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File #: JC-08-09    Version: 1 Name: N/A
Type: Tri-Council / Joint Council Status: Passed
File created: 5/1/2009 In control: TRIBAL COUNCIL
On agenda: 5/11/2009 Final action: 5/11/2009
Enactment date: 5/11/2009 Enactment #: JC-08-09
Title: A JOINT COUNCIL RESOLUTION IN OPPOSITION TO STATE RECOGNITION OF CHEROKEE "TRIBES" AND "INDIANS" IN TENNESSEE
Sponsors: N/A
Indexes: Joint Council
Code sections: N/A - Not Applicable
Attachments: 1. JC-08-09
Title
A JOINT COUNCIL RESOLUTION IN OPPOSITION TO STATE RECOGNITION OF CHEROKEE "TRIBES" AND "INDIANS" IN TENNESSEE
Body
WHEREAS, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and the Cherokee Nation have exercised the sovereign rights of self-governance on behalf of the Cherokee People since time immemorial; and
WHEREAS, the Cherokee Nation and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians since time immemorial have exercised the sovereign rights of self-government on behalf of the Cherokee people: and
WHEREAS, the Cherokee Nation and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians are Federally- recognized Indian Nations with a historic and continual government-to­government relationship with the United States of America; and
WHEREAS, the Joint Council unites the Legislative Branches of government of the Cherokee Nation and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, representing approximately 294,000 Cherokee people throughout the United States of America: and
WHEREAS, the two Cherokee Tribal governments share a common history prior to forced removal in 1838. and then separate histories to the present. yet our common language, culture, and traditions have made the Cherokee Nation and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians distinct and unique Native people from other Indian Tribes and other people, as was declared by the Joint Council in Resolution No. 3­92. adopted on August 11, 1992 in Cherokee, North Carolina: and
WHEREAS, the Cherokee Nation has been aware of a growing number of non-Indian groups claiming to be Cherokee tribes or bands and that these groups have been organizing and attempting to gain federal recognition, this problem being acknowledged by the Joint Council in Resolution No. 008, adopted on October 3, 1988 in Cherokee, North Carolina; and
WHEREAS, the Department of the Interior through the Bureau of Indian Affairs' Branch of Acknowledgment and Research maintains the responsibility for addressing specific applications for Federal recognition and the Cherokee Nation and Eastern ...

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