The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The Native Scholar Who Wasn't’
Episode Date: June 6, 2021Andrea Smith had long been an outspoken activist and academic in the Native American community. Called an icon of “Native American feminism,” she was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for her advo...cacy work and has aligned herself with prominent activists such as Angela Davis.Last fall, however, a number of academics, including Ms. Smith, were outed as masquerading as Black, Latino or Indigenous.While many of them explained themselves and the lies they told, Ms. Smith never did. Why?This story was written by Sarah Viren and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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My name is Sarah Vereen, and I'm a contributing writer to the New York Times magazine,
and also a professor of creative nonfiction.
You may have heard me a few weeks ago introducing a previous story I wrote for the magazine,
The Accusation. It was about a time when my family and I were caught up in a series of
terrifying accusations, all because of a coveted job at a university.
My latest story for the magazine also deals with the world of academia and deception.
I look at what some people call ethnic fraud or racial grifting.
In the last year, there have been a series of news stories about academics and activists
who falsely claimed they were Black or Latinx or Native American.
who falsely claimed they were Black, or Latinx, or Native American.
I was interested in the stories themselves,
but also in the way they were covered in the news,
and how they were read and talked about by the rest of us.
I wanted to look deeper at the structures and systems and people that allow this particular form of deception to persist,
and how we might begin to deal with it.
So here's my story, The Native Scholar Who Wasn't, read by Julia Whalen.
It was a Thursday morning last September, and J. K. Haulani Kawanui had just woken up.
last September, and J. K. Haolani Kawanui had just woken up. She was reading a story on her phone in bed, a confession written by a woman named Jessica Krug, when, quite suddenly, it yanked her
into the past. To an escalating degree over my adult life, I have eschewed my lived experience
as a white Jewish child in suburban Kansas City, wrote Krug, a history professor who had for years I have thought about ending these lies many times over the years, she continued,
but my cowardice was always more powerful than my ethics.
Kauanui checked the time. The confession was posted
only minutes earlier, but already six friends had forwarded her the link. It was that kind of story,
the kind that spreads so fast and so far, it soon seems that everyone has read it,
and everyone has had a reaction. Shock, disgust, anger, amusement. But Kauanui wasn't thinking
about Krug. She was thinking about Andy. It was a fantasy piece, she told me the first time we
talked last November. When I read it, the very first thing that came to my mind was,
oh my god, if only Andy would do this. Andy is Andrea Smith.
She and Kawanui met almost 25 years earlier,
when Kawanui was a 28-year-old graduate student in the History of Consciousness program
at the University of California, Santa Cruz,
and Smith was a young divinity student who planned to go there for her PhD.
Kawanui served on the department's admissions
committee that year, and she still vividly remembers Smith's application, how passionately
she wrote about gender politics, but also how clearly she defined her ethnic identity.
She positioned herself as Cherokee, she told me. She had something in the application that
talked about what it meant
for urban Native Americans away from homeland. Kauanui is Kanaka Maoli, or Native Hawaiian.
But she grew up in Southern California, and she knew what it felt like to belong ancestrally to
one place, but be raised somewhere else. Part of her eventual dissertation, in fact,
would look at that question of identity within the context of Hawaii, specifically the state's
comparably strict rules regarding who counts as Native and who doesn't. The thought of having not
just another Native student at Santa Cruz, but a student who understood how complex and complicated
Native identities can be
was thrilling to Kauanui, and she pushed for Smith's acceptance and reached out to her as
soon as she got in. Over time, the two became good friends, just as Kauanui had hoped,
though she quickly realized that Smith didn't want to talk about her family or her native roots.
For years, all she would tell
Kawanui was that she was from Long Beach, California, that her mother was Oklahoma Cherokee,
as were her grandparents, and that her dad, though out of the picture, was Ojibwe. There was a
Cherokee community in California, and Kawanui assumed for a while that Smith was part of that group. She assumed a lot, she realized in retrospect,
filling in the blanks that Smith left in her story so that it would make sense.
Even 25 years later, when she knew that so much of what she first believed wasn't true,
Kauanui still grappled with what to make of everything Smith had said, or hadn't said.
When Krug confessed last September, her admission prompted the outings of a series of white people
who had been masquerading in their fields over the years as Black, Latino, or Indigenous,
six in academia alone by the year's end.
And yet, unlike Krug or the others who confessed and then disappeared from the public eye,
Smith never explained herself or the lies she told. She has never really had to.
Rereading Krug's mea culpa later that afternoon on a laptop at her dining room table,
Kawinui thought about the reckoning that never took place.
By then, it had been years since she and Smith had been in touch.
But on an impulse, she found Smith's university email address and, with a click, sent her a link to Krug's confession.
In the subject line, she wrote,
Now it's your turn.
A Harvard graduate with long brown hair and pale skin,
Andrea Smith began to make a name for herself in the early 1990s,
when she and her younger sister, Justine, moved to Chicago
and started a local chapter of Women of All Red Nations,
an activist organization that grew out of the American Indian movement of the 1960s and 70s.
Neither sister responded to multiple requests for comment for this article.
Although the sisters stayed in Chicago for only a few years, they made an impression.
Although the sisters stayed in Chicago for only a few years, they made an impression.
They helped organize a protest of the Columbus Day Parade and flew in Native activists to speak at community gatherings.
