Black Creek Citizenship Seminar


Presented by: Muscogee Creek Indian Freedmen Band & Justice For Greenwood


Location: via Zoom

If you're a descendant of Creek Freedmen, this seminar will walk you through how to claim your rightful citizenship. Legal experts—including Attorney Damario Solomon-Simmons—will guide you through the process.

Read the latest news

  • "As Creek Freedmen, we’ve always carried the truth of who we are. Today, that truth was recognized. This decision affirms our place in the nation — not as outsiders, but as citizens,” Solomon-Simmons said in a press release. “We’re ready to walk forward together, guided by our elders, our communities, and our shared hope for what comes next.”

    Attorney Damario Solomon-Simmons, Lead Attorney for Rhonda Grayson and Jeff Kennedy

  • "I applaud the judge’s ruling to grant Black Native American Freedmen their rights to full citizenship. These are rights promised to them through the 1866 treaties. After decades of racial discrimination and injustice, this ruling affirms the Freedmen’s rightfully and legally-guaranteed claims to human dignity and equal recognition — rights that have been unjustly and cruelly withheld for far too long."

    United States Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA)

  • “The Nation has urged in McGirt — and the U.S. Supreme Court agreed — that the treaty is in fact intact and binding upon both the Nation and the United States, having never been abrogated in full or in part by Congress,” she wrote. “To now assert that Article II of the treaty does not apply to the Nation would be disingenuous.”

    Muscogee (Creek) Nation District Judge Denette Mouser

  • “You can’t claim and bound all of your arguments for your people in a treaty from the federal government and claim this is the supreme law of the land” while intentionally disenrolling Freedmen,”

    Palmer Scott, Graduate of the University of Oklahoma College of Law

  • “It’s 100 percent anti-Black discrimination,” he told CNN. “They’re telling you that if you’re Black and/or (had) enslaved (ancestors), you can’t be a member of our nation.”

    Attorney Damario Solomon-Simmons, lead attorney for Rhonda Grayson and Jeff Kennedy, Black Creeks

  • “While this victory honors our past, it also offers a meaningful opportunity for healing and reconciliation,” said Grayson in a statement to the Associated Press. “It’s time now to come together, rebuild trust, and move forward as one united Nation, ensuring future generations never again face exclusion or erasure.

    Rhonda Grayson, Co-founder of Muscogee Creek Indian Freedmen Band and Plaintiff