Mohawk Nations News
Sept. 15, 2007
MNN.
Their backs were against the wall, the two youth defended themselves. The youth had gone into the house, one going one way and the other in another direction. The older Indigenous boy caught one of the non-native men beating his younger brother.
The OPPolice had stopped construction that morning at
It is worth noting that the OPPolice were there throughout the incident “to maintain the peace”. They had not verified that all workers had left or that the area was secure.
They stood by and watched the non-native men go into the house with clubs. They did not help the two Indigenous youths who were being attacked inside. The OPP admitted, “We were caught off guard”. [Or they were using their “discretion” not to intervene!]
Apparently two Indigenous youth had entered the “empty” building and surprised the non-natives who were inside. It was the Gualtieri brothers, Sam and Joe, and their three nephews, of
numbers, strength and weight on their side, while the kids were
fighting for their lives.
The Gualtieris said they were just checking on the “home” which was behind the Six Nations blockade. They thought they were merely “protecting each other” from the boys.
Then the Gualtieri stated that they thought the two boys invited them “to have a fight!” “When you enter into a fight willingly, it isn’t an assault, is it?” [What about when a fight is provoked?]
The blockade is along the
Corporate media reported that 52-year old Sam Gualtieri was seriously injured. He was in the nearby Hagersville county hospital and shipped to
One of the Confederacy Royaner [Chiefs] immediately distanced himself from the defenders of the land. He issued a statement condemning the boys and apologizing to the Gualtieri family. The Royaner condemned all defenders by saying “they’re on their own”. He said they will support “peaceful actions” only. His apology for an act of self-defense by the Indigenous boys shows how even our own members can be ensnared by bad press that presumes that we are guilty before being proven innocent. Even we can get sucked in by the mythology that blames us for all violence.
According to the Two Row Wampum Agreement between independent nations, the Confederacy has the responsibility to investigate the incident before commenting on it. If the five non-natives are at fault, they must be turned over to the colonial authorities to be dealt with. If the Indigenous youth have any culpability, the Confederacy and its people will deal with it.
On the other hand, if any member of the Confederacy wipes their hands of responsibility for its people and turns them over to the colonial authorities, then the Royaner have violated wampum 58. Those indigenous people who follow foreign laws have alienated themselves from their nation. They forfeit their title and the gustowi falls from their brow. The office shall always remain with the people.
Should the Royaner choose to submit themselves or their people to foreign laws, they are no longer in but out of the nation. Persons of their class shall be called, “they-have-alienated-themselves”. They shall forfeit all birthrights and claims of the Confederacy and to the territory.
These sanctions on the “Royaner” are not imposed without warning. When the facts of the situation are known then someone must take the time to warn the “Royaner” of their responsibilities. The clan mothers have the duty to correct
any erring Royaner who deviate from their responsibilities according to the Kaianereh’kowa/Great Law of Peace. If the Royaner don’t support the youth or the people, then the women have to step in.
On-going talks have put development at a standstill. These on-native developers are intruders, instigators, trespassers and law breakers. Mayor Marie Trainor of
The Indigenous youth had a right to question these men who were trespassing. It looked like the Galtieri family were trying to make a political statement. It ended with our boys getting ambushed inside the house and the boys acting in self-defense as they should.
According to the Kaianerehkowa, each indigenous person has the duty to protect the land. If they could have, these boys could have called for our own authorities to come to the site. The indigenous people with the chiefs could have gone there to remove these intruders and the youth could have avoided being ambushed.
Kahentinetha Horn
MNN Mohawk Nation News