And they also, says Katie Jones, a Cherokee woman who protested and organized alongside them, called out Native activists they thought weren't legit.
I watched them both go after this woman named Constance, she told me. Constance had showed up, and she'd been living in Champaign, and came to
Chicago, and tried to plug in with us, and they were like, she is Portuguese, she is black, but
she's not one of us. She's lying. She's a fake. Although the United States has a long history of white people playing Indian,
as the scholar Philip J. Deloria calls it in his book of the same name, the 1990s saw the
beginning of what would eventually be significant pushback by Native Americans against so-called
pretendians or pretend Indians, including the successful passage of a national law prohibiting
non-native people from marketing their art as Indian. Smith found her voice within that protest
movement in 1991 when she published an essay in Ms. Magazine calling out white feminists and
new agers for co-opting native identities.
When white feminists see how white people have historically oppressed others and how
they are coming very close to destroying the earth, they often want to disassociate themselves
from their whiteness, Smith wrote.
They do this by opting to become Indian.
In this way, they can escape responsibility and accountability for
white racism. Of course, white feminists want to become only partly Indian. They do not want to be
a part of our struggles for survival against genocide, and they do not want to fight for
treaty rights or an end to substance abuse or sterilization abuse. It was the kind of article that would have gone viral
if viral had existed back then, and it hinted at the forceful voice that would define Smith's
activism and scholarship. Patty Jo King, a Cherokee academic and later one of the first
people to confront Smith about her identity, says she taught that essay in her university classes for years.
Before questioning Smith about her ancestry at a private meeting in 2007,
King actually opened by saying how much she had enjoyed her article calling out fake Indians.
Smith's intensity and singularity of focus was obvious the moment she showed up in Santa Cruz in 1997. David Delgado Shorter,
now a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, remembers that she was successful
academically and quickly gained the ear of most of the professors, but she used that access to
criticize a student Native Studies group that he was a part of, complaining that it had no
Native American leadership, and after that it fell apart. Kawanui said Smith's zeal rubbed
other students the wrong way. Simultaneously, an old guard Marxist, a born-again Christian,
and an animal rights activist, Smith was the kind of person, Kauanui said, who once commented multiple
times on the feelings of shellfish after someone ordered shrimp at lunch. But as the years passed,
Smith mellowed. Kauanui thinks she realized that her dogma was off-putting. Easing up on her
doctrinaire Marxism, she also developed a new fascination with celebrity gossip.
Marxism, she also developed a new fascination with celebrity gossip. People in our program, they were doing cultural reads on Hollywood, Kawinui said. But to go from there to talking
about which Hollywood star was bonking whom was totally another extreme. So she really went there
and really committed. She knew about that stuff, and it was kind of her discussion fodder at conferences, and it made people laugh.
It was in 2006, during their collaboration on a collection of essays by Native American women, that Kauanui first heard rumors about Smith's identity.
By then, the two had grown close, even as the trajectory of their careers had diverged. They had both graduated with doctoral degrees and landed jobs at well-regarded universities,
Kauanui at Wesleyan University and Smith at the University of Michigan.
But while Kauanui was developing a narrow expertise on Hawaiian indigeneity,
Smith had become nothing less than an icon of Native American feminism,
as the publication Color Lines later called her. She co-founded the national organization
Incite Women of Color Against Violence, was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for her
advocacy work, and aligned herself with prominent activists, including her dissertation advisor Angela Davis
and Winona LeDuc, who later wrote the introduction for Smith's first book.
That fall, a friend of Kauanui's, aware of her friendship and ongoing collaboration with Smith,
reached out and asked whether Smith was really Cherokee.
Oh no, she's totally Cherokee, Kauanui told that friend. She wondered
whether the concern was that Smith was not native enough because she grew up off the reservation.
But the next year, Kauanui was shown confidential emails that complicated the narrative. In early
2007, an official from the Cherokee Nation began emailing Smith, asking about her connections to the Cherokees, given that she wasn't enrolled, a word used for citizens in a tribal nation.
Smith's responses were evasive, and reading them, Kauanui couldn't figure out why she didn't just clarify who her relatives were.
It was, she came to realize, the first moment she really doubted
Smith. But as so many others would later do, she brushed her concerns aside.
In the months that followed, Kauanui was distracted by her work helping to organize
a conference that spring at the University of Oklahoma. The conference was a step toward starting a national organization
to bring together scholars working on Native and Indigenous issues.
Smith was at the conference, too, and one afternoon during a panel session,
she pulled Kauanui outside, saying she needed to talk to her about something serious.
I just went home to Long Beach, and I found out from
my mother that I'm not actually enrolled, she said, according to Kauanui's memory of the
conversation. I have to try to figure this out, because there are people from the Cherokee Nation
who are going to meet with me here. The two were on a bench on the Norman campus.
Smith seemed anxious, and Kauanui wanted to help, but again, she was confused.
From the emails, she knew that Smith had already been told she wasn't enrolled.
Kauanui couldn't mention them, she'd been sworn to secrecy,
and she still thought there had to be an explanation.
She told Smith to share the names of her relatives with tribal officials,
sure that they would be able to straighten things out. But Smith told her that it wasn't that simple. And indeed, it wasn't.
