Birth certificate and family testimony reveal Oscar-winning folk singer Buffy Sainte-Marie is another fake Indian



Buffy Sainte-Marie is an Academy Award-winning folk singer who has claimed Native-American heritage since the early 1960s. In her art and activism, she has spoken from what Teen Vogue called an "Indigenous perspective," repeatedly condemning colonization and referring to America's founding and the supposed erasure of American Indians as "genocide." She also has touted herself as a "survivor" of an allegedly racist government welfare program that placed certain Native-American kids in foster homes.

Liberal media outfits devoured and trafficked in the singer's claims for years, suggesting, for instance, that the singer had been forcibly taken away from her Native-American family; that she was "raised ... in a small town where there was almost nobody that looked like her"; that she was Cree.

A birth certificate, testimony from family members, genealogical data, and an altogether damning report from the Canadian state media have knocked out the pillar upon which Sainte-Marie has long built her persona. She was not born in Canada. She was likely not adopted. She is most likely of Italian and English heritage.

What's the background?

Sainte-Marie has for over 50 years claimed to have Native-American heritage. At one stage, she said she was a "full-blooded Algonquin Indian." Months later, in 1963, she said she was "half-Micmac by birth."

Once she got her story straight, she told reporters she was Cree, born on the Piapot First Nation reserve in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, then sent to live with a Massachusetts couple who would become her adoptive parents, Albert and Winifred Santamaria. PBS suggested last year she was taken from her family against their will, owing to a supposedly racist practice called the Sixties Scoop.

Much of her music, dance, and activism came to center on her supposed race.

According to her biography, "It's My Way!," Sainte-Marie held her part in the TV western, "The Virginian," hostage unless the studio agreed to have only real indigenous actors play all of the Native-American parts.

While keen for people to appreciate Native-American culture, she condemned those who attempted to "reach out to Indigenous people to adopt some of their ways," reported Canadian state media.

"It doesn't make any sense to me — these kids, trying to be Indians," she told an underground Berkeley, California, newspaper in 1967. "They'll never become Indians."

Sainte-Marie was hired in 1975 to present Native-American programming for children on "Sesame Street." Her debut appearance was purportedly groundbreaking. She opened a backpack and produced some Native-American bead work.

"This is Cree Indian," she said, holding a pair of moccasins. "Cree Indians are my tribe, and we live in Canada."

Concerning her children's television experience, she said she "wanted little kids and their caretakers to know one thing above all: that Indians exist. We are not all dead and stuffed in museums like the dinosaurs."

Sainte-Marie has won numerous race-based prizes. She took home four Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards, two Aboriginal Peoples' Choice Music Awards, four Juno awards designated for Native-Americans, and four Indigenous lifetime achievement awards, reported the Canadian state media.

Not only did art centers celebrate her supposed success as a Native-American, Canada even put out a stamp depicting her in traditional native garb.

Another worn-out costume

Canadian state media indicated it received a tip in 2022 that Sainte-Marie was not of Cree ancestry but rather of European heritage. The taxpayer-funded giant subsequently began to investigate discrepancies in the singer's origin story.

Whereas the singer claimed she was born on a Canadian reserve, documents obtained by the state broadcaster, including her birth certificate, indicate she was instead born in Stoneham, Massachusetts.

"She wasn't born in Canada. .... She's clearly born in the United States," Heidi St. Marie, daughter of the singer's older brother Alan, told the state broadcaster. "She's clearly not Indigenous or Native American."

While the singer's Ontario-based lawyer told the broadcaster, "At no point has Buffy Sainte-Marie personally misrepresented her ancestry or any details about her personal history to the public," Sainte-Marie declined requests for a follow-up interview.

Instead, in a video statement posted to Meta, where she once more insinuated she was a Sixties Scoop "survivor," Sainte-Marie discarded her usual racial confidence, saying, "There are also many things I don't know, which I've always been honest about. I don't know where I'm from, who my birth parents are, or how I ended up a misfit in a typical white Christian New England town."

