UNDRIP Article 33: The Right to Determine Your Own Citizenship and National Identity
The Text of UNDRIP Article 33
Among the 46 articles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Article 33 addresses one of the most fundamental questions a nation faces: who belongs to it?
Article 33 reads: “1. Indigenous peoples have the right to determine their own identity or membership in accordance with their customs and traditions. This does not impair the right of indigenous individuals to obtain citizenship of the States in which they live. 2. Indigenous peoples have the right to determine the structures and to select the membership of their institutions in accordance with their own procedures.”
Article 33 uses the word ‘membership’ — and that word carries real legal weight. Also in international law, membership sovereignty is the principle that Indigenous peoples, not external governments, hold the authority to determine who belongs to their nation, and that is the right UNDRIP Article 33 affirms.
Within the Xi-Amaru Republic, that right is exercised as citizenship. Not because membership is the wrong word in the legal sense, but because citizenship is the word that most fully captures what the Republic is actually conferring. Membership can describe affiliation with any group.
Citizenship describes standing within a nation — a jurisdiction, an identity, a legal status with weight behind it. When the Republic applies Article 33 in practice, it does so through citizenship pathways, citizenship procedures, and citizenship determinations. The foundation is the international right to determine membership. The application is citizenship.
Membership Sovereignty — Applied as Citizenship
For much of American history, Indigenous identity was defined externally. Blood quantum calculations, enrollment rolls, and federal criteria shaped who was counted, who was recognized, and who had access to the rights and standing that came with Indigenous status.
Those frameworks reflected the assumptions of their era — assumptions that many people within democratic institutions today are actively working to examine and move beyond.
The endorsement of UNDRIP in 2010 was itself evidence of that movement. It represented a decision by the United States and the broader international community to affirm something more aligned with dignity and truth: that Indigenous peoples have the right to define themselves. Not to be defined by others.
But there is a deeper dimension to this conversation that rarely enters policy discussions. For many Indigenous peoples, the loss of national identity was not only political. It was spiritual. When a people moves away from its foundation in God — when identity becomes rooted in external systems, borrowed frameworks, and the approval of outside voices rather than the living God who established them — a season of displacement follows. Not as arbitrary punishment, but as the natural consequence of building a house on ground that cannot hold it.
What UNDRIP Article 33 makes possible — and what the Xi-Amaru Republic is actively doing — is a return. A return to self-determination, a return to identity that comes from God, not from a government form, and a return to the standing that was always there, waiting to be reclaimed.
Part 1: The Right to Determine Citizenship
The first part of Article 33 establishes that Indigenous peoples have the right to determine their own identity and citizenship in accordance with their customs and traditions.
This means the criteria for belonging to an Indigenous nation are set by that nation — not by federal agencies, not by blood quantum tables, not by enrollment systems designed outside the community.
It also clarifies something important: holding citizenship in an Indigenous nation does not cancel out or conflict with citizenship in the United States or any other state.
Article 33 explicitly protects the right of Indigenous individuals to hold both. Xi-Amaru citizenship establishes your primary national identity and jurisdiction. It does not require you to surrender other standing you may hold. Both can coexist.
This point matters practically. Xi-Amaru citizens live, work, and participate in American society. Their citizenship in the Republic is their primary national identity — the jurisdiction where their deepest standing originates. Article 33 affirms that this coexistence is not a contradiction. It is a right.
Part 2: The Right to Determine Institutional Citizenship
The second part of Article 33 extends the principle inward: Indigenous peoples also have the right to determine the structures and select the membership of their own institutions.
This covers who serves in Indigenous governing bodies, how leadership is selected, and what qualifications those who represent the nation must hold.
For the Xi-Amaru Republic, this means that the Aboriginal Ministry of Justice — its structure, its team, its standards — is the Republic’s own.
Its authority derives from the Republic, not from any external appointment or licensing process. The AMJ is the institutional expression of the Republic’s Article 33 sovereignty.