Being enrolled in an American Indian tribe essentially means being a legal citizen of
that tribal nation. It's a status that can be passed down by parents who are also enrolled,
but also one that can be claimed
depending on the citizenship rules of each tribe, if an individual can prove he or she is a child,
grandchild, or at times even great-grandchild of someone who was a tribal member.
As the Cherokee genealogical researcher David Cornsilk would later tell me,
Smith couldn't even do that. She had known since the 1990s that
her family had no identifiable Native American roots because Smith had hired Cornsilk to look
for them, and he found nothing. Although he can no longer recall the exact dates, Cornsilk says
Smith first asked him to research her mother's side of the family in the early 1990s,
when she was working as a native organizer in Chicago. Near the end of the decade, she hired
him again to look into her father's side, around the time she was starting graduate school at Santa
Cruz and introducing herself as Cherokee, and also after she accepted the first of two Ford Foundation fellowships then earmarked for
underrepresented groups in academia. After researching both sides of Smith's family tree,
Corn Silk concluded that she had no identifiable Native American relatives, enrolled or unenrolled,
or even living near those who were once enrolled. He says he sent off his report to her both times and never heard back.
She never said anything, he told me, but they usually don't,
because most of the time they're not getting the answer that they wanted.
Kauanui knew none of this that day in Norman.
All she knew was that after Smith came back from her meeting with a tribal
official and Patty Jo King,
the Cherokee academic, she said she had agreed to stop identifying publicly as Cherokee. Smith
implied that her enrollment status was a mistake and that she was still Cherokee, just not officially
so. It was an explanation that made little sense to Kauanui, but she believed it because she didn't want to consider the other option,
that Smith was lying to her.
In the months that followed, however,
Kauanui's doubt grew into something harder,
something she might have eventually verbalized
if in February 2008,
Smith hadn't found herself
in the middle of another crisis.
She learned that the University of Michigan had denied her tenure,
a decision in academia that is akin to being fired.
The reasons were not stated.
Tenure decisions are confidential, and no one I've talked to knows why.
But Smith's supporters were outraged.
They organized a petition to overturn the decision
and held a one-day conference in Ann Arbor with Angela Davis as a guest speaker to highlight the difficulties faced by female scholars of color.
At that point, very few academics outside of Kauanui knew of the rumors about Smith's identity, and a conference news release described her as one of the greatest indigenous feminist intellectuals of our time.
Their organizing didn't change the tenure decision,
but it did draw the attention of a Cherokee academic named Steve Russell,
who learned that Smith was not enrolled.
He decided to write about her in a column for Indian Country Today,
the first of many times she would be outed over questions about her in a column for Indian Country Today, the first of many
times she would be outed over questions about her identity.
He titled the column, When Does Ethnic Fraud Matter?
Kauanui assumed that Smith would finally defend herself, or at least explain her identity
claims.
At one point, she and another contributor to the Native Book Project
even tried to sort out Smith's genealogy themselves so they could help her respond.
They'd heard that she once claimed a connection to a famous Cherokee named Red Bird Smith,
so they dug around to see if he might be an ancestor. They wondered if her mother might
have been a product of rape, incest, or something else that Smith didn't want to talk about.
We were running these hypotheticals because we were trying to do the work for her, Kawanui said.
We were trying to help her narrate, but she wouldn't tell us what was going on.
But eventually, Kawanui could no longer suspend her disbelief.
could no longer suspend her disbelief. She called Smith and asked her directly how she knew she was Cherokee, and specifically Oklahoma Cherokee. Smith said she didn't know. Kawinui asked her
who her mother's grandparents were, and she said she didn't know. She said her mom didn't know
either. How can her parents both be Cherokee if you tell me that your mother doesn't know who her grandparents are?
Kauanui asked.
Smith was crying by then, but Kauanui couldn't let it go.
I had been so fed up, she told me.
I was really interrogating her.
There was no other word for it.
I was grilling her.
And she just kept saying, I don't know.
She was whimpering, like a dog, like an
injured animal. It was awful. It was a horrible phone call. I was crying, and she was crying,
and I said, you are basically telling me you don't even have a lineal descendancy claim.
You've got nothing. After that conversation, their book project fell apart. It was originally conceived as a project written and edited solely by Native American women.
It had been almost ready to go to press,
but when it became clear that Smith wasn't going to step down as one of the editors,
Kauanui pulled out.
She says that some of the contributors, many of them friends, supported her,
but others were upset, and she felt as if they were blaming
her, not Smith, for the fallout. One of them, the Diné Navajo scholar Jennifer Dinétdale,
emailed Kauanui questioning the focus on Smith's identity.
I'm biased, and I stand by Andy's commitment to Indigenous peoples
and recognize that she has done the footwork, she wrote.
to indigenous peoples and recognize that she has done the footwork, she wrote.
When I spoke to Donettdale recently, though, she told me she stayed with the project not because she supported Smith, but because she didn't want to let down the other contributors.
Some of them were junior scholars, she said. They needed this publication for their career.
Robert Warrior, an Osage professor at the University of Kansas and a friend of Kauanui's,
remembers another scholar telling him afterward why she couldn't abandon Smith.
She's like an organ.
You can't get rid of her, he recalled the woman saying.
She's like an organ to what we do.
Nobody is an organ, he responded. We're just people.
If this were like the other cases of ethnic fraud in academia, Smith's story would end at this point.
These stories have become common enough now that we can predict their narrative arc.
