http://www.nationalreview.com/flashback/miller200601271228.asp
January 27, 2006, 12:28 p.m.
Honest Injun?
The incidence of fake Indians is almost epidemic.
By John J. Miller
EDITOR’S NOTE: “Did a struggling white writer of gay erotica become one of multicultural literature’s most celebrated memoirists by passing himself off as Native American?” So asks L.A. Weekly in its current issue, which features a story by Matthew Fleischer on an author who calls himself Nasdijj and claims to be a Navajo.
Fake memoirs have made news lately, with the revelations surrounding James Frey, the author of the best-selling book A Million Little Pieces. Nasdijj, for his part, may simply be the latest in a long line of Indian hoaxers, whose ranks also include the radical professor Ward Churchill and Forrest Carter, the author of The Education of Little Tree.
Last year, NR’s John J. Miller reported on the phenomenon of Indian hoaxers, in the March 28, 2005 issue...
(Ward Churchill seems to be one of many.)
These frauds get hired and promoted by their fellow frauds. Hundreds of fellow travelers at Boudler took out big newspaper ads and marched for Ward.
(Ward Churchill seems to be one of many.)