Xi-Amaru and Article 33: Membership Authority, Citizenship in Practice
The Xi-Amaru Republic exercises its Article 33 rights through two distinct citizenship pathways, each grounded in the Republic’s own customs, traditions, and Kingdom Culture framework.
Tribal Screening — The Path to Tribal Citizenship
The Tribal Screening Process is the pathway through which individuals with Indigenous lineage — ancestral connection to the peoples of the Americas — establish eligibility for Xi-Amaru citizenship. It is also open to individuals married to active Xi-Amaru citizens.
The criteria for Tribal Screening are set entirely by the Republic. What constitutes meaningful lineage evidence, how cultural alignment is assessed, what standards of character and identity are required — these are determined by the AMJ under the authority of Article 33.
The Republic decides. Not a federal agency. Not an external enrollment board. The Republic.
This is not exclusion. It is the exercise of a right that UNDRIP affirms: the right of an Indigenous nation to say what citizenship within it means and who has met the standard.
ARK Eligibility — The Path to ARK Citizenship
The ARK Eligibility Process is the pathway through which Christian individuals and families who align with Kingdom Culture values establish eligibility for Xi-Amaru citizenship.
This pathway does not require Indigenous lineage. It requires something equally foundational: active Christian faith and genuine alignment with the principles that define the Republic’s identity.
Under UNDRIP Article 33, this is entirely within the Republic’s authority. Indigenous nations determine their citizenship criteria in accordance with their own customs and traditions. For the Xi-Amaru Republic, Kingdom Culture is not decorative — it is the spiritual backbone of the nation. A values-based citizenship pathway grounded in that framework is as legitimate an exercise of Article 33 as any lineage-based pathway.
Both pathways are equally honored within the Republic. Neither is a lesser path. They reflect the full range of how God has drawn people toward this nation — through lineage and through faith.
What Article 33 Means for You as an Applicant
If you are applying for citizenship in the Xi-Amaru Republic, understanding Article 33 gives you a clearer picture of what you are actually engaging with. At the international law level, you are engaging a nation exercising its right to determine its own membership — a right UNDRIP Article 33 affirms belongs exclusively to the Indigenous people themselves. At the practical level within the Republic, that translates into a citizenship process: two defined pathways, specific eligibility standards, a thorough review, and an official determination.
The Tribal Screening Process and the ARK Eligibility Process are how the Republic’s Article 33 membership authority operates day to day. They are how the Republic determines who holds Xi-Amaru citizenship. The criteria are not bureaucratic checkboxes. They are the Republic’s sovereign expression of what it means to belong here — drawn from its customs, its traditions, and its Kingdom Culture principles.
When you receive your determination from the Aboriginal Ministry of Justice, you are receiving the result of that membership authority applied as citizenship. The AMJ has reviewed your application against the Republic’s own standards and made a sovereign decision. That determination is grounded in international law, backed by Article 33, and issued under the Republic’s full jurisdictional authority. It is not a certificate of affiliation. It is documentation of national standing.
The Larger Significance
UNDRIP Article 33 is one piece of a larger framework. It does not stand alone. It works together with Article 3 (self-determination), Article 4 (autonomy and self-governance), Article 5 (maintaining distinct institutions), and Article 34 (maintaining legal systems and procedures) to establish a comprehensive foundation for Indigenous national sovereignty.
What makes the Xi-Amaru Republic significant — not just for its citizens but for the broader conversation about Indigenous rights — is that it takes these articles seriously enough to build on them. To create actual procedures, to issue actual determinations, and to govern an actual nation. That is what implementation looks like.
And at the heart of it is a spiritual reality: this is not just a political project. It is a people returning to God, reclaiming the identity He established for them, and building on the foundation that does not shift. UNDRIP Article 33 gives that return international legal grounding. But its true authority is older than any declaration. It is written in who they are.
Explore Citizenship in the Xi-Amaru Republic
Visit aboriginalministryofjustice.org/citizenship-pathway to learn about the Tribal Screening and ARK Eligibility pathways — and to begin your journey toward citizenship in an Indigenous self-governing nation whose authority is grounded in UNDRIP Article 33.