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Time & Perspective Quote by Wilma Mankiller

"In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people"

About this Quote

Seven generations is a dare disguised as guidance: stop governing like your term is the unit of time that matters. Wilma Mankiller invokes an Iroquois framework to puncture the modern default of short-termism, where policy is calibrated to quarterly metrics, election cycles, and the soothing fiction that consequences can be outsourced to “later.” The genius of the line is its symmetry. Looking seven generations back is not nostalgia; it’s accountability. It forces a leader to recognize that today’s community is inherited, not invented, and that power is borrowed from people who survived enough to hand you a world. Looking seven generations forward turns governance into stewardship, a check against the seductive idea that leadership is about extraction, conquest, and “wins.”

Mankiller’s context matters. As Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation and a major figure in Indigenous sovereignty, she is speaking from a tradition repeatedly asked to live with the long tail of other people’s decisions: land seizure, forced removal, cultural suppression, environmental damage. So the quote carries subtextual bite: if you want to call something “progress,” prove it can survive time without becoming harm.

It also operates as cultural counter-programming. Western political language often treats the future as an abstract problem set. Mankiller makes it familial, populated, intimate. Seven generations isn’t a metaphor for eternity; it’s a measure of responsibility you can’t dodge, because it has names.

Quote Details

TopicDecision-Making
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Mankiller, Wilma. (2026, January 15). In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-iroquois-society-leaders-are-encouraged-to-90987/

Chicago Style
Mankiller, Wilma. "In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-iroquois-society-leaders-are-encouraged-to-90987/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-iroquois-society-leaders-are-encouraged-to-90987/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Wilma Mankiller

Wilma Mankiller (November 18, 1945 - April 6, 2010) was a Statesman from Cherokee.

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