United Nations
The Next
Miccosukee
Seminole Nation Frontier
***********************************
CURRENT
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
TREATY WITH
CUBA
Miccosukee
Seminole Nation (MSN) Meets with Cuban
Government to Sign
Treaty of
Recognition, Friendship, and Mutual Assistance
July 1959
Miccosukee Seminole Nation (MSN)
Arrival in Cuba
.

MICCOSUKEE
SEMINOLES
NATION
MAKES
TREATY
IN CUBA
Miami Herald
by Bob Reno
Seminoles Win Cuban Approval
By Bob Reno
Cont. from page 1
"...extend their visit for
another week.
The visit of the Indians reached diplomatic
proportions when the Miccosukees presented
Castro with a declaration written on buckskin
praising his "victory over tyranny and
oppression" and giving the revolutionary
government formal recognition.
In return, Castro recognized, "duly constituted
government of the sovereign
Miccosukee Seminole nation."
Castro in a signed document, saluted the
Miccosukee leaders for "the long struggle of
your Miccosukee Nation and the perseverance and
courage of your indomitable and freedom-loving
people..."

*
From p. 182
Harry A. Kersey Jr.,
AN ASSUMPTION OF
SOVEREIGNTY,
(University of Nebraska Press 1996)
* The Miccosukee
contingent, including Homer Osceola, Buffalo
Tiger, and other members of the Council, as well
as Morton Silver, Sought and received Castro's
recognition as an independent nation. This drew
a withering blast from the Miami Herald's
editorial page: "The silly season seems to be
with us again. It blossomed in a bit of
grandstanding by a dozen of Florida's Seminole
Indians. They junketed to Cuba for the big
doings in Havana last weekend. There they
swapped documents with premier Fidel
Castro...The Cuban gambit was the latest in a
long series of headlines hunting antics by this
ill-advised
(Italics and
emphasis supplied) group, which must
embarrass most of the one thousand Seminoles in
Florida...(Miami Herald, 29 July 1959, 6A)...The
reservation Seminoles voiced their displeasure
with the Miccosukees and moved to distance
themselves from the action "these people don't
speak for us" says Mike Osceola (Miami Herald 4
August 1959 p. 5C).
From
p. 184
of Harry Kersey, An Assumption of Sovereignty
The Cuba venture became
a pivotal issue in negotiations with the
Bureau. Years later Buffalo Tiger recalled,
“When Castro took over Cuba, he wanted us to
come over as his guests. We went and were
treated ok. When we got back the United States
said “ok, don’t go back. Promise you wont, and
you will be Miccosukees”
“We needed our own power and we had to go
to Cuba to get it” (Italics and
emphasis supplied) *
* ”A
Tale of Two Tribes,” (Florida Times Union, 3
June 1986, special supplement 15)
From p. 18K
THE MIAMI HERALD, Saturday January 1,
2000.
"...The
government wanted to pay us money to shut up. We
wanted land set aside for us and to be left
alone. No one in Washington would listen to us.
So when [Fidel] Castro took over [in 1959], I
went over there and smoked some cigars with him
and Che Guevara and I asked them: 'Do you
recognize the Miccosukee Tribe?' Castro said he
did. He said that if the United States would not
give us a place to live, we were welcome to go
over there and he would make room for us. When
we got back, there were all kinds of phone calls
from Washington.
The
government started dealing with us seriously
then.''
(Italics and emphasis supplied)
-- Buffalo
Tiger, of the Miccosukee Indian tribe, December
1997 interview
(at this point the
December 1961 issue of the
"Seminole Indian News" (the then first and
only newspaper of the Miccosukee Seminole
Indians) reported the following significant news
story (4th
edition, p. 1):
"U.S. PLANNING 3rd FLA. TRIBE"
"The U.S. Interior Dept. is pushing ahead with
its plans to organize a third tribe of puppet
Indians in an effort to wreck the many years of
negotiations and agreements with our Miccosukee
Tribe," charged Homer Osceola, Co-Chairman of
the Miccosukee Tribal Executive Council.
"We predicted this when we gave this story to
the newspapers last October.
They obviously
plan to try to trick the public into believing
that what their puppets do has been authorized
by our Miccosukee Tribe.
"If they go through with this shenanigan, it
will be the biggest fraud on the Seminoles since
the fake so-called treaty of Paynes Landing over
100 years ago. And we want the American public
to know what is going on here....."
(in this regard, it is interesting to also
note the following excerpt from Peter
Matthiessen's book "INDIAN COUNTRY" (The Viking
Press, New York, 1984) at pp. 62-63) (retyped
for clarity):
p. 62
"In early January of 1983, the
state of Florida granted Buffalo Tiger's
Miccosukee Tribe its long-sought lease on
189,000 acres of the FCD's Conservation Area No.
3, together with $975,000 for "economic
development." In the opinion of the Osceola
family, the lease contract is a government
payoff to a "puppet Indian." As Homer Osceola
told a reporter for the Miami Herald on January
9, 1983, "He's not doing things the Indian way
at all. He can't live like the old Indians used
to live. . . . If the Indian people are going to
change, let nature change them not some
money-hungry guy telling them what to do. Far
as we're concerned, Florida is not part of the
United States in the first place, because we've
never been conquered. . . . How can the white
man give it to us when we already own it?
To this, Buffalo Tiger retorted, "Just because
their last name is Osceola, they still think
they're great leaders like Chief Osceola, but
they're wrong. The man died long, long ago.
These people better wake up and be like
everybody else." Hearing that he had been
criticized for driving a "1983 gold-colored
Cadillac," he said, "It's only an '82, but it
runs pretty good."
In recognizing Tiger's disputed right to speak
for all his Miccosukee people, the U.S.
government and the state of Florida tried to
extinguish all future treaty claims by Florida
Indians, and President
p. 63
Reagan, who signed the agreement into law,
promptly
received an angry letter protesting the
unlawful sale of "our Everglades homeland" by
"Mr. Tiger and his fake tribe." The letter was
written on ancient stationary that still carried
the name of Buffalo Tiger, who had resigned from
the General Council in 1961; it was signed by
Homer, Howard, Bill, John, Leroy, and William
Osceola, together with a nephew, Rainey Jim."