They begin with a confrontation that then leads to a
revelation, followed by outrage and sometimes an apology, before the guilty party slips into
obscurity. But with Smith, the story just keeps going. She was called out, yes. She retreated
briefly and even told Kawanui that her new 10-year plan was to live a private life and work church
bake sales. But then she came back. By the fall of 2008, Smith had a new job as an assistant
professor of media and cultural studies at the University of California, Riverside, and had
turned her attention to a different book project, a collection called Theorizing
Native Studies with the Mohawk scholar Audra Simpson. Her chapter for that book critiques
personal confession as a mode of truth-making and argues that accountability in academic and
activist circles should favor the collective over the individual, an argument that essentially says personal
identity shouldn't matter within social justice movements. Simpson, now a professor of anthropology
at Columbia University, told me that she stuck with that project even after Smith was confronted
by Kauanui, in part for the same reason Danette Dale had earlier, to protect the work of the other
contributors, but also because she, like Kauanui before her, kept thinking Smith would eventually
tell the truth. I want to be very clear that I do not support ethnic fraud, she wrote in an email.
I assumed that she would sort herself out and or make herself accountable to the Cherokee Nation
and to all of us in the field at some point, but she did not.
After 2008, Smith no longer identified as Cherokee in her official bios,
but she continued to identify as such for the panels, interviews, and lectures she often spoke at
as a representative of Native American views and causes.
At the same time, her younger sister Justine had begun building a career of her own in academia
based, in part, on claiming a Cherokee identity. After graduating from the University of Wisconsin,
where she received support from the McNair Program, which helps college students from
underrepresented backgrounds, Justine began a doctorate in religion at Harvard University. In 2010,
she was offered a visiting faculty position at the St. Paul School of Theology. A news release
announcing the hire identified Justine as Cherokee and noted,
It is believed that she also will be the first full-time Native American woman
to serve in any full-time faculty position in theological education in North America.
The Cherokee Nation reached out to St. Paul after learning about Justine's hire and discovered,
according to an email I reviewed, that she had obtained a Cherokee Nation citizenship card
and had altered it. St. Paul said that Justine was suspended after the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma
raised concerns regarding her identity claims and was employed by the college for only three months.
Richard Allen, then a policy analyst of the tribal nation, tried to contest Andrea Smith's
identity claims as well, but seemingly with less success. In 2012, before a lecture by Smith at
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, Allen emailed the organizers and explained that
Andrea Smith's claim of being Cherokee is fraudulent, and it is likely that she is not
American Indian at all. The lecture went on as planned. A spokeswoman for the university told
me that faculty there did slightly adjust their introduction of Smith after the email,
but only because they didn't want to direct energy toward that issue. A faculty member from the
university, who didn't want to
be named because of the sensitivity of identity issues, offered the following statement,
Andrea Smith is a valued educator who does important work.
The room was full because of her work, and she is a really good speaker.
Things might have continued that way, with Smith's misrepresentations an open secret
known only by a small circle of Native American scholars, if, in June 2015, a TV crew hadn't shown
up to interview a little-known activist and part-time academic in Washington named Rachel Dolezal. When the reporter asked Dolezal on camera
if she was African American, she looked shocked, said she didn't understand the question, and then
walked away. It was a confrontation that, as a news station in Houston later put it,
triggered a fascinating national conversation on race and identity. It is a cardinal rule of social identity
that people have the right to call themselves whatever they want, wrote the author Gary Young
a few days later in the Guardian newspaper. But with this right comes at least one responsibility.
What you call yourself must be comprehensible to others. His comments were a nod to a common
understanding of race as a social construct, and thus the meaning and the consequences of our
individual racial identities are largely determined by the collective. Yet the phrasing Young used
also raises an important question. When he wrote Comprehensible to Others, who counted as others?
It was clear with Rachel Dolezal that others meant just about everyone. But with Andrea Smith,
the majority of others still saw her as Cherokee, even though Cherokee officials and some Native
scholars said she wasn't. A couple of weeks after the Dolezal news broke, a graduate student named
Anita Lucchese forced the issue when she posted about Smith on her Tumblr account.
Andrea Smith is not Cherokee, she wrote. OMG, this is not new information. Her small protest
soon inspired a much larger and more prominent project, an anonymous Tumblr
titled Andrea Smith is Not Cherokee, that collected stories and documentation disputing
Smith's identity, as well as her sister's. That attention prompted David Cornsilk to speak
publicly about his genealogical work for Smith, and with him as a key source, The Daily Beast ran an article
calling Smith the Native American Rachel Dolezal. Kauanui remembers thinking, as she read those
pieces, that people would finally get it, which is to say they would understand what she and others
had known for years, that Smith had been lying, and not just to her colleagues and friends.
