WOMEN: Laws "Not Enough" to Tackle Violence Against Native Women > Truthout

Juana Majel Dixon


Laws "Not Enough"

to Tackle Violence Against

Native Women

by: Kanya D'Almeida, Inter Press Service | Report

Juana Majel Dixon, first vice president of the National Congress of American Indians, said earlier this year that, "Young women on reservations live their lives in anticipation of being raped…They talk about 'how I will survive my rape‚' as opposed to not thinking about it at all."

"We shouldn't have to live our lives that way," she added. 

But this is the harsh reality that a majority of all American Indian and Native Alaskan women face. 

According to the Indian Law Resource Center, one in three native women is raped in her lifetime, while one in six will be domestically abused by a husband, boyfriend or intimate partner. 

The National Sexual Violence Resource Center (NSVRC) estimates that the average annual rate of rape and sexual assault among American Indians is 3.5 times higher than for all races. 

Several studies, which rely on statistical data from the Bureau of Justice, indicate that Native American women experience the highest rate of violence of any ethnic or racial group in the United States. 

Furthermore, nearly 65 percent of American Indian women surveyed for the National Violence Against Women Survey (NVAWS) reported experiencing rape or physical violence. 

Although the high rates of violence in Indian Country have long been the concern of a handful of community organisations, a series of recent gestures by the U.S. federal government suggests that the crisis has become sufficiently dire to merit national attention. 

Addressing the press and the public in a conference call Thursday, Thomas Perrelli, associate attorney general with the Department Of Justice, said that the White House and its partners are engaged in consultations with tribes across the country about how best to protect Native women from violence. 

He added that domestic violence in particular has reached "epidemic" rates in many Indian communities, and stressed the need for swift action. 

Tribal leaders across the country have for decades lamented the limitations of existing legal structures for prosecuting perpetrators of both physical and sexual abuse, as well as stemming the escalating violence on reservations. 

Under current law, tribal governments lack the necessary authority to impose punitive measures against perpetrators; in fact, tribal courts can only sentence Indian offenders to one year in prison. 

The landmark Tribal Law and Order Act, which celebrates its one year anniversary later this month, extended possible sentencing of offenders from one to three years, but failed to grant tribal governments the authority to put non-Indians behind bars – even if the men in question live on the reservation, are part of the community or are married to tribal people. 

Given that 50 percent of Native women have non-Native husbands, according to Kimberly Teehee, White House senior policy adviser for Native American Affairs, these limitations pose huge challenges for tribal governments. 

The legislation currently before Congress will address some of the most gaping legal holes in the justice system, including recognising tribes' power to exercise criminal jurisdiction over domestic violence cases regardless of whether the offender is Indian or non- Indian and allowing for harsher sentencing for severe acts of violence such as spousal intimidation, strangling or suffocating. 

"The highly complex legal framework in Indian Country - often referred to as a 'jurisdictional maze' - is the key factor creating and perpetuating the disproportionate violence against Indian women," Katy Jackson, a staff attorney at the National Congress on American Indians (NCAI), told IPS. 

"[Therefore] the DOJ's proposals to restore tribal authority to hold on-reservation perpetrators - both Indian and non-Indian - accountable for these heinous crimes are by far the most critical piece of the puzzle at this point in time," she added. 

Judicial changes alone, however, will not be sufficient to tackle the problem. Many experts see the escalating violence as a diffuse and far-reaching plague that must be tackled at various different levels. 

"The judicial system is only one component of this crisis and can only help those people who choose to participate in the criminal justice system, which many women do not want to do," Monika Johnson Hostler, president of the National Alliance to End Sexual Violence, told IPS. 

"So while judicial strides are necessary, we must remember that prevention is the only way to end the actual cycle of violence," she added. 

Jackson added that resources for treatment were also sorely needed. 

"Too often, Native victims find themselves going without access to critical, lifesaving services and treatment programs that are more easily acceptable to other victims of domestic violence and sexual assault," she told IPS. 

"That is why the NCAI Task Force on Violence Against Women continues to advocate for increased funding to support tribal coalitions and victim services programmes on tribal lands," she said. 

