What Is the Tribal Screening Process?

Learn what the Tribal Screening Process is, who may qualify, how temporary national status works, and how the Xi-Amaru Republic evaluates eligibility for Indigenous citizenship.
Who Are the Amaru People? (Xi-Amaru People Explained)

“Who are the Amaru people?”
the accurate answer is:
They are the Indigenous citizens and descendants of the Xi-Amaru Republic, a modern Indigenous nation reclaiming identity, culture, and nationhood in North America.
Understanding Nationality vs. Citizenship | Tribal Enrollment

the Xi-Amaru Republic’s Tribal Enrollment Series, where Chief Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears explains the difference between nationality and citizenship and why it matters for misclassified Indigenous people across the Americas.
Understanding the Xi-Amaru Republic: What It Is and Isn’t in Terms of Spirituality

Discover the spiritual foundation of the Xi-Amaru Republic—an Indigenous nation guided by faith, built through divine instruction, and committed to honoring both ancestral heritage and religious freedom.
The Ancestral Legacy of the Xi-Amaru Natives: Descendants of the Olmecs and Mayas

Explore the ancestral legacy of the Xi-Amaru Natives, direct descendants of the Olmecs and Mayas — ancient civilizations that shaped the Americas. Learn how their cultural and spiritual heritage continues to thrive through identity, resilience, and nationhood.
Not Just Slavery: The Xi-Amaru Journey Through Genocide, Erasure, and Rebirth

Slavery may have ended on paper, but the true chains were mental, legal, and spiritual—woven through the loss of land, language, and Indigenous identity. For Xi-Amaru Native Americans, freedom is not a date in history—it is the ongoing restoration of who we are, where we come from, and who governs us. Emancipation begins when identity is reclaimed, and justice begins when truth is restored.
Call to Vote: Help Choose the Official Flag of the Xi-Amaru Republic

Cast your vote for the official flag of the Xi-Amaru Republic. Review full flag descriptions, eligibility requirements, and submission deadline before the national reveal on April 28, 2025—honoring the 1-year anniversary of our Constitution.
The History of the American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (ADRIP)

The American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (ADRIP) is a guide document that protects the rights of Indigenous peoples across the Americas.
The History of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP)

Explore the history and significance of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) in this comprehensive article. Learn about the decades of advocacy and negotiation that led to its adoption in 2007, the key provisions empowering Indigenous sovereignty, and its ongoing impact as a framework for justice and cultural preservation. Dive into the challenges, triumphs, and the future of Indigenous rights through the lens of this landmark declaration.
Biography of Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears

Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears is a Native American-born Indigenous jurist, activist, and the founding mother of the Xi-Amaru Republic—a self-governing Indigenous nation devoted to sovereignty and the self-determination of Indigenous peoples.