The Aboriginal Ministry of Justice is the administrative authority of the Xi-Amaru Republic, an Indigenous self-governing nation operating within U.S. territory under international law. Learn about its role, citizenship pathways, and legal foundation.

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Aboriginal Ministry of Justice: Administrative Authority of the Xi-Amaru Republic

The Aboriginal Ministry of Justice (AMJ) is the administrative authority of the Xi-Amaru Republic — an Indigenous self-governing nation formally declared into existence on December 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas. The AMJ implements the governance of the Republic, administering citizenship pathways, maintaining jurisdictional records, and managing all legal and administrative operations on behalf of Xi-Amaru nationals and citizens.

If you have been searching for information about Indigenous national identity, lawful self-governance, or how to reconnect with your Indigenous lineage through a recognized jurisdiction, this article explains what the Aboriginal Ministry of Justice is, what it does, and how the Xi-Amaru Republic operates as an Indigenous government within U.S. territory — lawfully and by right.

What Is the Aboriginal Ministry of Justice?

The Aboriginal Ministry of Justice is a government organization that serves as the administrative and legal body of the Xi-Amaru Republic. It is responsible for implementing tribal governance through real institutions, real records, and real decision-making systems. Its specific functions include tribal screening, citizenship administration, legal documentation issuance, jurisdictional recordkeeping, legal advocacy support, and more.

The AMJ is the administrative authority. The Xi-Amaru Republic is the governing authority. This distinction matters: governance authority originates from the people and their inherent right to self-govern. Administrative authority implements that governance. The AMJ exists to carry out the work of the Republic’s governance on behalf of its nationals and citizens.

The AMJ is not a nonprofit, a community organization, or an advocacy group. It is a government organization — one operating within the same universal framework through which nations have been established and administered throughout human history.

What Is the Xi-Amaru Republic?

The Xi-Amaru Republic is an Indigenous self-governing nation whose mission is to restore lawful national identity, jurisdiction, and citizenship to Indigenous peoples of the Americas who were historically misclassified, denationalized, and displaced through colonization and its administrative systems. Colonization disrupted governance administration — it did not erase Indigenous identity. The Xi-Amaru Republic exists to restore what was disrupted.

It was founded by Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears, Founding Mother of the Xi-Amaru Republic. The Republic was formally established through a written, notarized, and signed Declaration of Independence with witnesses present and formal documentation recorded on December 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.

The Republic operates from a Christian foundation. Rights do not originate from governments — they originate from God. The Xi-Amaru Republic was founded through divine instruction, and God is openly acknowledged as the source of its wisdom and direction. All nationals and citizens are asked to respect this foundation, though the Republic does not impose religion as a condition of eligibility.

The Source of Indigenous Governing Authority

One of the most important things to understand about the Xi-Amaru Republic is where its authority comes from — and where it does not come from.

Authority originates from Divine Authority. God is the Creator and the source of lawful authority. From Divine Authority come Universal Rights — the inherent rights of all peoples to exist, organize, and govern themselves. Governments do not create these rights. They exercise authority within the framework of those rights. They may protect rights or fail to protect them, but they do not create them.

Indigenous Rights are Universal Rights applied to Indigenous peoples. The right to self-determination, the right to self-government, the right to maintain institutions — these rights existed before federal and state governments existed. This authority is not granted by external governments. It originates from the people themselves. This is known as Inherent Sovereignty.

Federal recognition is not the source of Indigenous jurisdiction. The Xi-Amaru Republic does not derive its governing authority from the federal government or from any state government. Its authority flows from the inherent right of Indigenous peoples to govern themselves — a right affirmed internationally and exercised through the Republic’s founding Declaration of Independence.

The International Legal Basis: UNDRIP and ADRIP

UNDRIP
American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

The Xi-Amaru Republic’s operation as a self-governing Indigenous nation within U.S. territory is grounded in two internationally recognized declarations. Both affirm that Indigenous peoples possess inherent rights to self-governance that exist independently of federal and state government recognition.

UNDRIP — United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2007)

Adopted by the UN General Assembly on September 13, 2007, UNDRIP establishes minimum standards for the survival, dignity, and wellbeing of Indigenous peoples worldwide. Key articles directly relevant to the Xi-Amaru Republic include:

  • Article 3 — Indigenous peoples have the right to self-determination; they freely determine their political status and pursue their own development
  • Article 4 — Indigenous peoples have the right to autonomy and self-government in matters relating to their internal and local affairs
  • Article 5 — Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain and strengthen their own political, legal, economic, social, and cultural institutions
  • Article 19 — Member states (including the U.S. federal government) shall consult and cooperate in good faith with Indigenous peoples before adopting measures that may affect them
  • Article 38 — Member states shall take appropriate measures, including legislative measures, to achieve the ends of this Declaration

The United States is a member state of the United Nations. These are not suggestions directed at other countries. They are standards that apply within U.S. territory.

