A January 2012 report from the U.S. Census Bureau—“The American Indian and Alaska Native Population: 2010”—says
that 175,494 Mexicans (Mexican, Mexican-American, Chicano)
self-identified as American Indian, making them the fourth largest
tribal group in the country, says Think Mexican.
The group also pointed out on its tumblr page
that the 2010 United States Census form was “deliberately disorienting”
and that some Census workers were encouraging Mexicans to identify as
white.
They refer specifically to question No. 9 on the form, which asks to
which race residents of a home belong. The choices included: White,
Black, American Indian, Alaska Native, various Asian descents, Hawaiian,
Pacific Islanders, and “some other race.”
“It was confusing. I came to that question, and I just stopped. I
didn’t know what to put,” Jessica Valenzuela, a schoolteacher from
Avondale, told The Arizona Republic
in 2010. “Obviously, I’m not White. I would consider myself Hispanic or
Mexican-American, but definitely not White. The form doesn’t really
leave you with another option, though.”
Think Mexican says that while 175,494 out of 31 million Mexicans in
2010 may not seem like that much, but despite of the confusing form and
centuries of Catholic indoctrination, it’s a “powerful statement.”
“It says that indigenous identity amongst many Mexicans is strong,
and although this group is numerically relatively small, it represents a
much larger group with a similar heritage,” the group says.
They also say Mexicans making up the fourth largest tribal group
directly challenges Manifest Destiny by saying: “This land is still
Native.”
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/08/05/fourth-largest-tribe-united-states-mexicans-150740
COMPILED & REVIEWED BY CLAUDIA A. FOX TREE, M.Ed (Arawak). Here are resources I recommend in courses I teach about Native Americans - like book lists, websites, video clips, music/songs, curriculum ideas, and other thoughts thrown in for explanation… Mostly, this blog is a place to present truths and perspectives about the Indigenous People of the Western Hemisphere (with particular focus on the Caribbean) not easily found in other places.
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