimination of the Jewish indigenous nation, using the Arab population, as it
were, in a political war - threatening children utilized as soldiers and human
shields in war, impoverishing families, and promoting lifestyles of terror. Under
international law, Druze, Bedouin, and other Arab groups may not be considered
indigenous as they do not have a language and religious beliefs distinct to
Israel. However, they deserve a humanitarian approach outside the bounds of
corruption of the current P.A. and Gaza political arrangement. Ultimately,
adjudicating each land dispute and presence claim of a given group ought to
occur in the legal system of the nation state, not outside of the country of
Israel.
Judean
Rose: Tell us about your work with other indigenous peoples.
Nan Greer: I have worked
with the Mayangna and Miskitú of Central America for over 25 years now - and I
continue to work with them to this day. Initially, I worked with these groups
on a consultation for writing a land law that would help them to protect their
lands (Law 445, Nicaragua),
which defined the indigenous right to land, outlined a procedure for making a
traditional land claim, and determined a phase of normalization of land tenure
in the indigenous autonomous regions of the North Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAN)
and South Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAS).
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Mayangna Leaders meet with children from Orphanage - Nicaragua |
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Data Analysis Awas Tingni - preparation for Court land defense, Mayangna |
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Mapping Matumbak, Mayangna |
After this, we began
with documenting the right to land amid the BOSAWAS Biosphere Reserve, for the purpose of assisting the indigenous to
protect their lands, and also to help protect the rainforest (given a 18% rate
of annual cutting by illegal colonists, compared to a -1% of forest cutting by
indigenous). This work went on for
approximately 18 years, and as a result, all 9 territories of the Mayangna
Nation now have legal title to their lands, in addition to four Miskitú
territories. Other groups assisted by others, and some working on their own,
were also titled, with some remaining pending. As such, my task has now turned
to dealing with illegal colonists on indigenous lands, whereby lands are
inalienable to indigenous peoples (not able to be sold, under national law 445). Some indigenous territories have chosen to
allow illegal colonists to remain (those who do not destroy the forest), while
forcing others to leave - per Nicaraguan law 445, and 28).
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Nan Greer with Brooklin Rivera - head indigenous representative Nicaragua; president YATAMA; Miskitu |
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Nan Greer & Noe Coleman - Current Nicaragua Indigenous Representative to MesoAmerican Group of Indigenous; leader, Matumbak - Mayangna |
For approximately 5
years, I worked directly with Native Hawaiians and other ethnic groups on the
islands of Hawai`i Nei, as they struggled to defend their right to farm lands
where they grew taro/kalo (Colocasia esculenta) - the Hawaiian “staff of life” which is used in
making poi. The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) had
been purchasing wetland areas used by traditional farmers as a method of protecting
endangered wetland birds. However, in so doing, USFWS often utilized methods
that were inconsistent with the local ecology, even threatening the wetland
bird populations themselves. As such, I worked with farmers to document the
wetland waterbird populations, in addition to tracking another 150
environmental variables with each farmer for over a period of a year and a half
(the average growth period of taro).
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Exchange between Native Hawaiian elder and Noe Coleman |
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Noe Coleman meets with students and faculty of Kauai Community College, Nan Greer, right |
Taro Farmers: Alternative Wetlands Management
Fascinatingly, we found
taro farmers provided habitat to more endangered wetland birds per acre than
those found on the USFWS wetland refuge systems (USFWS data was acquired under
the Freedom of Information Act). Consecutively, we collectively examined the
economic viability of farming taro as an economically sustainable activity in
Hawai`i, and as an alternative to USFWS management of wetland areas, found to
be areas inhabited by Native Hawaiians going back to approximately 600 A.D.
After moving to
California in 2014, I have worked with elders of a group of Cahuilla-Serrano in the state of California. This work focused more on
the preservation of ethnoecological knowledge, in addition to protecting
religious and spiritual connections to land.
