you have the onondaga sitting here and over here would be the mohawk and the seneca.nd here are the younger brothers, the oneida and cayuga. now you have this structure -- we had a lot of influence in how the u.s. government was formed and if you look at it, the onondaga, the fire keepers, would suggest the agenda and over here would be the mohawks. they would debate back and forth and went through all the issues. they went back and forth and then would say now we will send it over to the fire keepers. it all started when we decided to file our land rights action. that is a whole other issue in itself. we made these trees and we are -- we made these treaties and we are told we are going to protect your lands. but the states did not seem to recognize that and we lost our land. ♪ chief sidney hill: we are still here, we still have a language, we have a culture and our ways and we are still a people and still a nation. [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2015] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption