Back to All Events

Culturally Deliberate in the 21st Century

Richard Sneed, 28th Principal Chief, Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians

The 2023 Moccasin Bend Fall Lecture Series wraps up on Monday, November 13th at 7 p.m. featuring the 28th Principal Chief Richard G. Sneed. For millennia, cultures across humanity were diverse and unique. From language, dress, religion, and social constructs, people groups were as diverse as the lands they inhabited. This held especially true for the indigenous peoples of North America. As Europeans settled the “New World,” the unique cultures of Tribal Nations were both revered and reviled by those who sought to possess the land and its resources. In the late 1800’s the federal government of the United States implemented policies to systematically destroy the culture of tribal nations. Our discussion will review the history of systematic cultural destruction, and how the implementation of those policies still impacts tribal cultures today. Finally, as technology, communication, and media become globally ubiquitous, there is a risk of the homogenization of culture. We will discuss the need to be deliberate in our embrace, practice and celebration of the uniqueness of all cultures.

Speaker Bio:

Richard G. Sneed life’s work has been one of public service advocating for youth, community building, and cultural preservation. After graduating from Cherokee High School in 1986, he served in the United States Marine Corp for four years. His beloved wife Colene is a citizen of the United Keetowah Band of Cherokee Indians. He is the father of five children, Breanna, Richie, Mattilynn, Katrina and Samuel. Sneed earned his degree from Universal Technical College in Phoenix, AZ, and holds a North Carolina Teaching License in Industrial Arts.

While pastoring the Christ Fellowship Church of Cherokee for fourteen years, Sneed also taught vocational education at Cherokee Central Schools for twelve of those years. His excellence in the classroom earned him recognition as the National Classroom Teacher of the Year by the National Indian Education Association in 2013. In 2015, Sneed was elected Vice Chief of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI). On May 25, 2017, he was officially sworn in as Principal Chief of the Eastern Band and subsequently re-elected as Principal Chief on September 5th, 2019. 

Since taking office, Chief Sneed’s administration has been dedicated to exercising the EBCI’s sovereignty, including growing relationships and partnerships, in part, through his service to the WCU Cherokee Center Advisory Board, United South and Eastern Tribes (USET), and the Cherokee Preservation Foundation Board of Directors.  Chief Sneed has also recently been elected as the Vice-Chairman of the Center for Disease Control’s Tribal Advisory Committee.

Previous
Previous
October 2

General Ulysses S. Grant and the Civil War Campaign for Chattanooga