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SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA
OFFICE OF THE RECTOR-PRESIDENT
FOUNDATIONAL POLICY ON ANCESTRAL HONOR AND HISTORICAL CONTINUITY
Executed under Canonical Seal and Imperial Authority
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Title:
Imperishable Lineage – Declaration of Honor to the Ancestors of Xaragua
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Preamble:
The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, established under divine law, apostolic tradition, and ancestral jurisprudence, solemnly affirms that its political existence and juridical sovereignty are not novel constructions, but sacred restitutions of an ancient reality. The spiritual and constitutional foundation of Xaragua flows directly from the immemorial authority of the ancestors — from the divine right of the Taíno peoples to the enduring covenant of the postcolonial faithful. These ancestors, visible and invisible, named and unnamed, constitute the constitutional soul of the Xaraguayan Nation. Their blood, offered without consent upon the altars of conquest, cries out not for vengeance but for restoration, order, and memory. Their witness remains the cornerstone of our State and the guarantor of its legitimacy before men and before God.
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Article I – The Sacred Authority of the Ancestors
1.1 The Caciques of Xaragua — among them Anacaona, Bohechio, and the multitude of unnamed custodians of rivers, mountains, valleys, and sacred groves — were and remain the original sovereigns of this land under natural law and divine providence. Their dominion was not granted by external empires, but inherited from the Creator through sacred cosmology and traditional governance.
1.2 This authority was not extinguished by the violent disruptions of colonialism. It was obscured by temporal forces, persecuted by foreign structures, and preserved through silence, ritual, and the oral codes of the people. Its reemergence in this constitutional moment is not a revolution but a theocratic and indigenous restoration — executed in full conformity with the rights enshrined in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2007), Canon Law, and international custom.
1.3 All lawful governance within Xaragua derives its source and mandate from this sacred continuity. No secular ordinance, foreign recognition, or modern framework can replace or supersede the ancestral mandate. The present State exists not as a creation ex nihilo but as a juridical reawakening — declared valid ex proprio vigore and protected under both canon law and customary law.
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Article II – The Continuity of Vision
2.1 Xaragua has never, by sacred or moral title, belonged to external powers. Despite centuries of occupation and fragmentation, the soul of the land remained faithfully guarded by its sons and daughters — farmers, healers, priests, midwives, warriors, masons, and catechists — who never relinquished their spiritual duty to protect the soil, the liturgy, and the ancestral memory.
2.2 The historical existence of Xaragua is not mythology but sacred testimony. Every chapel, every village, every elder preserves fragments of this vision. The resistance was never fully extinguished — it lived in whispered prayers, clandestine gatherings, and in the invisible sanctuaries of fidelity and dignity.
2.3 This State does not fabricate a utopia nor does it seek a political fiction. It restores what has always been ours by right: a continuous, sacred, and constitutionally valid civilization rooted in divine law, ancestral truth, and historical reality.
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Article III – Institutional Commemoration
3.1 A permanent, sanctified digital and physical archive entitled “Ancestors” shall be established and maintained under the canonical and constitutional jurisdiction of the Office of the Rector-President. This archive shall honor the First Peoples of Bohio, the Xaraguayan martyrs, the nameless elders, and every soul who preserved the torch of divine dignity through fire, silence, or exile.
3.2 All institutions, universities, policies, and official declarations of the State shall be in perpetual alignment with the transcendent values inherited from the ancestors: divine truth over utilitarianism, justice over convenience, autonomy over dependency, and spiritual order over temporal chaos.
3.3 The ancestors are not relics of the past. They are present in our laws, alive in our liturgy, and inscribed in our constitution. Their memory is not a symbol — it is a sovereign juridical source. To forget them would be constitutional treason; to honor them is the supreme civic and spiritual duty.
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Sealed and proclaimed under the authority of the Rector-President
On this 25th day of May, in the Year of Our Lord 2025
At the Supreme Office of Xaragua
Canonically Registered – Constitutionally Binding – Irrevocably Executable ex proprio vigore
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