![]() The other dominant theme of the end-of-march rally Saturday was to focus on what some believe is the wrongful conviction and sentencing of Julius Jones who now sits on death row. Despite his promises and the rule of law, he has had no respect for either.” Justice for Julius But when he says what’s best for us, he means what’s best for him and those like him. “He says he wants what’s best for all 4 million Oklahomans. criticized Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt for working against the McGirt decision saying that he had “at every turn worked to destroy the sovereignty of our nations.” ![]() But we have always been sovereign with our own tradition, culture, and governments.”Īmy E. “You believe your Supreme Court restored our sovereignty. “On July 9, 2020, your Supreme Court affirmed for the purposes of the Major Crimes Act that land reserved for the Creek Nation since the 19th century, remains Indian country,” said Amy E. We recognize that long before the illegal settling of this state and of this land, this was the traditional home of the Caddo nation which taught affiliated tribes.” “Stolen land”Īmy E, who is Muscogee and Seminole, reminded those gathered on the State Capitol grounds that they were “standing on stolen land.”Īmy E criticized Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt for his opposition to the Supreme Court McGirt ruling at the March for Our Rights and rally. “Today, from where we stand, we recognize the land of Kiowa Kickapoo, Comanche, Osage, and Wichita. “In addition, we honor the 60 tribes who were relocated during the genocidal disruptions at the removal era, including but not limited to the nations of Sac and Fox, Seminole, Cherokee, as well as Delaware, Osage, Ponca, Chickasaw, and Pawnee,” said Wilson-Clements. The Apache, Arapaho, Caddo, Comanche, Kiowa, Osage, and Wichita were pointed to in Wilson-Clements’ speech as being the indigenous peoples of what is now the State of Oklahoma. Kendra Wilson-Clements speaks as other Native American speakers stand in support of recognizing the land rights of the tribes. Wilson-Clements punctuated her speech with “#landbackacknowledgement” calling for the current government to acknowledge the “theft of lands” throughout Oklahoman’s history. We are walking miracles and gifts to this land. We are stepping through the yesterday into today with resilience, relevance, passion, and purpose. “We are survivors of a system designed to chew us up and erase us out. “Do not ever tell us to pull ourselves up by the bootstraps as we are survivors and direct descendants of genocide, slavery, segregation, murder, violence, suppression, and oppression.” Do not tell us to move on,” said Kendra Wilson-Clements. Oklahoma and Governor Kevin Stitt’s negative reaction to it has supercharged the debate about tribal sovereignty and dominated the first part of the speaker line-up for the rally. The highly unique political environment in Oklahoma caused by the Supreme Court decision in McGirt vs. 23rd, the crowd dwindled under the afternoon heat as speakers came to comment on the day and the issues. 23rd and Lincoln focused primarily on the fundamental rights of Black people and Native Americans in Oklahoma. What did pass were bills that would require a fiscal impact statement to be part of each initiative petition and to allow for recounts of the votes which had not been allowed before.Īctions of other state legislatures were also cited for their aggressive legislation to make voting more difficult by closing voting locations and other restrictions.īut, speakers at the OKC end-of-march rally on the north side of the Oklahoma Capitol at N.E. Even though those have not yet passed they are promised again in next year’s legislature. But, the march was to pressure Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act.Īt the beginning and end of the Oklahoma City march, the focus was on some issues about voting suppression such as the effort in this year’s legislature to shorten the time initiative petitions are given to collect signatures thus making the effort harder. ![]() Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I have a dream” speech. commemorated the 58th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington most commonly known for Dr. The OKC march and other marches across the U.S. OKLAHOMA CITY ( Free Press) - The March for Our Rights in OKC Saturday was organized to point out inequalities that still exist in the U.S.
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