The folk singer's birth certificate states that Beverly Jean Santamaria, the singer's original name, was born in 1941 north of Boston to Albert and Winifred Santamaria. Albert was an electrician whose parents were Italian, and Winifred was a homemaker whose background was English. Sainte-Marie has publicly referred to this couple as her adopted parents, both now dead.

Just like her mother and father, she too was listed on the stamped and certified Town of Stoneham birth certificate as "white."

Canadian state media was able to confirm the facts on the birth certificate by cross-referencing genealogical records and media stories with family interviews.

The state media report also noted various inconsistencies in Sainte-Marie's claims over the years. For instance, in 1966 she stated, "My real mother wasn't in a position to keep me, but I always knew who she was and that I could go back to the place of my birth when I wished." Then, in 1967, she said, "I don't know who my real mother was."

Sainte-Marie's younger sister, now 75, told state media in September that she couldn't recall her parents ever once mentioning the folk singer having been adopted.

The singer's paternal uncle told the Wakefield Daily Item in 1964, Sainte-Marie "has no Indian blood in her."

"I thought I should come down and tell you the truth about Buffy. ... [I]f people believe what they get from the press agents, they'll get a wrong impression," said Arthur Santamaria.

Asked whether the singer had Native-American blood, her uncle responded, "Not a bit."

Other family members, including her cousin Bruce Santamaria, all understood that she was "Uncle Albert's child."

The town clerk in Stoneham, Massachusetts, Maria Sagarino, told Canadian state media that Sainte-Marie's handwritten birth certificate was signed by Dr. Herbert Land, the same doctor who delivered her sister years later. The doctor certified she had been born to Alfred and Winifred Santamaria.

Sagarino further noted that "children adopted by parents in Massachusetts were commonly issued new Massachusetts birth certificates with the name of their adoptive parents," which hadn't happened in Sainte-Marie's case.

"It doesn't appear that she was adopted in any way, shape or form," said the town clerk.

On a marriage certificate in 1982, even the singer confirmed she was born in the U.S. to "Albert and Winifred St. Marie."

Sainte-Marie released a statement in advance of the report, noting she was "proud of [her] Indigenous-American identity."

— (@)

Pretenders

While Sainte-Marie appears to have been playing at it longer, faking Native-American heritage for self-gain appears to be an all-too common occurrence.

Blaze News previously indicated that Marlon Brando's infamous Academy Awards stand-in Sacheen Littlefeather, whose real name was Marie Louise Cruz, was revealed by her sisters to have been of Hispanic and European heritage, not Apache ancestry.

Heather Rae, an award-winning producer, was accused earlier this year of lying about being Cherokee.

Former Berkeley sociology professor Elizabeth Hoover also greatly benefited from faking a Native-American background, admitting to probably having received special treatment as a result of the perception she was a "Native scholar."

Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) identified as Native-American on her application for a job at Harvard University and hand-wrote "American Indian" in the field for "race" on her State Bar of Texas registration card. In 2018, former President Donald Trump, who had long derided Warren as "Pocahontas," challenged the senator to get a DNA test to prove she was Native-American. The test results came back showing that she was only 1/1,024th Native-American, if at all.

"They're taking that opportunity from a real Indigenous person. ... It's prestige, it's money, it's grants and awards and positions and work that they would never have gotten otherwise," Métis lawyer Jean Teillet of Vancouver told state media.

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Stanford University teacher suspended for allegedly separating Jewish students, calling them colonizers, downplaying the Holocaust



A Stanford University teacher has been suspended for allegedly separating Jewish students from the rest of the class, calling them colonizers, and downplaying the Holocaust.

Just days after the Hamas invasion that killed more than 1,300 Israelis, a Stanford University lecturer is accused of "identity-based targeting" of Jewish students. The disturbing alleged actions took place on Tuesday during two "Civil, Liberal and Global Education" classes – a course for undergraduate students on campus.

Senior Nourya Cohen and junior Andrei Mandelshtam – co-presidents of Stanford’s Israeli Student Association – caught wind of the troubling accusations and interviewed several students who were in the classroom.

