
Iroquois
Women Inspire 19th Century Feminists
by Sally Roesch Wagner
How did our 19th century foremothers get the vision and courage to demand a
better life when they were surrounded by voices telling them the stifling existence
they led was the only one possible? Woman was created to be subordinate to man,
the church thundered, and science nodded its approval that Gods way was
natures way as well.
Common law based itself upon church law, and the two shall become one
and the one is the man of Christianity became the non-existence of married
women under the law. Women could not vote, own property, control their own wages,
or have any say over their bodies or the children they birthed. Unmarried women
were unnatural since they were not under the control of a husband, and fared
no better under their fathers authority.
The assertion that women have always been physically inferior to men,
and consequently have always been held in a subject condition, has been universally
believed, Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote. This view has furnished
the opponents to womans emancipation their chief arguments for holding
her in bondage...
With this universal view of women in place, one might wonder how Stanton and
other early feminists were inspired to imagine the possibility of a more equal
society. That inspiration came from contemporary women who in fact lived very
different lives from theirs, the women of the six Iroquois nations-Seneca, Cayuga,
Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and Tuscarora--the Haudenosaunee, as they called themselves.
Lucretia Mott saw this world in practice when she and her husband visited the
Seneca in the summer of 1848. She watched women who had equal responsibilities
with men in all aspects of their lives -- family, spiritual, government, economic.
At this time the Seneca women were deeply involved in the decision of whether
or not to drop their traditional clan system of government and adopt the constitutional
form insisted upon by the Quakers. While the Cattaraugus Seneca finally did
accept the United States model, they refused to accept the element of male dominance.
They placed in their constitution that no treaty would be valid without the
approval of three-fourths of the mothers of the nation.
With this in mind, Mott traveled to visit friends in western New York where
they planned, and held, the first womens rights convention in Seneca Falls.
Beyond equal suffrage, Stanton marveled that the women were the great
power among the clan, and the original nomination of the chiefs
also always rested with the women. The clan mother had the authority to
nominate, hold in office and remove the representative of her clan, Stanton
explained.
Matilda Joslyn Gage, Stantons equally brilliant contemporary, described
the governmental structure in more detail. Division of power between the
sexes in this Indian republic was nearly equal. Although the principal chief
of the confederacy was a man, descent ran through the female line, the sister
of the chief possessing the power of nominating his successor.
Gage wrote that the U.S. form of government was borrowed from that of the Six
Nations, and thus the modern world [is] indebted for its first conception
of inherent rights, natural equality of condition, and the establishment of
a civilized government upon this basis to the Iroquois.
The movement theoreticians, Stanton and Gage, came to believe that every existing
institution of western civilization-family, capitalism, church and
state- rested on the oppression of women, and each would have to be destroyed
in their existing form before women would be free. They knew these institutions
were neither inherent nor natural, for they had seen an alternative in action.
While civilized women pledged to obey their husbands upon marriage,
among Haudenosaunee women usually the females ruled the house, Stanton
wrote. The stores were in common; but woe to the luckless husband or lover
who was too shiftless to do his share of the providing. No matter how many children,
or whatever goods he might have in the house, he might at any time be ordered
to pick up his blanket and budge; and after such an order it would not be healthful
for him to attempt to disobey . . . and unless saved by the intercession of
some aunt or grandmother, he must retreat to his own clan, or go and start a
new matrimonial alliance in some other [clan].
Divorce, Iroquois style, must have looked like a vision to Stanton, who had
been called a heretic for arguing that women should have the right to leave
loveless or dangerous marriages. Women had no right to their children under
the laws of patriarchal Christianity, while among the greater number of
the American aborigines the descent of property and children were in the female
line, Stanton wrote.
This model, of indigenous women living in a world in which they had status,
authority, and dignity, gave our feminist foremothers a vision of how they could
transform their world, along with the sure knowledge that it could be done without
upsetting either nature or God.
Sally Roesch Wagner is the Executive Director of the Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation, PO Box 192, Fayetteville, NY 13066 and can be reached at swagner711@aol.com. This article was originally published in the Summer 1999 issue of National NOW Times.
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