Indigenous Rights Lawyer Gabe Galanda on the Fight Against Tribal Disenrollment
This week on The Day With Trae, Indigenous rights lawyer Gabe Galanda joined guest host Omari Salisbury to discuss Galanda's history with Converge Media, Native tribal disenrollments, and other pressing issues facing the Native American community.
Galanda explained that disenrollment is the elimination of an Indigenous person's citizenship in their tribal nation. He stated that it was originally invented by the U.S. government in the late 1800s but has been used over the last 30 years primarily to get rid of Indigenous people in order to concentrate gaming wealth and power. Galanda discussed the eviction of Nooksack families, noting that they lost their homes despite the United Nations intervening.
Alongside disenrollment, Galanda pointed to budget cuts to the Indian Health Service and the negative impact of the SNAP benefit shutdown. He added that the vast majority of Indian country exists at poverty levels, a statistic that he believes is not talked about enough. Salisbury shouted out Converge’s Emmy-nominated film, Nooksack 306, a short documentary about the eviction and exile of over 300 Nooksack tribal members.
Learn more about Gabe Galanda, his legal work, and his organization Huy at huycares.org, and follow Galanda Broadman on Instagram and Facebook.
Catch The Day With Trae weekdays at 11 a.m. on all Converge streaming platforms.