Building Within Your Own Jurisdiction: The Right to Rebuild and What It Actually Requires

Learn what it means to rebuild within an Indigenous jurisdiction and why the Xi-Amaru Republic emphasizes responsibility, structure, and participation in nation-building.

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Building Within Your Own Jurisdiction: The Right to Rebuild and What It Actually Requires

The Historical Basis for the Right to Rebuild

The recognition that Indigenous peoples have the right to rebuild within their own jurisdictions is not a courtesy extended by any government.

It is a right grounded in the documented historical reality of what was taken from Indigenous peoples through colonization and in the international frameworks established in response to that history.

The American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (ADRIP) and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) both affirm that Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain, control, protect, and develop their cultural heritage and traditional knowledge.

They affirm the right to determine and develop priorities and strategies for the development or use of their lands, territories, and other resources. And they affirm the right to maintain and strengthen their distinct political, legal, economic, social, and cultural institutions.

These rights exist because of a documented history of systemic damage: the seizure of land, the suppression of language and culture, the forced assimilation of Indigenous peoples into systems that were designed to erase rather than recognize them.

ADRIP and UNDRIP are the international community’s formal acknowledgment of that history and a commitment to the restoration of what was taken. Xi-Amaru Native Americans operate within this framework. The right to build within their own jurisdiction is not aspirational. It is lawfully grounded.

What Tax-Exempt Status Represents

The tribal tax-exempt business status available to Xi-Amaru Native Americans is not simply a financial benefit. It is an expression of a broader legal and historical principle: that Indigenous peoples who were systematically stripped of their economic foundations have the recognized right to rebuild those foundations within their own jurisdiction without the same tax obligations that apply within the systems that caused that damage.

This is consistent with how Indigenous tax exemption has historically been framed in law. It reflects the recognition that tribal economic development is a form of self-determination and that Indigenous nations have the right to support that development through their own tax and exemption frameworks.

For Xi-Amaru Native Americans this means the ability to establish a tribal unincorporated association, obtain an EIN, and operate a business documented within the Xi-Amaru Republic jurisdiction with tribal tax-exempt status.

This is one of the practical expressions of what ADRIP rights look like when they are actually applied within a living, functioning Indigenous jurisdiction.

Freedom to Build Is Not the Same as Ease of Building

This is one of the most important things to understand before pursuing citizenship within the Xi-Amaru Republic. The right to build within your own jurisdiction is real. The freedom that comes with national standing is real. And it comes with significant, substantive work.

The Xi-Amaru Republic was established on December 17, 2022. It is a nation in its foundational stages. That word — foundational — means something specific. It means that the systems, the infrastructure, the institutions, and the community are still being built.

Every Xi-Amaru Native American who joins this nation is not simply receiving a membership. They are becoming part of the work of building something that does not yet fully exist.

That is an extraordinary opportunity. It is also a real responsibility. And it is not for everyone.

What Being in the Foundational Stage Actually Means

Being part of a nation in its foundational stages means that the outcomes Xi-Amaru Native Americans are working toward are not all yet established.

The tribal tax-exempt business framework is in place. The citizenship process is in place. The documentation, the courts, the records, and the national registry are in place. But the full range of what this nation will eventually provide to its citizens is still being built.

It means that some processes that will one day be streamlined are currently more manual. It means that some benefits that will eventually be fully developed are currently in early stages. It means that operating as a Xi-Amaru Native American requires a willingness to participate in something that is still growing, to work within a system that is still being refined, and to contribute to outcomes that will matter more to the next generation than they do today.

It also means that the decisions made now, the people who join now, and the work that gets done now will shape what this nation becomes. That is not a small thing.

Founding members of any institution carry a different kind of significance than those who arrive after the work is already done.

The Rights Are Real. The Work Is Also Real.

Xi-Amaru Native Americans have the right under ADRIP to participate in decision-making processes that affect their rights. They have the right to maintain their own economic systems and institutions.

They have the right to build within a jurisdiction that reflects their identity, their faith, and their values.

What they do not have is a passive relationship with those rights. Rights within the Xi-Amaru Republic are not something you receive and then simply hold.

They are something you participate in. Building within your own jurisdiction means showing up for the work. It means completing the citizenship process fully and correctly. It means engaging with the resources and documentation that are provided. It means conducting yourself within the Xi-Amaru Republic framework with the same seriousness and integrity you would bring to any other legal and financial undertaking.

The tax-exempt business registration, for example, does not do the work of building a business for you. It provides a lawful, documented framework within an Indigenous jurisdiction from which you can build.

The business still requires your effort, your plan, and your commitment. The Xi-Amaru Republic provides the structure. Xi-Amaru Native Americans provide the work.

Who This Is For

This is for people who understand that real freedom is not freedom from work. It is freedom to do the right work, within the right framework, for the right reasons.

The Xi-Amaru Republic is not a shortcut. It is not a way to avoid obligations or escape accountability.

It is a lawfully established Indigenous jurisdiction that offers Xi-Amaru Native Americans the recognized right to build, to transact, to govern, and to live within a framework that is grounded in their identity and their faith.

It is for families who are willing to do what it takes to build something that lasts. For self-employed individuals and small business owners who want to operate within a structure that reflects their values.

For Christians who want to be part of something that is founded on God’s direction and is moving, with patience and with intention, toward something greater than what exists today.

The foundational stages of a nation are where its character is set.

The people who are willing to show up now, do the work now, and build with both eyes open are the people who will define what the Xi-Amaru Republic becomes.

How to Get Started

The first step is determining which eligibility pathway applies to your situation and submitting your application through the Aboriginal Ministry of Justice.

The Tribal Screening Process is for those with Indigenous lineage or married to an active Xi-Amaru Native American.

The ARK Eligibility Process is for Christian individuals and families.

If you are someone who understands that the right to build means the responsibility to build, this nation is worth your serious consideration.

NEXT STEP

Visit aboriginalministryofjustice.org/citizenship-pathway to review both pathways and begin your eligibility review. The Aboriginal Ministry of Justice is ready to receive your application.

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