New in PJ Media:
“My mom was Indian and my dad’s a cowboy,” says Heather Rae, who has parlayed her Cherokee heritage into becoming what the New York Post called “Hollywood’s top Native American producer.” She is a member of the Indigenous Alliance of the Academy of Motion Pictures and has previously led the Sundance Institute’s Native American program. There’s just one catch: Heather Rae isn’t really Native American at all. Instead, she is just one more example of the recurring phenomenon today of white people attempting to escape the stigma of whiteness by posing as a “person of color.”
The Post reported Sunday that “a watchdog group called the Tribal Alliance Against Frauds is now demanding the Academy and the producer drop her ‘false claims’ while activists insist she’s at best 1/2048th Cherokee.” 1/2048! That’s even less than Elizabeth Warren, who is famously 1/1024 Native American. The Tribal Alliance Against Frauds accordingly accuses Rae of appropriating “real American Indian voices and perspectives” and even goes so far as to call her a “Pretendian.”
The game of pretend has gone on for a long time. Rae’s oldest daughter, who was born in 2002 and currently stars in the reboot of Dexter, is actually named Johnny Sequoyah. (Sequoyah, kids, was a real Native American who in the 1820s developed a system for writing in the Cherokee language.) But if Heather Rae is at best 1/2048 Cherokee, Johnny Sequoyah, despite her Cherokee name, is even less native; her father is another Hollywood producer, Russell Friedenberg, who doesn’t seem even to be pretending to be Cherokee.
Rae’s pretend game also involved her with another notorious “Pretendian,” Sacheen Littlefeather, the famous Apache whom Marlon Brando sent to the Academy Awards ceremony in 1973 to pick up his Oscar and berate Americans for mistreating American Indians. The Hollywood Reporter noted in Sept. 2022 that “the Academy welcomed Sacheen Littlefeather to its museum for an evening curated in her honor, an event that was both a culmination and continuation of its efforts to apologize to and reconcile with the actress and activist who was blacklisted from the industry for speaking up in protest of the treatment of Native Americans on- and offscreen.” Heather Rae was among those credited as the letter of apology to Littlefeather was read out.
Here again, there was just one catch: Littlefeather turned out not to be Apache at all. Her real name was Marie Louise Cruz, and she wasn’t even a fraction Native American. Far from being blacklisted, she had actually taken on her Native American identity in order to get work in Hollywood. Her sister Rosalind explained, “Marie’s sham claim of Native American heritage was nothing more than an opportunistic way for an aspiring actress to bust into Hollywood.”
There is more. Read the rest here.
somehistory says
Many Americans, native to this land, have some ancestry within the 500 Nations. Some can prove they have this ancestry; and some know it through family tradition passed down, but do not have the papers necessary to be a card-carrying member of a Tribe.
These imposters, like this woman and e warren, would have been the first to run screaming had they been on a wagon train headed West when the Cheyenne, Apache and Commanche were fighting to keep their land.
Now, the tide has turned ,and it’s seen as a plus to be an American with Native roots, longer than the Pilgrims could provide. As such, they can pretend and not be harassed by those who enjoy harassing those they claim are oppressors.
Pretense makes one a liar. And oh, how many liars there are today. As the old saying goes,, ” So thick, you can’t stir ’em with a stick.”
Golem2 says
+1
Kepha says
Hollywood banks on the world of make believe. Take everything that comes out of that place with a big grain of salt.
Like the Hollywood tale spinners,
Like those Indians
I’m an Indian too
Woo-hoo, woo hoo!
Just like Pimple tongue, Fauxahantas, Whopper-mouth,
Like those Indians
I’m an Indian too
Woo-hoo, woo hoo!
somehistory says
Yes, they all pretend to be smart and beautiful; so another pretense is nothing original.
somehistory says
TY, golem2
Greg Smith says
Great comment! Pretense does make one a liar — And these pretenders have to live with the lie to others and to themselves; which really digs into a person’s spirit. Who are they?
somehistory says
Thank you, Greg Smith
Diane says
I thought the exposé of Elizabeth Warren was hilarious. My native ancestry is minute, but still greater than hers! My great-great-great-great-grandfather was Chickahominey from Virginia and my great-great grandmother and her sisters in Georgia looked 100% native (I have the photo album from the 1880s). Strangely enough, traces still crop up. Out of the 4 families in my generation, 2 lots of us have no native traits, , but the remaining 2 families each have one child who looks very much like the great-great-aunties. Heredity is truly amazing.