Smith's first book, Conquest, Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide, had relied on stories
of rape and sexual assault that Native women shared with her while she was identifying as
Cherokee. Kawanui was sure that at least some of those women would have felt differently if they had known they were talking to a white woman. To her, Smith's refusal to be honest about her
positionality, as academics sometimes call it, meant that she was not only being dishonest to
those within her social circle, but was lying within her own work. Enough people agreed with Kauanui this time that she and 11 other prominent
Native American female scholars published an open letter in Indian country today about Smith,
clarifying that the issue wasn't about being punitive or exclusionary, but about asking her
and others like her to account for their identity claims. Andrea Smith allows herself to stand in
as the representative of collectivities to which she has demonstrated no accountability,
the letter read. Her lack of clarity and consistency in her self-presentation
adds to the vulnerability of the communities and constituents she purports to represent.
the communities and constituents she purports to represent. Kauanui might have expected a real reckoning this time around, but not everyone did. That June, the Lenape scholar Joanne Barker,
who also signed the open letter, predicted on her blog that Native academics and activists
would disagree about what to do about Smith, and non-Native people would dismiss the sources and
documentation of Smith's fraud as crass or too complicated identity politics. That's more or
less what happened. A second blog called Against a Politics of Disposability was created in July
to defend Smith, and six scholars and students who identify as
Native American argued there that the scrutiny of Smith was either premature, too late, or
inappropriate. In the end, it is up to our families and communities to determine our identities,
wrote Andrew J. Jolivet, an Atacapaw-Ishak scholar. So let us elevate our discussion to
focus not on individuals, but rather on institutions and structural practices
that continue to marginalize Native peoples. The University of California, Riverside,
also issued a statement praising Smith as a teacher and researcher of high merit,
statement praising Smith as a teacher and researcher of high merit, noting that it could not, by law, consider ethnicity when making hiring or promotion decisions. In response to my request
for clarification regarding that statement, a spokesman told me that the university does not
comment on the ethnic backgrounds of specific employees. Smith's only response was a brief post to her
personal blog in July, which was later taken down. I have always been and will always be Cherokee,
she wrote. There have been innumerable false statements made about me in the media,
but ultimately what is most concerning is that these social media attacks send a chilling message to all Native peoples who are not enrolled or who are otherwise marginalized that they should not publicly work for justice for Native peoples out of fear that they too may one day be attacked.
By that point, Kauanui said it felt like 2008 all over again, only the blowback this time was worse.
People were upset over legitimate issues, including the historically racist enrollment policies of some tribal nations
and the oppressive role the United States played in deciding which tribes received federal status,
but those had no direct connection to concerns about Smith's
deception. We were called ableist, anti-black, jealous, COINTELPRO, you name it, she said.
I was an exposed nerve.
When I began researching this article, I wanted to understand why stories like these
seem to dominate one industry, my industry. As a white academic, I watched, aghast,
as other white academics were outed for pretending to be scholars of color,
both in real life and online. It seemed absurd to me at the time, but also horrifying,
in part because the outings coincided with a moment of national reckoning on questions of
race and representation, and a number of universities, including mine, had recently
committed to hiring more scholars of color. I kept wondering, as the former academic Ruby Zelzer posted on Twitter in September,
academia, do we have a problem? It started last April when the writer H.G. Carrillo, a former and
much-beloved assistant professor at George Washington University, died of complications
from COVID-19. The Washington Post ran an obituary that recounted the story he always told others
in his adult life,
that at seven, he fled Cuba with his family
and landed in Michigan.
But after the obituary ran,
Carrillo's sister contacted the paper.
He wasn't Afro-Cuban, she said.
He was a black man from Detroit,
and his given name was Herman Glenn Carroll.
A couple of months after that, Beth Ann McLaughlin, a white former assistant professor of neurology at
Vanderbilt University, apologized for pretending under the Twitter handle
Sciencing Bi to be a bisexual Native American scholar at Arizona State University, where I now
work. At Sciencing Bi had often tweeted in support of McLaughlin's career, including when she was
denied tenure at Vanderbilt. She was also active in online discussions on sexual assault and social
justice, and many of her followers realized she was an invention only in July, when McLaughlin
announced that AtSciencingBy had died of complications from COVID-19, and others on
Twitter started looking for a public notice of her death. Then in September, Krug posted her confession,
which received by far the most attention, including write-ups in the New Yorker,
the New York Times, and eventually Vanity Fair, and was followed a few days later by the outing
of a University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate student, C.V. Vitolo Haddad, who was white but had presented as black for years. Later that month,
Craig Chapman, a white assistant professor of chemistry at the University of New Hampshire,
was outed for, like McLaughlin, creating a Twitter account purporting to be a woman of color
that he used to criticize minority groups and social justice arguments.
Then, a few weeks after that, Kelly Keene Sharp,
an assistant professor of African American history at Furman University, who had identified as Chicana,
resigned after she was accused of having no Mexican ancestry at all.
all. All of this was a little bewildering to watch from the sidelines. Academia is an industry,
like journalism, that defines itself in large part by its ethical standards. We're supposed to educate people and produce knowledge. So what does it mean that we're also a haven for fakes?
Even more disturbing for me, as I began to learn about Smith's story, was hearing similar stories
that had gone untold, or perhaps more accurately, unheard. Talking with Corn Silk and with some of
the Native scholars who signed the open letter, I learned about other academics falsely claiming
to be Native American who came before or after Smith. It was the accumulation of such stories,
not just Smith's alone, that finally pushed many to speak out.
There are so many fakes in academia, said Kim TallBear, a Sisseton Wapiton Oyate professor at the University of Alberta,
who said she was scared at first to sign the 2015 open letter.
It just felt like we needed to recognize the pervasiveness of the problem.
It's a problem that has been known at least since 1992,
when, in an early use of the term ethnic fraud in a newspaper,
the Detroit News published an investigation into what were then known as box checkers,
students who identify as Native American on their college applications.