Another obstacle to justice for Native women is the fact that violence in Indian Country is stripped of its historical background and presented in isolation of its socio-political context, which is perhaps part of the reason why the crisis has received so little attention in the mainstream. 

"Colonisation is one of the root causes of violence against Native women," Lucy Simpson, executive director of the National Indigenous Women's Resource Center, told IPS. 

'In order to effectively respond to and prevent such violence, we need to address colonisation and its impacts. We need to restore women to their traditional role as sacred within our communities by turning to Native cultures and traditions that already recognise this." 

"We also need to address the poverty and lack of employment and infrastructure in Indian country that prevents adequate responses when violence occurs," Simpson added. 

"We honour the voices and perspectives of American Indian and Alaska Native leaders who speak out about the devastating and lasting effects of colonisation on American Indian and Alaska Native communities," Anna Marjavi, a project manager at Futures Without Violence, told IPS. 

"Many domestic violence and sexual assault advocates who work in Indian Country also believe that violence against Native women is rooted in the colonisation of tribal nations when an unnatural worldview brought a level of violence not seen before by tribal peoples. The path of non-violence and respect for women is the natural life way of indigenous people," she added. 

Furthermore, while punitive actions generally only impact individual survivors and offenders, broader measures such as education and awareness programmes could reach whole communities. 

"Not just colonialism and institutionalised racism, but other factors such as the boarding of Native American school children and adopting them en masse out of the own culture perpetuates this violence," Hostler told IPS. 

"Now more than ever people need to understand that words matter, that media matters, that the method of reporting on this issue matters, if society is really going to change its perceptions of women," she added. 

 

Showing 12 comments

  • Scribe74 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Why must women grow up every generation and hear about rape, experience it, fear it? Why can't education begin in the schools about this issue as opposed to courses on who crossed what alps hundreds of years ago?

    Why can't men admit their own impotence in the societies they live in, their anger, their frustration, deal with it instead of doing the most cowardly thing they can do is to hurt something so much weaker than themselves physically. 

    Why didn't our government address this issue long ago? Where are men who DEFEND women, feel it an honorable thing to do? Do we ever hear our politicians talking about protecting women and children? Decrying publically the abuse to women? Calling upon the churches to teach men right behavior?

    We can blame the heightened vulgarity in the movies, Tv,online
    where boy meets girl, next scene they're 'getting it on' as the vernacular goes today.

    How grateful I am I was raised where there were chaperones everywhere, few had cars, and dating and friendship stressed before getting close. In the long run women think they're 'liberated' jumping in the sack everytime a man puts the pressure on? I've met many. You learn the scarring of your soul and emotions for you are different then a man in your spirit.

    The unreal world of media shows men they can get sex whenever they want it, and then they learn reality and when they don't get what they want they get angry and hurt a sensitive soul who can't fight back.

    These sexual attacks create a scarring in the spirit that affects women the rest of their lives. Punishment should be far more severe than 1 year in jail. My heart cries when I hear of the rapes in Somalia, Haiti, here, everywhere. How cowardly. How sick. How utterly sad, where are the churches to speak out? Our officials?

    I swear, with the gov't shutting down Planned Parent Hood Centers, funding for low income women, accusing them of murder if they miscarriage because of ingesting a drug for , it would almost appear there is innate hatred that men have for women inborn. Or, is it the soft side in themselves they hate more? As a race will we ever become honorable and high-minded?

  • travelergtoo 3 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    This is what sometimes happens when everything is taken away from a man and he has no self respect. The Europeans murdered the Indians and stole their land. The remaining Indians were discriminated against.

  • PhatGirl7 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    Bite me.

