TWO Republicans running for Congressional seats last year offered
opinions on “legitimate rape” or God-approved conceptions during rape,
tainting their party with misogyny. Their candidacies tanked. Words
matter.
Having lost the votes of many women, Republicans now have the chance to
recover some trust. The Senate last week voted resoundingly to
reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act, the 1994 law that recognized
crimes like rape, domestic abuse and stalking as matters of human
rights.
But House Republicans, who are scheduled to take up the bill today and
vote on it Thursday, have objected to provisions that would enhance
protections for American Indians, undocumented immigrants and gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgender youth, among other vulnerable
populations.
Here in Minneapolis, a growing number of Native American women wear red
shawls to powwows to honor survivors of sexual violence. The shawls, a
traditional symbol of nurturing, flow toward the earth. The women seem
cloaked in blood. People hush. Everyone rises, not only in respect, for
we are jolted into personal memories and griefs. Men and children hold
hands, acknowledging the outward spiral of the violations women suffer.
The Justice Department reports that one in three Native women is raped
over her lifetime, while other sources report that many Native women are
too demoralized to report rape. Perhaps this is because federal
prosecutors decline to prosecute 67 percent of sexual abuse cases,
according to the Government Accountability Office. Further tearing at
the social fabric of communities, a Native woman battered by her
non-Native husband has no recourse for justice in tribal courts, even if
both live on reservation ground. More than 80 percent of sex crimes on
reservations are committed by non-Indian men, who are immune from
prosecution by tribal courts.
The Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center
says this gap in the law has attracted non-Indian habitual sexual
predators to tribal areas. Alexandra Pierce, author of a 2009 report on
sexual violence against Indian women in Minnesota, has found that there
rapes on upstate reservations increase during hunting season. A
non-Indian can drive up from the cities and be home in five hours. The
tribal police can’t arrest him.
To protect Native women, tribal authorities must be able to apprehend,
charge and try rapists — regardless of race. Tribal courts had such
jurisdiction until 1978, when the Supreme Court ruled that they did not
have inherent jurisdiction to try non-Indians without specific
authorization from Congress. The Senate bill would restore limited
jurisdiction over non-Indians suspected of perpetrating sex crimes, but
even this unnerves some officials. “You’ve got to have a jury that is a
reflection of society as a whole, and on an Indian reservation, it’s
going to be made up of Indians, right?” said Senator Charles E. Grassley
of Iowa, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee. “So the
non-Indian doesn’t get a fair trial.”
Leaving aside the fact that most Native defendants tried in the United
States face Indian-free juries, and disregarding the fulsome notion that
Native people can’t be impartial jurists, Mr. Grassley got his facts
wrong. Most reservations have substantial non-Indian populations, and
Native families are often mixed. The Senate version guarantees
non-Indians the right to effective counsel and trial by an impartial
jury.
Tribal judges know they must make impeccable decisions. They know that
they are being watched closely and must defend their hard-won
jurisdiction. Our courts and lawyers cherish every tool given by
Congress. Nobody wants to blow it by convicting a non-Indian without
overwhelming, unshakable evidence.
Since 1990, when Joseph R. Biden Jr., then a senator from Delaware,
drafted the original legislation, the Violence Against Women Act has
been parsed and pored over. During reauthorizations in 2000 and 2005,
language on date rape and orders of protection was added. With each
iteration, the act has become more effective, inclusive and powerful.
Without it, the idea that some rape is “legitimate” could easily have
been shrugged off by the electorate.
Some House Republicans maintain that Congress lacks the authority to
subject non-Indians to criminal trials in tribal court, even though a
Supreme Court opinion from 2004 suggests otherwise. Their version of the
bill, as put forward by the majority leader, Eric Cantor of Virginia,
would add further twists to the dead-end maze Native American women walk
when confronting sexual violence. John Dossett, general counsel for the
National Congress of American Indians,
said it would create “more off ramps for defendants by adding multiple
levels of removal and appeal, including the right to sue tribes.” A
compromise backed by two other Republicans, Darrell Issa of California
and Tom Cole of Oklahoma, is vastly preferable to the Cantor version. It
would offer a non-Indian defendant the right to request removal of his
case to a federal court if his rights were violated.
What seems like dry legislation can leave Native women at the mercy of
their predators or provide a slim margin of hope for justice. As a
Cheyenne proverb goes, a nation is not conquered until the hearts of its
women are on the ground.
If our hearts are on the ground, our country has failed us all. If we
are safe, our country is safer. When the women in red shawls dance, they
move with slow dignity, swaying gently, all ages, faces soft and eyes
determined. Others join them, shaking hands to honor what they know,
sharing it. We dance behind them and with them in the circle, often in
tears, because at every gathering the red shawls increase, and the
violence cuts deep.
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