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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS |
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Q. Do the Haudenosaunee
(Iroquois) live in bark longhouses?
A. Haudenosaunee
stopped living in bark longhouses in the early
1700s, then lived in log houses, and today live in modern dwellings.
Q. Do Haudenosaunee pay taxes?
A.
Haudenosaunee pay no property taxes if they live on an Iroquois
reservation. They pay property and school taxes if they live off the reservation. They pay
no taxes to the Internal Revenue Service on income earned on their reservation.
Iroquois pay
federal, state, and provincial taxes earned off the reservation. They pay no sales tax on
goods sold on the reservation, nor do they collect sales tax when they sell goods on the
reservation. While they legally do not have to pay sales tax on goods
bought off the reservation, many merchants insist they do and New York State does not
enforce the law prohibiting merchants from charging them.
Q. Do the
Haudenosaunee
welcome visitors?
A. Many
Haudenosaunee communities have cultural centers, museums,
craft and art shops, businesses, and special events that welcome visitors.
Q. Do
Haudenosaunee
have their own language?
A. Each
Haudenosaunee nation has its own language. A speaker
from one of the six nations can easily learn to understand a speaker from another
Haudenosaunee nation. The
Iroquoian linguistic group includes the Cherokee language as well as other
languages. Not all Haudenosaunee
today can speak
their native language, but most
speak English, and some speak French.
Q. What form of government do the
Haudenosaunee
have?
A. Most
Haudenosaunee communities have two forms of government:
traditional and elected. Traditional government begins with groups of families called
clans. Each clan is headed by a woman "clan mother" who appoints a
"Chief" who serves with her approval
for the people.
The traditional chiefs meet in Grand Council at Onondaga to discuss problems,
solutions and plans for the Confederacy. They follow the system brought to the
Iroquois by the Peacemaker many centuries ago.
Early in the 20th century, the United States and Canada imposed an elected
system for selecting chiefs to deal with state and provincial governments.
The
Seneca communities of Allegany and Cattaraugus joined together to form the Seneca Nation
of Indians, a separate government in New York State.
Traditional and elected governments co-exist in most communities, but some communities
have only a traditional or elected government.
Q. What religion do the
Haudenosaunee
have?
A. Many forms of religion are found in
Haudenosaunee communities.
Some traditionalists follow the teachings of Handsome Lake, a prophet who died in 1815.
Others seek guidance from the teachings of the Peacemaker centuries before. Quite a few are Christians of many denominations. Followers of other religious
views are also found.
Q. Were the
Haudenosaunee
conquered by the U.S. Army
and confined to reservations?
A. No. Some
Haudenosaunee
fought with the British
during the Revolutionary War. Some fought with the colonists. Some remained
neutral.
After the war, much of Iroquois land was taken away as a result of government treaties,
federal decisions and private land sales. Many of those transactions are now
being challenged in the courts.
The Haudenosaunee are not wards of the U.S. Government. Their lands do not belong to the United Sates. Their lands were not "reserved" for them by the U.S. They are a federally recognized tribe by the United States.
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