Thousands of students misrepresent themselves to gain entrance and scholarships to U.S. universities,
costing real American Indians access to higher education, the article reported. It was accompanied
by a shorter piece about similar lies by Native-identified faculty. Of the 1,500 university
educators listed as Native American at the time, said Bill Cross, who helped found the American
Indian Alaska Native Professors Association, we're looking realistically at one-third of those being
Indians. The most prominent example of this is Senator Elizabeth Warren, who was listed as Native
American by both Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania Law School when she was on the
faculty at those
institutions, and has since apologized for claiming that identity. Many academic administrators feel
there's little they can do to fix things without, as Daniel Schwartz, the history department chair
at George Washington University, and at one point Krug's supervisor put it, launching into a new McCarthyism of interrogating
people's race. Universities are also hesitant to start vetting identity claims, in part because
of the fear of lawsuits, but also, according to a number of scholars I talked to, because doing so
would force them to confront the real problems they face when it comes to outreach and support of students and faculty of color.
And yet, academia also doesn't make it easy for people with concerns to speak out, in large part because academia is a hierarchical industry,
one in which a small minority of those with secure jobs or tenure have huge sway over decisions about job security for
the remaining majority, and a vast majority of those making those decisions are white.
According to a 2020 report by the American Association of University Professors,
Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous scholars are all grossly underrepresented in academia,
and indigenous scholars are all grossly underrepresented in academia, especially the further up you go in the hierarchy. Black scholars account for only 6% of all full-time faculty.
Native Americans, less than 1%. In the absence of any real policy for dealing with ethnic fraud,
what academia is left with is a risky marketplace of accusations,
one in which those doing the labor of researching someone's background are often also those most
harmed by the trespass in the first place, and their only real power to effect change
is by means of what others then dismiss as cancel culture. Those who do speak out risk exactly what Kauanui
gave up back in 2008, friendships and relationships with colleagues, but also opportunities for
scholarship. These people kind of hide out in academia where the system is not dealing with
them, and the only way to deal with them is to shame them,
to let them know that you know they are a fraud, said Jackie Thompson Rand, a Choctaw professor
at the University of Iowa. That is the additional work that indigenous scholars have to decide
if they are going to engage in or not. Figuring out Andrea Smith's family history wasn't easy, but halfway into my reporting,
I became determined to do that work, if only to clarify the facts amid the larger political and
cultural debates that at times overwhelmed discussions of her identity. I had asked
Corn Silk for help, but he said he no longer had records from the 1990s,
and he didn't remember either of her parents' names. Neither Andrea nor Justine had written
anything about their parents in the acknowledgement section of their dissertations,
and then there was the issue of their maddeningly common last name, Smith. But eventually,
I was able to figure out their mother's maiden name, Wilkinson,
and using census records, birth and death certificates, and obituaries, I began to piece
together the story Smith had for so long refused to tell. Smith's mother, Helen Jean Wilkinson,
was born in a small town in Indiana to what appear to be middle-class parents.
Her father was an engineer, according to a death certificate, and her mother was at one point a trustee for Luce Township,
a farming town of a little more than 2,000 on the Ohio River near Evansville.
Their ancestors appear to have been mostly farmers and laborers in Kentucky and Indiana,
going back generations.
Some of Helen's Kentucky ancestors fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War,
and a couple owned slaves. A great-grandfather on her mother's side, Lyman V. Pierce, was one of the
first police chiefs of Owensboro, Kentucky, a man whose story of killing a romantic rival was narrated recently in that city's Voices
of Elmwood tour. But neither Helen nor her parents nor her grandparents nor her great-grandparents
nor her great-great-grandparents are listed in census records I found as anything other than
white. Helen went to Indiana University, where she worked on the
yearbook staff and majored in business education. At some point after graduating, she moved to
California, where she married a man named Donald R. Smith. They had two children, Andrea and then
Justine, and divorced in 1968. Helen died in 2014, but as far as I could tell, Donald Smith was still alive.
But finding him was even harder. Then one day, Kauanui mentioned that someone once told her
that Smith used to spend summers with her father in Virginia. I searched for people with his
birth year who had ever lived in Virginia, and eventually found an obituary for the father of a Donald Smith
who was survived by two granddaughters named Andrea and Justine.
I mapped out Donald's family tree and found a relative with a working phone number.
After I explained what I was looking into, the woman on the other end of the line exhaled.
Yeah, we heard about that, she said, and we just kind of shook our heads.
Donald R. Smith is alive, the woman confirmed, and he isn't Ojibwe.
He is a white man from Chicago who, like his daughters, is very smart.
He was a nuclear physicist with the Pentagon before he retired, the relative told me.
He has a degree from MIT. His family are mostly of British ancestry, and no, he didn't want to
talk to me, but his relative wanted me to know that I was doing a good thing writing this article.
Honestly, integrity is everything in academics, she said, so let the truth out.
But what is the truth?
Or rather, what is truth enough to convince those others that Gary Young referred to in his essay in The Guardian?
After I had evidence that Smith's genealogy was just as Corn Silk had claimed,
I talked to a friend of mine, the feminist historian Emily
Skidmore, and she pointed out that ethnicity listings on census records aren't always accurate.
