As Ryan Bellerose, a member of the Métis nation in Canada, wrote, “The Palestinians are not like us. Their fight is not our fight. We natives believe in bringing about change peacefully, and we refuse to be affiliated with anyone who engages in violence targeting civilians. I cannot remain silent and allow the Palestinians to gain credibility at our expense by claiming commonality with us. I cannot stand by while they trivialize our plight by tying it to theirs, which is largely self-inflicted. Our population of over 65 million was violently reduced to a mere 10 million, a slaughter unprecedented in human history. To compare that in whatever way to the Palestinians’ story is deeply offensive to me. The Palestinians did lose the land they claim is theirs, but they were repeatedly given the opportunity to build their state on it and to partner with the Jews — and they persistently refused peace overtures and chose war. We were never given that chance. We never made that choice.”

Chief
Anne Richardson of the Rappahannock Tribe in Virginia and Kathy
Cummings-Dickinson, head of the Lumbee tribes in North Carolina
Ryan Bellerose is far from the only Native American to feel this way. Santos Hawk Blood, a full blooded Native American who is an activist for Native American land and fishing rights, similarly proclaimed, “One indigenous people should support another indigenous people. I come from the same Apaches as Cochese and Geronimo, the Chiricahua people from Southern Arizona. Like all Apaches, we were warriors. When more passive Indians were attacked by marauding groups, we fought for them. It is a part of Apache culture to stand up for oppressed people and to respect all people who cherish their ancestral land. I admire the people who take a stand, and that’s why I admire the people of Israel: They’re people who stand up to defend their homeland. We are not with the Palestinian people.” His mother also declared, “The Jews are people like us. They have been forced from their land, forced to move from place to place. They have suffered like us and have been attacked wherever they go.”
Chief Anne Richardson of the Rappahannock Tribe in Virginia and Kathy Cummings-Dickinson, head of the Lumbee tribes in North Carolina, are supporters of the State of Israel as well. When the two female chiefs visited Israel in 2009, they declared, “We are here to deliver a message to the residents of Israel: Stand firm and united against the threats and pressure. We want to encourage Israel and the newly elected Knesset not to give in to those who try to pressure them to give up parts of the homeland. Surrender to this pressure is not a recipe for peace, but rather war. We stand beside you.” As Native Americans, they understand more than anyone else the consequences of attempting to give up land for peace.
Indeed,
the Jewish people, who have always sympathized with the oppressed, have
a history of assisting the Native Americans in their just struggle for
civil and human rights. In 1973, over 500 Native American
activists were jailed after battling with American forces at Wounded
Knee. Over 80 percent of the lawyers assisting these Native American
activists were Jewish. Israel has also formed a close relationship with
the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana. Israel assists them with agriculture
and trade, and the Coushatta have shown their appreciation by
recognizing May 14th, Israel’s Independence Day, as a national Coushatta
holiday. The Coushatta nation, like many other Native Americans, feel
a special bond with the Jewish people due to the fact that both peoples
have endured centuries of persecution, relocation and prejudice, while
holding on to a strong commitment to their ancestral homeland.

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