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1103439
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United Tribes Council of Pacific West
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doc
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document
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id
1103439
contentType
document
title
United Tribes Council of Pacific West
collections
Bradley H. Patterson Files (Ford Administration)
Bradley Patterson's Native American Programs Files
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Indians of North America
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1103439
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1976-09-01
month
9
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1976
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1976-09-01
month
9
year
1976
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The original documents are located in Box 6, folder "United Tribes Council of Pacific West" of the Bradley H. Patterson Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box 6 of the Bradley H. Patterson Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library Sacramento, Calif.95816 P.O. Boy 161144 September 1, 1976 Bradley Patterson, Jr. The White House Wash, D. C. FORD j LIBRARY GERALD Dear m. Patterson, dn response to your letter of aug. 27, '76: We have printed materials and papers, but to answer your questions concerning the United Trike Council of Pacific West it is simple to say to you that our work is to do all the things for which many other groups (here) are well funded to do, but do not: as their non-participation increased, ours arganization grew, dating back to 1971 when the Sacramento Indian Center was first funded under O.E.O. Our half-hearted attempte to he funded quere rejected, and while there was some dissappointment, we have been able to retain autonomy and find power in our freedom from fundings "guidelines." The primary funded dudian groups here use a preference system for native California dndians, and that, of course, excludes 80% of the Indian community in this state from aids, jobs, benefits, or (even) social rapport. We are approv. 3000 Indian people who are refugus in the mest, fung pushed to this place since 1800 as aur homelands were invaded and wars of conquest were maged against our nationa. Our members are from approp. 40 tribus, each of which has suffered the well- known appressions, brokm treaties, confiscations, and colonialistic take - over of this lands and lines. The first group of note to arrive here was lead by Creck and Isalagi mise people, including Sequoyah, in 1809, when the Triaty of Hopewell was flagrantly violated and barbarity against the Mushagean and eastern nations grew to fearful proportions. athers came when the white man, John Ross, was subsidized to impose dectatorship on the nation in Indian Territory. still others came during the scandalous years of the rape of dudian nations by the politicians in the "Richapao Indian offair." as land in the Plains is confircated, and in the desert, desecrated-as Black misa- more fled before the onslaught: they continue to home as their lands and their peace and rights are taken from them. Our 'program' is simply the natural actions of a tribal erstended-family- unit: we keep dndian alive, in frequent gatherings, and advocacy as well as performing the social services which refugus require in a strange, unfriendly land. We are pushed to these western waters and can go no further; together, we are the bundle of sticks which cannot be broken. Our primary drive is to help get our prople educated, and we are responsible for getting hundreds of am members into college, aiding them, and encauraging them to stay there, assisting each other mith studies, papers, problems of discrimination which are built in any standard set of studie. Our work is daudly hard this year due to the gross insults which pourd us in every quarter under the ruse of "Bi- -Centennial." We have scholars, medicine people, tribal religious teachers, and all manner of traditional aids who function for the right reasons, old may reasons, and not for "pay" (which we dont have). Our elected Cauncil-prople are from FORD is LIBRARY pawa seven different Indian nations, and a supplemental 'congriss' of 21 are from other Indian nations. We have an annual Spring Festival, and these people are chosen at that time. We have sent representatives Cat thur aun expense) across america this summer, to mut with many tribes, nations, and groups. dt has hem enlightening to us, and we feel we are unique as we found no such body with like goals and work. Like the Jewa and the old-way Hope, we keep our nuds simple and they are met and we go on, observing each day that the Great Spirit works in the offairs of man and universe, and that the time our ancients spoke of, is here. We are therefore probably the most contented group of childing in this land today, seeing that we have placed our trust in the proper powers, and we have saught knowledge rather than gold, and we are prepared for the upheavals, holacausts, ar any other vast inisitations of geology, or psychology that may some. We are contented and unofraid, and, as such, me are pretty good people, having many friends in all races who now turn to us for assurance in a world going herserb mith fear. dt is good, for there are good people in every race and every avenue of life. We publish a minsletter from time to time to let people know what is happening in the world, since the large subsidized media is not allowed to do so. dt is an ant-of- packet paper, free to interested persons, and is hittle more than a headline report and bibliography to assist readers where they can still aftain true reporting of the affairs we have mentioned. We have great mail and reader response, and these are also sources of clipping and reports of events not widely circulated. We have histonians and scientists and well-trained brains to aid us in enderstanding what is going on from the bits and pieces of information which come from a wide field. as our goal is knowledge, and our work is by fair exchange, we avoid high erime of fraud, stealing, and other acts so Common in every full and strata of society. We therefore ful we are among the best citizins of the land, abiding by the laws of "Caesar" and the laws of am dudian ethics of old. Time is on am side and the Great Spirit is our frind. V. Card; Spokesperson UNITED TRIBES COUNCIL Secramento, la. 95816 SACRA REMENTONCA I Pivi SEP 170.0A EA 918 8.8 a 1975 United States 13c Bradley H. Pattereon, Jr. The White Hose WHITE HOUSE MAIL RECEPTION & SECURITY Washington D.C. 1976 SEP 3 20001 Processed by: 2