The lecturer allegedly began one of the classes by announcing that the lesson would be about colonialism. The teacher blamed the war on Zionists and excused the barbaric atrocities committed by Hamas terrorists because their actions were part of a "resistance."

The lecturer – who was not identified – reportedly asked Jewish students to raise their hands. The teacher then ordered the Jewish students to leave their belongings at their seats and go stand in a corner.

Rabbi Dov Greenberg – director of the Chabad Stanford Jewish Center – said three students in the class informed him that the instructor told the class, "This is what Israel does to the Palestinians."

The lecturer then asked, "How many people died in the Holocaust?" A student responded by saying, "Six million." The teacher replied, "Colonizers killed more than six million. Israel is a colonizer."

The San Francisco Chronicle reported, "Cohen and Mandelshtam said students told them that the lecturer asked if anyone knew who 19th-century Belgian King Leopold was. When no one responded, he said the king, who colonized Congo, had killed some 12 million Africans. Students reported that the lecturer told them that more people died from colonization than from the Holocaust and that colonization was what happened to the Palestinians, Cohen and Mandelshtam said.

The instructor allegedly asked every student where their ancestors were from. The teacher then purportedly labeled each student as a "colonizer" or someone who was "colonized."

A student allegedly said his ancestors were from Israel, and the teacher shot back, "Oh, definitely a colonizer."

Cohen said, "I feel absolutely dehumanized that someone in charge of students and developing minds could possibly try and justify the massacre of my people. It's like I’m reliving the justification of Nazis 80 years ago on today’s college campus."

Joshua Jankelow – President of the Jewish organization Chabad at Stanford – noted, "It sounds like a vile form of hatred."

Stanford University suspended the teacher and launched an investigation into the alarming allegations.

Stanford University said in a statement:

We have received a report of a class in which a non-faculty instructor is reported to have addressed the Middle East conflict in a manner that called out individual students in class based on their backgrounds and identities. Without prejudging the matter, this report is a cause for serious concern. Academic freedom does not permit the identity-based targeting of students. The instructor in this course is not currently teaching while the university works to ascertain the facts of the situation.

The students who exposed the teacher remained anonymous because the atmosphere had gotten toxic on campus following the start of the Israel-Hamas war.

There were posters and slogans written in chalk that read: "Israel Is Dead," "Long Live The Intifada," "From The River To The Sea," and "2-4-6-8, Smash The Zionist Settler State."

The Stanford Daily reported, "Multiple banners were hung on campus buildings over the weekend. One at Tresidder Memorial Union read, 'The Illusion Of Israel Is Burning.' Another banner at the clock tower on Sunday read, 'The Land Remembers Her People,' accompanied by a drawing of the Palestinian flag. The banners were taken down before Monday."

— (@)

Requests were made to increase security at Hillel at Stanford – the self-described "Jewish home for 550 Jewish undergraduate and 1100 Jewish graduate students, and a center to share the wisdom and beauty of Jewish life with the university community as a whole."

Rabbi Jessica Kirschner – executive director of Stanford Hillel – said Jewish students are "feeling invisible" and are experiencing a real sense of uncertainty and fear.

Originally, Stanford President Richard Saller and Provost Jenny Martinez issued a statement on Monday that described the bloody Hamas invasion of Israel as a "Middle East conflict." The press release did not use the word "Hamas" at all.

After blowback to the milquetoast statement, the president and provost delivered a second statement that was much more sympathetic to the murdered and kidnapped Israelis.

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Left-wing academic violates Twitter rules by wishing Queen Elizabeth II an 'excruciating' death



As the world mourns the death of Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-reigning monarch in British history, a self-described feminist university professor was roundly condemned for wishing the queen an "excruciating" death.

"I heard the chief monarch of a thieving raping genocidal empire is finally dying. May her pain be excruciating," Carnegie Mellon University linguistics professor Dr. Uju Anya wrote on Twitter Thursday morning after news broke that doctors were concerned for the queen's health. Her tweet has since been taken down for violating Twitter rules.