That wasn't what I wanted to hear, but if I was interested in clarifying the facts,
I realized I needed to do more reporting. So in March, I began calling people who had lived in
and around Luce Township, the farming town where
Smith's mother, Helen, grew up, and eventually I found a cousin of Helen's on her father's side,
a woman named Margaret Jane Wilkinson. She told me that Helen had never identified as Native
American, but, she said, the family always claimed her grandfather on her mother's side,
the son of the police chief who shot a man in Owensboro, was American Indian.
Hearing that, I wondered if this was perhaps the proof of native ancestry that Smith had never
produced. But I also knew by then how common these family stories are, and so I began calling up the grandchildren of that grandfather.
I recognized, as I left the fifth or sixth message, that I'd become a little obsessed,
but I couldn't let it go. I thought of Kauanui and how her concerns weren't heard,
and of Smith saying that the media got the facts wrong. Eventually, I found a woman named Barbara Smith, Helen's cousin on her mother's side,
who remembered her grandfather, Mr. Pierce, as she called him. He wasn't Native American,
she said without hesitation, but there were rumors of Native ancestry in her family.
She'd believed them too, until she took a genetic test a couple years ago.
believed them too, until she took a genetic test a couple years ago.
We're mostly Scandinavian, she said.
When we hung up, I felt for a moment that I'd tracked down the truth about Smith.
Yes, she had stories of Native American ancestors in her family,
but like a lot of such stories, they weren't based in fact.
But then I caught myself.
I'd done enough reporting and talked to enough Native American scholars by that point to know one thing. Native identity
is not reducible to genetics. That's a fallacy that tribal nations spend a lot of time trying
to dispel. What it is about depends on whom you talk to, but it tends to boil down to this.
Are you claimed by the community that you claim?
If anyone needs proof that Smith wasn't Cherokee, it has been there since 2008.
In Native Studies, there's a concept called settler colonialism that Smith has written about.
It includes the conviction felt by non-Natives that the land, but also the knowledge, cultural heritage, and identities of American Indians belong to the rest of us. In Playing Indian, the book by Deloria,
he argues that white people in this country
have been co-opting Native identities
since the Boston Tea Party.
Playing Indian is a persistent tradition
in American culture, he writes,
stretching from the very instant of the national Big Bang
into an ever-expanding present and future.
In other words, this might feel like a news story, but it's actually quite old. For Kauanui,
that long history is part of what's so dangerous about Smith and others like her.
By refusing to acknowledge their identity theft, these people
make invisible those they are stealing from. And by refusing to apologize, they imply that their
trespass is not that big of a deal. John Stevenson, a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder,
told me that when his former colleague, the activist and academic Ward Churchill,
was accused of ethnic fraud, the university couldn't do anything because of a policy it
had preventing it from considering ethnicity or race in hiring or firing decisions. This was true
even after the Rocky Mountain News ran an article in 2005 reporting that Churchill's family had no identifiable Cherokee
connections. Churchill still claims he is Native American and has criticized the newspaper's
genealogical research. If Ward proved anything, Stevenson said, he proved that if you wanted to
say you were XYZ, the way you do it is keep saying that and don't apologize.
What eventually led to Ward's firing, in fact, was not the small outrage about ethnic fraud in
some native circles. Instead, it was a much larger outrage over something he wrote after 9-11,
an essay that referred to people killed in the Twin Towers as Little Eichmanns
because, he argued, they formed a technocratic core at the very heart of America's global
financial empire. I'm thinking about what galvanizes the nation, but that happened here,
Stevenson told me before we got off the phone, and I said
I'd been thinking about that recently too. What outrages people, but also what galvanizes them
to make change, and by contrast, what we choose to ignore. In researching Smith's past, I talked
at one point to a former high school classmate of hers, who told me she didn't remember Smiths ever
identifying as Native American in high school, but added that we wouldn't have talked about that back
then. The woman was white, and we had a brief conversation about identity and ethnicity,
including forays into 23andMe and how that genetic test has challenged and possibly expanded modes of self-identification.
But later, she wrote, asking that I not use her name, because, despite being in a club with Smith
in high school, she didn't think she knew her that well. She also questioned, it seemed to me,
the premise of the story itself. As important as this issue is, there are so many millions of people, mostly men,
who are church leaders, school presidents, clergy leaders, philosophy professions, theologians,
who have molested their children and grandchildren, she wrote. Their pictures still hang on the walls
with the other primarily white men. These atrocities seem more pervasive.
When I asked sources why Smith's story
turned out differently than those of Krug or Dolezal or others,
many of them said it was because she faked a Native identity
instead of a Black or Latino one.
We care less as a culture about Native Americans, they argued,
so the theft of Native identities means less, too.
Others said we romanticize American Indians
and that so many people have stories of a long-lost Indian ancestor.
Again, think of Elizabeth Warren,
that we're not shocked when someone claims a Native identity under dubious grounds.
Corn Silk told me that it is also a matter of
pragmatics. To prove that a person isn't Black, you usually only have to talk to their parents.
To prove that a person isn't Native American, you sometimes have to go back generations.
