|
His Meetings of Council
The Indian Council has a
province more important than that which our Municipal
Councils exercise. Its decisions as to disputes growing out
of real estate transactions, unless clearly wrong, have in
them the force of law.
The ordinary Council is a somewhat informal gathering
as regards a presiding officer or officers, and, also, in
respect of that essential feature of a quorum, for which similar
bodies among ourselves hold out so exactingly. The Chiefs of the
tribes, who, alone, are privileged to participate in
discussions, can scarcely be looked upon in the light of
presidents of the meeting; nor can there be discovered in the
privileges or duties of any one of them the functions of a
presiding officer.
The Chiefs of the
Mohawk and
Seneca, who sit on the
left of the house, initiate discussion on all questions. The
debating is then transferred to the opposite side of the house,
where are seated the Chiefs of the
Tuscarora,
Oneidas, and
Cayuga, and is carried on by these Chiefs. The Chiefs of the
Onondagas, who are called "Fire-Keepers" (of the origin of the
name "Fire-Keeper," I will treat further, anon) then speak to
the motion, or upon the measure, and, finally, decide
everything; and they are, in view of this power of finality of
decision with all questions, regarded as the most important
Chiefs among the confederated tribes. The decision of the
"Fire-Keepers" does not, by any means, always show concurrence
in what may have been the consensus of opinion expressed by
previous speakers, very frequently, indeed, embodying sentiments
directly opposite to the weight of the judgment with those
speakers. As illustrating, more pointedly, the arbitrary powers
committed to these Chiefs, they may import into the debate a
fresh and hitherto unbroached line of discussion, and, following
it, may argue from a quite novel standpoint, and formulate a
decision based upon some utterly capricious leaning of their
own. I have not been able to learn whether the decision of these
Chiefs, to be valid, requires to be established by their
unanimous voice, or simply by a majority of the body.
The reason or cogency of the system of debate followed
in the Indian Council has not seemed to me clearly demonstrable;
nor is the cause for the honor attaching to the Chiefs of the
Mohawks and Seneca, and of the Onondagas, respectively, of
commencing and closing discussion, very explicable. I believe,
however, that the principle of kinship subsisting between the
tribes, the Chiefs of which are thus singled out for these
duties, governs, in some way, the practice adopted; and am led,
also, to imagine that exceptional functions, in other matters as
well, vest in these Chiefs; and that they enjoy, in general,
precedence over the Chiefs of the other tribes.
The Chiefs in Council take cognizance of the internal
concerns, and control and administer, generally, the internal
affairs, of the community. There are often special and
extraordinary deliberations of the body, which involve
discussion upon points that transcend the operation of the
Indian Acts, and require the Government to be represented; and,
in these cases, the Indian Superintendent, whose presence is
necessary to confer validity on any measure passed, is the
presiding officer.
As mention is made here of the Superintendent, or, as
his title runs in full, the Visiting Superintendent and
Commissioner, it will be opportune now to define his powers, so
far as I understand them.
It may be said, in general, that he exercises
supervisory power over everything that concerns the well-being
and interests of the Indian. By the representations made by him
to the Government in his reports (and by those, of course, who
hold the like office in other Indian districts) has been
initiated nearly every law, or amendment to a law, which the
pages of the Indian Acts disclose.
He will often watch (though in his commission no
obligation, I believe, rests upon him to do this) the trial of
an Indian, where some one of the graver crimes is involved, that
he may, perchance, arrive at the impelling cause for its
perpetration. This may have had its origin, perhaps, in the
criminal's having over-indulged in drink, or in his having
resigned himself to some immoral bent; or it may have been
connected, generally, with some deluging of the community with
immorality. If, haply, the origin of the crime be traced, the
Superintendent embodies in his report a recommendation looking
to a change in the law, which shall tend to suppress and control
the evil. If there be indication that a particular order of
crime prevails, or that, unhappily, some new departure in its
melancholy category is being practiced, it will, again, be his
place to represent the situation to the Government, to the end
that a healthier state of things may be brought about. He is
authorized, in certain cases, to make advances on an individual
Indian's account, and, also, on the general account, where some
emergency affecting the entire tribe arises, such as a failure
of the crops, confronting the Indian with the serious, and, but
for this Governmental provision, insuperable, difficulty of
finding the outlay for seeding for the next season's operations.