But Anya's sentiments were shared by a handful of other left-wing academics and media personalities, who called the queen a "colonizer" and expressed disdain for the British empire.

"Real question for the 'now is not the appropriate time to talk about the negative impact of colonialism' crowd: When is the appropriate time to talk about the negative impact of colonialism?" Washington Post national political reporter Eugene Scott tweeted.

\u201cReal question for the \u201cnow is not the appropriate time to talk about the negative impact of colonialism\u201d crowd:\n\nWhen is the appropriate time to talk about the negative impact of colonialism?\u201d
— Eugene Scott (@Eugene Scott) 1662655131

"I will not mourn a colonizer," wrote Aabria Iyengar, a tabletop role-playing game streamer who has appeared as a guest on the popular Critical Role show.

\u201cI will not mourn a colonizer.\u201d
— Aabria Iyengar \ud83c\udf39 (@Aabria Iyengar \ud83c\udf39) 1662658639

"Good riddance to any and all murdering colonizers," said independent journalist Kavin Senapathy.

\u201cGood riddance to any and all murdering colonizers\ud83d\udc51\u201d
— Kavin Senapathy (@Kavin Senapathy) 1662660543

Ebony Elizabeth Thomas, an associate professor at the University of Michigan, defended criticisms of the queen upon her death.

\u201cTelling the colonized how they should feel about their colonizer's health and wellness is like telling my people that we ought to worship the Confederacy. \ud83d\ude12\n\n"Respect the dead" when we're all writing these Tweets *in English.* How'd that happen, hm? We just chose this language?\u201d
— Ebony Elizabeth Thomas (@Ebony Elizabeth Thomas) 1662650166

"Telling the colonized how they should feel about their colonizer's health and wellness is like telling my people that we ought to worship the Confederacy," she wrote. "'Respect the dead' when we're all writing these Tweets *in English.* How'd that happen, hm? We just chose this language?"

However, many others swiftly condemned Anya and came to the defense of the queen and her legacy.

“This is someone supposedly working to make the world better?” billionaire Amazon founder Jeff Bezos wrote, quoting Anya's tweet. "I don't think so. Wow."

\u201cThis is someone supposedly working to make the world better? I don\u2019t think so. Wow.\u201d
— Jeff Bezos (@Jeff Bezos) 1662655895

"You vile disgusting moron," British broadcast journalist Piers Morgan said to Anya.

\u201cYou vile disgusting moron.\u201d
— Piers Morgan (@Piers Morgan) 1662658248

"Uju, what happened to your family is a tragedy but Britain under Queen Elizabeth II was far less of a 'thieving raping genocidal empire' than it had been before then -- and for all its faults, that empire had positive consequences, as well. She wasn't the villain you suggest," Fox News editor Tyler O'Neil charitably wrote.

\u201cUju, what happened to your family is a tragedy but Britain under Queen Elizabeth II was far less of a "thieving raping genocidal empire" than it had been before then -- and for all its faults, that empire had positive consequences, as well. She wasn't the villain you suggest.\u201d
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler O'Neil) 1662664109

Anya posted a follow-up message at 1:51 p.m. ET after Buckingham Palace announced that Queen Elizabeth II had passed.

"If anyone expects me to express anything but disdain for the monarch who supervised a government that sponsored the genocide that massacred and displaced half my family and the consequences of which those alive today are still trying to overcome, you can keep wishing upon a star," shewrote.

\u201cIf anyone expects me to express anything but disdain for the monarch who supervised a government that sponsored the genocide that massacred and displaced half my family and the consequences of which those alive today are still trying to overcome, you can keep wishing upon a star.\u201d
— Uju Anya (@Uju Anya) 1662659490

Horowitz: Minneapolis residents scared to leave their homes as city on the brink



Why are Minneapolis residents terrified to leave their homes in recent months? For the same reason why someone brazenly shot and killed an anti-Antifa counterprotester in broad daylight in Denver on Saturday. There is no deterrent against violent criminals any more and therefore no protection for the average citizen.

