About

Original Nations Advocates
Original Nations Advocates is dedicated to supporting Indigenous nations and peoples to protect their sacred ancestral homelands, to restore and revitalize their linguistic, cultural, and spiritual traditions, and to heal from the trauma of colonization and the patterns of domination.

 

Steven Newcomb is a Shawnee-Lenape scholar and author. He has been studying and writing about U.S. federal Indian law and policy since the early 1980s, particularly the application of international law to Indigenous nations and peoples. Mr. Newcomb is the Director of the Indigenous Law Institute, which he co-founded with Birgil Kills Straight, a Traditional Headman and Elder of the Oglala Lakota Nation. Together they have carried on a global campaign challenging imperial Vatican documents from the fifteenth century. Those documents resulted in the decimation of Original Nations and Peoples of Mother Earth and thereby deprived the planet of life-ways, sustainable ecosystems, and Sacred Teachings. Newcomb’s book Pagans in the Promised Land: Decoding the Doctrine of Christian Discovery (2008) relies upon recent findings in cognitive theory and a semantic analysis of the Latin and English versions of 15th century Vatican documents. He has identified the little noticed patterns found in those documents and a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, which claimed a right of a “Christian prince or people” to discover and exert a right of domination (dominorum Christianorum) over the lands of “heathens and infidels.”

The result of Christendom’s legacy of domination and dehumanization has resulted in the near destruction of thousands of years of spiritual and ecological wisdom developed by our original nations. The remaining understandings of the need for reverence, honor, and respect are vital for the healing of humans and Mother Earth at this time.

Mr. Newcomb’s work has also served as a powerful context for the documentary “The Doctrine of Discovery: Unmasking the Domination Code,” (directed and produced by Sheldon Wolfchild (Dakota), (co- produced by Newcomb). The documentary also features theologian Dr. Luis Rivera-Pagán, and his book A Violent Evangelism: The Political and Religious Conquest of the Americas (1992).

Having majored in Rhetoric and Communication at the University of Oregon, Mr. Newcomb uses his expertise in persuasive argument and rhetorical analysis on behalf of Original Nations. He has worked on Indigenous Peoples issues at the United Nations for twenty years, and has worked with numerous Native Nations and Peoples. Newcomb is published by Wiley-Blackwell (Oxford), Routledge, New York University School of Law, Fulcrum Publishing, the University of California at Los Angeles School of Law, and the Griffith School of Law in Australia. He has been a regular columnist with Indian Country Today Media Network Now since 2001. (See articles)

In May 2016, Mr. Newcomb met Pope Francis at St. Peter’s Square and spent two hours meeting with Archbishop Tomasi at the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace regarding the papal bulls of the fifteenth century.