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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.

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.

Biography of Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears

Nnakina

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. 

Overview of November 11, 2024 Tribal Monthly Introduction Meeting

In the Xi-Amaru Republic’s monthly meeting on November 11, 2024, Chief Nnakina Xi-Amaru presented a comprehensive overview of the Indigenous nation’s mission, vision, and historical journey. Officially established on December 17, 2022, the Xi-Amaru Republic was formed to protect Indigenous rights, preserve cultural heritage, and promote community prosperity after breaking away from the Aboriginal Republic of North America (ARNA). This milestone marked a crucial step in building an autonomous Indigenous government based on the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and the American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (ADRIP).

Chief Nnakina highlighted the Republic’s structured government, including its executive, legislative, and judicial branches, and the implementation of a new taxation system aimed at supporting citizens’ economic independence. Upcoming events were also announced, including a partnership with the Community Treehouse Center Detroit, inviting members to actively engage with initiatives that reinforce Indigenous sovereignty, cultural preservation, and self-governance.