That makes telling a story like this one more complicated, especially in a world where every
narrative is supposed to fit in a sound
bite and every audience expects to have an instant reaction, sometimes one that's formed
before they have even finished reading. At some point after I contacted Smith,
her original blog post went back up. I have been and always will be Cherokee. I take that to
mean that she still identifies as Cherokee, but because she hasn't responded to my requests for
comment, I can't say for sure. I know that as recently as 2018, she identified in an online
essay as a person of color. Her sister, Justine, who now has two Native American
children and is a pastor at a Methodist church in Norman, Oklahoma, was identified in an interview
last year as of Cherokee and Ojibwe descent. She finished her dissertation in 2018, acknowledging
the support of the United Methodist Women of Color Scholars Program
in addition to the McNair Program.
Even though most Native Studies scholars no longer work with Smith,
she has begun publishing within adjacent fields, like ethnic studies,
and has slowly built back a reputation.
This past spring, she came out with a new co-edited collection from Duke University Press,
the same press that published and later condemned Krug.
Thank you for your ethical stance on the Jessica Krug issue, tweeted the Ojibwe scholar Jean O'Brien,
a historian at the University of Minnesota.
What are your thoughts on what you should do about your author Andrea Smith's
fraudulent claims and your responsibilities about them? Smith's book, edited with Tiffany
Lathabo King and Janelle Navarro, is an anthology called Otherwise Worlds, Against Settler Colonialism
and Anti-Blackness, that is meant to examine ways that Native studies and black studies
might find common ground, and by extension, how black and Native activists can collaborate
rather than compete. But it lies on shaky ground by including Smith as an editor,
said Joseph Pierce, a Cherokee academic at Stony Brook University, who also tweeted about the apparent double standard.
That Duke, which has so much legitimacy on critical scholarship, would allow her to make
major interventions in the field of Native studies, even after all the work that has been
done by Native women to reject Andrea Smith, was so messed up to me, he told me. Neither King nor Navarro responded to my requests for
comment on their collaboration with Smith, but as her name has surfaced again in online discussions
of Krug, some people have come to her defense. Andrea Smith clearly responded to attacks on her
identity by stating that she has always known herself to be Cherokee, tweeted
Nandita Sharma, a professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in September. She doesn't need my
support, but she has it 100% nonetheless. Kawanui says another reason she thinks people still don't
believe that Smith lied, even after the facts are staring them in the face,
is because they don't want it to be true. Non-natives didn't want their Indian being
taken away from them, she told me. Or, as Anita Lucchese wrote in her Tumblr post outing Smith
in 2015, most Native scholars that are connected to their cultures slash communities have questioned her for a very long time, but non-Natives get so comfortable using their one token go-to Native feminist to quote that those questions don't get heard or understood.
that sentiment when I talked to a white academic who had been duped by Beth Ann McLaughlin this past summer. Michael Eisen, a biologist who attended a Zoom memorial service for
at-sciencing-by and was credited in many media accounts for exposing McLaughlin's fraud,
told me that native scholars on Twitter actually sounded the alarm earlier, but he and others
didn't pay attention.
We should have realized that the intersections for those identities in academia,
while it should be large, is not, he said.
In other words, these hoaxes, though they reveal a lot about the people who carry them out,
also say something about those who fall for them in the first place.
One of the last times I heard from Kawanui, she emailed to say that she was super anxious.
She's worried that she'll come off as if she's obsessed with Smith in this article, and she fears that what happened in 2008 and again in 2015 will be repeated here.
I wrote back to say that I don't think of her as obsessive. You've made decisions that weren't necessarily advantageous to your career, I said,
but you did so because you ethically felt like you had to. What I didn't say was that when it
comes to her second concern, I share her fear.
Not about what will happen to Smith specifically, but more broadly, what will happen with stories like hers.
I heard recently from a Native scholar who had a good friend, a colleague, who had always identified as American Indian based on family stories of Native ancestry.
based on family stories of Native ancestry.
But then, not too long ago,
this person decided to investigate those claims and found out they weren't true.
Trying to be respectful,
that person pulled out from some Native American projects
and told a few people about the discovery.
But the Native scholar I know
is encouraging her friend to go public as well.
She said that kind of transparency,
the transparency that Kauanui and others were pushing for in 2015, could really change the
way we talk about identity and power in academia, but also elsewhere. The last I heard, that person,
whom I asked to interview for this article, still hadn't decided what to do.
It seems as if, in many ways, academia hasn't either.
Hannah Arendt said that any time we lie, we tear a hole in the fabric of factuality.
But when we don't acknowledge those lies, when we pretend that those pointing them out are obsessed or deluded,
we also give up the opportunity to ever mend that tear.
As I was finishing writing this story, I got an email from Duke University Press in response to
my questions about their decision to publish Smith's recent book. Gisela Fosato, the editorial director, sent me a long statement that included
the following. For months now, we at Duke University Press have engaged in difficult
conversations about how we can do a better job of considering ethical concerns as we make our
publishing decisions. In the past, our considerations of works to be published did not always include
serious engagement with questions of ethics outside of those raised in the peer review process.
That has changed. Our publication of Smith's most recent work did harm by undermining the brave
calls by Native scholars and others asking for accountability, transparency, and honesty.
Our publication of her work continued to provide her with a platform and became a
legitimation in itself, allowing others to ignore the damage she caused. We are sorry.
Smith never responded to Kauanui's email, and she most likely never will.
But maybe it's not her apology that matters.
This was recorded by Autumn.
Autumn is an app you can download to listen to lots of audio stories from publishers such as The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and The Atlantic.