  • keeperofthefire 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    phatgirlplease read "bury my heart at woundedknee and after you wipe your tears away,you will understand what this evil nation did to a much superiative,caring of their woman&children while living in harmony with grandmother's nature!!! what native men do to their familys,the females in their lives and their children horrible and without excuses,yet unseen to outsiders,these males,in context to what our government and in many cases u.s. citizens have done to natives, these men are no longer human biengs with a spirit or soul!!! if you compare these natives to any of the poor, downtrodden males living in the white, black, brown, yellow ghettos of america,you will find the same problems for men&wemon living there!!!time to rise up and take down our evil,heartless,corrupt,murderous gov. before it becomes unlivible for all of us!!!!!! hokahey/it is a goog time to live

  • Ttobbar 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    This story doesn't mention the role of alchol in these crimes. When they get drunk, Indian men get beat up and robbed and the women get raped.

     

  • Frostfire 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Another wonderful program, brought by the Europeans. :)

     

  • Elaine Mack 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    I think that these men who marry Native women do so because they see these women as vulnerable, and it makes the men feel powerful to have control over them. It's just like men who marry foreign women, bring their new wives to their country, then abuse them. Its the mark of a weak man. I don't know how laws will really protect Native women when they have no means of defending themselves in their own homes.
  • Jackwillmore2003 5 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    As is not untypical of writers (female) of these types of stories and subject matter it is full of holes and unanswered questions that it could only have been written by a woman. Firstly 65% experience physical violence ? I think men will tell you that they experience 100% over their lifetimes at one time or another. Half of spouses are non-native ? Are they white ? black ? hispanic ?Asian ? Why not answer this question and shed some light on why this would make sexual assault more prevalent ? There are no jail sentences longer than a year for the crime of rape ? Really ? When did legislators or village elders decide that was a punishment that fit the crime ? There are so many non-sequestors and non-supported postulations in this article that it is nearly meaningless and this one of at least a half dozen per year that make their way through TruthOut. I'm dissapointed that editors don't draw a line somewhere regarding responsible writing.

  • Black Wolf 4 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    You need to work on your reading comprehension and retention skills; go back and read it again. The figure of 1 in 3 rapes for Indian women comes from surveys of self-reporting native women. There is no comparison of violence against men because that is not the topic, and it is irrelevant in this context. Ethnic/racial makeup of non-Indian spouses is not an issue here; the issue is that Indian law and order has no jurisdiction over non-Indian spouses. The word is non-sequiters, and it is irrelevant in this context as well. There are no non-supported postulations in the article if you read what it says accurately and completely. Nor is the article irresponsible: in fact, it is long overdue, and provides some small glimpse of forgotten cultures and peoples, victims of conquest, continued abuse by government, and virtual total ignorance and lack of concern from the ruling culture and people. Few non-Indians have any clue about real life on the rez, nor do they care.

  • uptownmanhat 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Sorry Black Wolf, but I really hardly, if ever hear anything about the rez. Sometimes I hear some beef about the native Americans are making too much gambling profits, or the likes. But, nothing other than items of this caliber ever pops up in the news, MSM or otherwise. Hate to say it, but it appears that the people living on reservations are treated like some kind of a sect, instead of the value of the people they really are!!! And to think, those same non caring oblivious people of this country have used American Indian names for their state names, their car brands, commercial products, and many, many other labels. And not even caring (or sometime even knowing) about the source, description, or meaning of such. Goes along with non-retentive comprehension of historical facts and understanding them. I Guess.

  • C Hale 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    It is a little-known fact that rape is common in black and Hispanic American homes, both male and female rape of youngsters by siblings and fathers. Cause? Perhaps rage due to supression.

  • Jackwillmore2003 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    You're basically correct, and I have gone back and reread the article. I have driven through and spent short term interactions in the American southwest and was alway deeply offended by the lack of support afforded the Indian communities there. I do not look down on nor blame any woman for being a victim of rape or assault or of being in fear of it. I wrote my response in haste without proof reading it. There are many errors I regret. My reaction was that of a person who has read similar articles on this website that were written by women about womens issues and many of them were not well vetted or had major logical holes in them. The thing that rankles me is when the point of view of the author takes on a Thelma and Louise perspective. Like most men I resent being grouped as the one guilty (by gender) in such stories. for I have spent a lifetime abhoring social injustice. I also agree with you that I was reading way too much into it. Your points are fairly and honorably made and I wish to retract my earlier comments. jack willmore