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Exchange between Leader Noe Coleman and Elder of Morongo Band of Mission Indians-Cahuilla-Serrano |
Judean
Rose: What steps have you taken toward having the Jewish people declared the
indigenous people of Israel?
Nan Greer: Actually, a
very unusual series of events has occurred in Israel this summer (2018). The
Basic Law - Nation-State Law was signed and approved by Knesset. Combining the
Declaration of the Nation of Israel with this recent Nation-State Law, we can
see demonstratively, that the Jewish people have self-declared their status
under state laws, as an indigenous people.
Israel has declared its
Jewish population as indigenous to the Nation of Israel and to the world
through two critical documents:
1) The Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel (Official Gazette: No. 1; Tel Aviv, 5 Iyar 5708, 14.5 1948), stating: “The Land of Israel was the birthplace of the Jewish people. Here their spiritual, religious and political identity was shaped. Here they first attained statehood, created cultural values of national and universal significance…”
2) Basic Law-Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People.
“1-Basic principles:
A. The land of Israel is the historical homeland of the Jewish people, in which the State of Israel was established.
B. The State of Israel is the national home of the Jewish people, in which it fulfills its natural, cultural, religious and historical right to self-determination.
C. The right to exercise national self-determination in the State of Israel is unique to the Jewish people.”
Israel has thus issued
laws recognizing Jewish indigeneity. While not possessing the word “indigenous”
in the Hebrew language, Israel has utilized all terminology under international
law to declare itself indigenous to its homelands, the Nation-State of Israel. Through
this self-declaration, Israel protects its indigenous population nationally as
a distinct people. Israel also protects itself as an indigenous nation under
the accepted working definition of the United Nations.
Signing UNDRIP
Israel is advised now to
sign the U.N. Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), with
reservations that under sovereignty, indigenous people do not lose their
international indigenous status, where sovereignty represents the pinnacle goal
of indigenous human rights.
The benefits of such a
declaration include the protection of the Jewish people as indigenous under
international law, in perpetuity, in addition to the permanent protection of
their lands and rights to those ancestral lands, as inalienable.
Consistent with
historical approaches, it is possible that Arab-Muslim populations in Israel
may attempt to thwart their declaration as an indigenous people in
international circles. Though numerous resolutions have passed the U.N. General
Assembly to Israel’s detriment, a self-declaration by Israel of Jews as
indigenous is paramount to their protection. Considering the above-mentioned
legislation declaring their indigeneity, and the great wealth of evidence
supporting this Jewish indigenous status, to deny the Jewish ethno-religious
group recognition in international circles, would be to go against U.N. laws
and policy.
Additionally, the
declaration of Jews as indigenous in no way denies the right of other ethnic
groups to their human rights, as such a declaration is without prejudice to
other cultural groups.
An Autochthonous Solution
By signing the UNDRIP
with reservations, the opportunity exists to litigate indigenous rights of Jews
to their homeland, sacred sites, and the upholding of their cultural
traditions. Despite sovereignty, by signing the UNDRIP with reservations, Israel
can further decisions and resolutions by the people of the land, for the land
and its people - an autochthonous solution, without the control and colonial
domination of other nation-states, politics, or international governance from
outside its borders - respecting and strengthening Israeli sovereignty, and
human rights.
With respect to recent
decisions by UNESCO to deny Jewish right to its sacred and historical sites,
Israel as a self-declared indigenous nation has the opportunity to request
immediate redress and revocation of these malicious political motions by the
U.N., demanding the respect of Jews to their own sacred sites and lands, as
indigenous people. Israel is within its rights to demand UNESCO resolve their
malicious discrimination, libel, slander, religious discrimination and
hostility. Current antisemitic, anti-historic resolutions that their sacred
sites are not theirs, changing their historical names and authoritative
management, are contrary to laws afforded to indigenous people under the U.N.
itself.
(Next
week, part two of this two-part series.)
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