"We have never seen anything like this."

"I'm scared to even drive after dark."

"I don't feel safe walking around my neighborhood."

"Everybody feels the same way. We all want to move."

This is just some of the feedback that members of the Minneapolis city council received during a meeting of the Public Health and Safety Committee last Thursday, according to Alpha news. During a two-hour virtual hearing, numerous citizens spoke about their concern of understaffed and demoralized police and the role of the city's politicians in emboldening criminals. With almost a quarter of the year left to go, there is already a 37.5% increase in homicides over the 12-month total of 2019.

The message has essentially been telegraphed that law and order is a racist concept, and so long as anyone acts violently in the name of "racial justice," it is forgiven or even encouraged. The black communities closest to the violence are paying for this a lot more than the gated communities of politicians.

Bill Rodriguez, a passionate citizen speaker at the meeting, summed up the consequences perfectly. "If we don't act soon, here's what's going to happen: you'll be presiding over the biggest exodus of businesses and families that this town has ever seen just as some of you are running for reelection next year."

But in city after city, we are seeing the opposite of law and order. The city officials are taking actions to discourage the police and encourage violent criminals, particularly those involved with BLM and ANTIFA. According to the Oregonian, out of 974 criminal cases stemming from the Portland riots over the past several months, 666 were dropped by Multnomah District Attorney Mike Schmidt. Moreover, only 7 out of the 39 arrests for assaulting police officers resulted in charges being filed. The outlet even found 18 individuals who were arrested three or more times throughout the rioting since May. Nearly all the charges have been dropped.

The Oregonian further found that even some of the cases that were initially listed as having criminal charges lodged against the defended were later dropped. "But court records show prosecutors have subsequently decided to drop all charges in at least 22 of these cases, some that have included allegations of riot, burglary and unlawful use of a weapon."

Is it any wonder why a suspect is seen on video in broad daylight shooting an anti-ANTIFA protester in Denver on Saturday? There is simply no deterrent against these people because they have a de facto green light from city politicians, prosecutors, and courts to rampage with impunity.

In Rochester, New York, a left-wing protester was caught on camera punching a policeman in the face. He was released the next day.

The guy with the red head covering punched a Rochester police officer in the face, and was released without charges… https://t.co/D8fiiv0ngk
— Bob Lonsberry (@Bob Lonsberry)1602492873.0

According to the New York Post, a similar incident just happened in Manhattan. Angel Rivera, 18, who allegedly head-butted an NYPD cop following three prior arrests for assaulting officers, was let back onto the streets on Saturday.

How much longer are we going to allow this one-sided war on citizens and cops alike to play out while the only people who are deterred are those who act in self-defense?

Jake Gardner is driven to suicide. A Patriot Prayer member is murdered in Portland. Now this murder in Denver. Ther… https://t.co/m2iBIgUB3N
— Colonizer Respecter Pedro 🎃 Gonzalez (@Colonizer Respecter Pedro 🎃 Gonzalez)1602375778.0

This dynamic is creating a death spiral of demoralizing police, vacancies in key policing positions, sparse police presence, weakening of deterrent, and emboldening of criminals. Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that many city police departments are having trouble finding police chiefs. People simply don't want the job. As a result, the death toll of violence due to BLM and ANTIFA will continue to mount.

BLM killed 30+ people this year.David DornAaron DanielsonSecoriea TurnerJessica WhitakerJavar HarrellChris Be… https://t.co/VxusEYlFaW
— Marina Medvin 🇺🇸 (@Marina Medvin 🇺🇸)1602255055.0

Meanwhile, as violent criminals are released in cities like New York, often without posting any bail, New York officials are fining Jewish synagogues for opening their doors and exercising their First Amendment rights. So, while peaceful people in America's major cities must quiver in fear of violent criminals, not only can they not count on their government to protect them, but they must fear its tyrannical hand as well. The very people who respect the police the most must now fear them, while those who assault the police go undeterred. Who ever said crime doesn't pay and that violence is not the answer?