ADRIP — American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2016)

Adopted by the Organization of American States (OAS) on June 15, 2016, ADRIP applies specifically to all 35 member states of the western hemisphere, including the United States. It affirms Indigenous rights in the Americas and establishes that the rights it recognizes constitute the minimum standards for the survival, dignity, and wellbeing of Indigenous peoples of the Americas (Article XXXIX).

Key articles affirm the authority the Xi-Amaru Republic exercises:

  • Article III — Indigenous peoples have the right to self-determination
  • Article VI — Indigenous peoples possess collective rights necessary for their existence
  • Article VIII — Indigenous individuals have the right to belong to an Indigenous nation
  • Article XXI — Indigenous peoples have the right to self-government
  • Article XXII — Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain their juridical systems and institutions

The role of member states in both declarations is significant. These governments are not positioned as opponents of Indigenous self-governance. They are called upon to actively support its implementation. Federal and state governments participating in the OAS and UN operate under these standards — standards that affirm, not restrict, the existence of the Xi-Amaru Republic.

Multiple Legal Systems Can Exist Simultaneously

Many people assume there is only one legal system. In reality, multiple legal systems can and do exist simultaneously within the same territory. These include federal law, state law, tribal law, and international law. Each operates within its own jurisdiction. The key question in any legal matter is: who has authority over this person or matter?

Tribal Law is the legal and administrative system exercised by an Indigenous nation to govern its people, identity, documentation, and internal affairs. The Xi-Amaru Republic exercises Tribal Law through its governance systems. The AMJ is the administrative body that implements that law — managing citizenship processes, legal documentation, and jurisdictional records.

Jurisdiction is the lawful authority to govern persons and matters. The Xi-Amaru Republic’s jurisdiction over its nationals and citizens does not conflict with the existence of federal and state government jurisdiction. It operates alongside it — as Indigenous governing bodies have done throughout history, and as international law affirms they have the right to continue doing.

The Two Citizenship Pathways

The Aboriginal Ministry of Justice administers two distinct pathways to Xi-Amaru Republic citizenship. Each pathway begins with an eligibility screening and, upon approval, grants temporary national status valid for 14 months — during which the applicant must initiate the full Citizenship Procedure.

Tribal Citizenship Procedure

This pathway is for individuals with Indigenous lineage connected to the peoples of the Americas, or for individuals married to an active Xi-Amaru citizen. Applicants begin through Tribal Screening, which verifies lineage and establishes eligibility before the Citizenship Procedure begins.

ARK Citizenship Procedure

ARK stands for Assembly for the Remnant of the Kingdom. This pathway is for Christian individuals and families whose faith and values align with Kingdom Culture principles. It carries the imagery of Noah’s Ark — offering protective national standing and a recognized jurisdiction for those who qualify. Applicants begin through ARK Eligibility screening before proceeding to the Citizenship Procedure.

Both pathways require eligibility approval before the Citizenship Procedure begins. All fees are strictly non-refundable, and approval grants temporary national status for 14 months.

Failure to proceed within that window results in a five-year waiting period before re-application. Adults who complete the Citizenship Procedure are recognized as Xi-Amaru Native Americans with full citizenship documentation.

 

What Citizenship Status Means

Citizenship in the Xi-Amaru Republic positions the Republic as the citizen’s primary jurisdiction — with first and final say over their wellbeing. Federal and state government systems are treated as secondary and limited-access. This does not mean Xi-Amaru citizenship automatically overrides another jurisdiction’s records — that jurisdiction must come into agreement with the citizen’s current status. What it establishes is that the citizen’s primary national standing is held within the Republic.

Temporary national status is the required first step toward citizenship. It is not citizenship itself. Full citizenship is obtained through a separate Citizenship Procedure that must be initiated within 14 months of eligibility approval. Nationals with temporary status are not yet full citizens and do not yet have access to the full range of benefits available to Xi-Amaru Native Americans.

A Note on the Pioneer Stage

The Xi-Amaru Republic is in its pioneer stages. The systems, relationships, and structures of a self-governing Indigenous nation are actively being developed. The Aboriginal Ministry of Justice operates with full transparency: outcomes cannot be guaranteed, and relationships with federal and state government systems are still being formally established. This transparency is intentional.

What is being built here is not new in the arc of human history. Nations have always been established through the exercise of authority. The Xi-Amaru Republic represents the continuation of that universal process — not the creation of something without precedent.

Ready to Learn About Your Citizenship Pathway?

If you believe you may qualify for Xi-Amaru Republic citizenship through Indigenous lineage or through the ARK pathway, your next step is to visit the citizenship pathway page and review your options. Both pathways begin with an eligibility screening.

Visit: aboriginalministryofjustice.org/citizenship-pathway



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