It is customary for the Superintendent to attend
important examinations of the Indian schools, that he may have
light upon the pupils' progress, and may report accordingly.
Where an occurrence of unusual moment in the history of
any of the Churches takes place; the projecting, perhaps, of
some fresh spiritual campaign amongst the Indians; or one,
marking some specially auspicious event, he will often lend his
presence, with the view to enlightenment as to the spiritual
state of his charges.
I have already said, that through the agency of the
Superintendent, the Indian receives his interest-money, and it
may, perhaps, be interesting to detail the manner in which this
is usually drawn. The tribes are told off for this purpose, and,
I believe, certain other purposes, into a number of bands; and a
given day is set (or, perhaps, three or four days are assigned)
whereon the members of a particular band shall be privileged to
draw. If the drawing of the money be not marked by that
expedition which the plan is designed to secure, but rather
suggests that there are a number of stragglers yet to come
forward to exercise their right, the turn of another band comes,
and so on, the straggling ones of each band being treated with
last.
It is usual for the head of each family to draw for
himself and his domestic circle.
The present incumbent of the Superintendent's office is
a gentleman of fine parts, and one who has striven, during a
term of nearly twenty years, with tact and ability, to conserve
the interests of the Indian. Speaking of tact, the Indian
character exacts a large display of it from one whose relation
to him is such as that which the Superintendent occupies, his
overseer and, to a large extent, his mentor. There have been
outcries against his course in some matters, though these have
been indulged in only a small section; but the Indian chafes
under direction, and is, for the most part, a chronic grumbler;
and his discontent frequently finds expression in delegations to
the Government, which, though they may be planned with the
view of ventilating some grievance, are more generally conceived
of by him in the light of happy expedients for giving play to
his oratory, or for setting about to establish his pretensions
to eminence in that regard, in a somewhat exacting quarter; or,
mayhap, for conveying to the powers that be, by palpable
demonstration, the fact of his continued existence, and more, of
his continued dissatisfied existence.
But to return to the Council. Where complaint of
irregular dealing is preferred by either party to a transfer or
sale of real estate, it comes within the scope of the Chief's
powers to decree an equitable basis upon which such transfer or
sale shall henceforward be viewed, and carried out. The
jurisdiction of the Chiefs also ranges over such matters as the
considering of applications from members of the various tribes
for licensing the sale to whites of timber, stone, or other
valuable deposit, with which the property of such applicants may
be enriched; and they likewise treat with applications for
relief from members of the tribes, whom physical incapacity
debars from earning living, or who have been reduced to an
abject state of poverty and indigence; and have authority to
supplement the interest-annuities of such, should they see fit,
with suitable amounts.
The silent adjudging of a question is something
abhorrent to the genius of the Indian, and is in reality
unknown. Dishonoring thus the custom, he can grandly repudiate
the contemptuous epithet of "voting machine;" so unsparingly
directed against, and pitilessly fastening upon, certain ignoble
legislators among ourselves. The manner of proceeding that
obtained with the Ojibway was somewhat different from the
practice I have detailed, and I allude to it now, because the
tribe of the Delaware, who are now treated as an off-shoot of
the Oneidas, and are merged with their kin in the Six Nations,
belonged originally to the Ojibway. With them the decision was
come to according to the opinions expressed by the majority of
the speakers--a plan resolving itself into the system of a show
of hands (or a show of "tongues", which shall it be?) it having
been customary for all who proposed to pass upon a measure to
speak as well. The issue upheld by the greater number of hands
shown, naturally, as with us, succeeded. Where a measure, in the
progress of discussion, proved unpopular, it was dropped, an
arrangement which should convey a wise hint to certain bodies I
wot of.
It will be readily gathered from what has been said,
that the method of voting, in order to establish what is the
judgment of the greater number, does not prevail with the Indian
Councils.
This site
includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied . A Treatise of the Six Nation Indians
Six Nation Indians
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy
|
Six Nation Indians
|
|