Multicultural Indigenous Academy

Oct 31st, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

The event at the school is Friday, Oct. 31st
9:30
- noon

> The Multicultural Indigenous Academy will be hosting a
> traditional celebration honoring the ancestors who have
> passed on called the ” Dia De Los Muertos“.  Some
> of the honored include Floyd “Red Crow” Westerman,
> Vernon Bellecourt and friends and family of the school….
>
> Our event will begin at 9:30ish am and run until lunch.  We
> will have some traditional Mexica Danzantes and the
> students’ offrenda presentations and a few cultural
> craft activities.
>
> We are located at 133 E. 7th St. Downtown St. Paul between
> Jackson and Robert Sts.

Minneapolis American Indian Center

Oct 31st, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

Join us for a feast of tator tot hotdish, frybread, dessert,
coffee and waterWHEN? Today, October 30 at 6:00pm

WHERE? At the Minneapolis American Indian Center 
1530 East Franklin Ave.
Minneapolis, MN

WHY? To learn the issues and what you will need to register come election day!!

Pow Wow Meeting!

Oct 29th, 2008 Posted in Pow Wow | no comment »
  • The next Pow-Wow meeting is scheduled for 6:00 pm on November 25th.
  • We need more people to help.
  • 2009 will be our 10th Pow Wow, a very special Pow Wow.

Joseph Sherry ( Sonny )

Oct 29th, 2008 Posted in OBITUARIES | no comment »
Sherry, Joseph L. ”Sonny”
View/Sign Guest Book
Sherry, Joseph “Sonny” L. Of Hastings & Woodbury Retired Ford Motor Co. Age 84, passed away on October 26, 2008. Survived by his wife of 64 years, Irene, three daughters; Tami (Dennis) Mitchell, Dawn (Donn) Sorenson, Loretta Ann (Jerry) Lee, his son, Joe (Teresa) Sherry, 11 grandchildren; Joy (Jeff), Brian (Jenn), Nathan, Mason (Laura), Meghan, Desiree (Justin), Ellen, Ben, Rachael, Matt & Luke, 4 great-grandchildren; Nikolas, Jack, Cooper & Makenzie, his brother; Jack Sherry, two sisters; Marion Schickling & Lucille Foster, his sister-in-laws; Pat & Bernie Sherry and brother-in-law, Phil Juneau. He was preceded by his brothers; Tom & Don and sisters, Elsie & Lorraine. Funeral Mass, 10:30 a.m. Thursday, October 30, 2008, ST. RITA CATHOLIC CHURCH, 8694 80th Street, Cottage Grove, visitation on Wednesday from 4:00 until 8:00 p.m. with a Rosary at 7:00 p.m. at Kok Funeral Home, 7676 80th Street and after 9:30 a.m., Thursday at church, Burial, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Cemetery, Hastings. 651-459-2875

kok_fh_cott_gr_4ob.eps.jpg

From Deanna Rae Standing Cloud.

Oct 24th, 2008 Posted in OPINION & COMMENTARY | no comment »

Please take 10 minutes to read!

Take a break from your hectic world for a moment, my Anishinabe brothers and sisters. Separate yourself from the chaos that has at times had the power to engulf your life. Allow the power to be shifted back to your authentic self. Reflect for a moment on the following idea:

 

Read the rest of this entry »

“Oral Tradition” A MN. Indian Women’s Workshop

Oct 23rd, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

“Oral Tradition” A MN. Indian Women’s Resource Center Workshop

When:
Thursday, November 13th, 2008
12:30 pm  -  4:30 pm

Read the rest of this entry »

"Manipi Hena Owasin Wicunkiksuyapi" We Remember All Those Who Walked

Oct 23rd, 2008 Posted in IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTS | no comment »

“Manipi Hena Owasin Wicunkiksuyapi”

(”We Remember All Those Who Walked”)

Dakota Commemorative March

On November 7, 2008 we will begin a 150-mile journey in honor of the Dakota men, women, and children who were forcibly removed to concentration camps at Mankato and Fort Snelling in November 1862.

 

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The Martha Fast Horse Show

Oct 23rd, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized | no comment »
Photobucket
The Martha Fast Horse Show
Sunday, October 26th, 2008
@ 6:00 a.m.
Featured Song
Demons - James Curry 13
Brian Tishcleder & Casey Fearing

Special Guests
Michelle Gross - President of CUAPB
Darryl Robinson - Vice President of CUAPB
Leah Lane - RNC Protester & Peace Activist

Read the rest of this entry »

NATIVE HEALTH CLINIC

Oct 23rd, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

www.nacc-healthcare.org

GET OUT AND VOTE

Oct 23rd, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

The property, which includes Chief’s Island and Gregory Point near Charleston, will be placed in trust for the tribes.

Oct 23rd, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »
COOS BAY, Ore. — President Bush has signed a bill returning 24 acres the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians consider sacred.

The property, which includes Chief’s Island and Gregory Point near Charleston, will be placed in trust for the tribes.

“These 24 acres have historical significance for the tribes, as they were the site of an Indian village and tribal cemetery,” said tribal Chairman Bob Garcia. “Members of the tribes continue to pay respect to their ancestors and perform ceremonies there.”

The bill returning the land passed both houses of Congress in September.

The tribe will take over management from the U.S. Coast Guard. Chief’s Island includes the decommissioned Cape Arago Lighthouse, which the tribes have agreed to maintain.

The tribes have formally sought the return of the land since 1991.

may dway aush home’s’kool
gamiskwawakakog
anishinaabeg territories
turtle island

social studies from indigenous persp

Honoring American Indian Women Luncheon

Oct 22nd, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

Honoring American Indian Women Luncheon

Presented by: The American Indian Student Cultural Center (U of MN)

Date: 10.24.2008
Time: 11:30– 2:00 pm

Place: St. Paul Student Center
Cherrywood Room
2017 Buford Ave.
St. Paul, MN 55108

Please join us, The American Indian Student Cultural Center, as we honor
these amazing women:

Nelda Goodman
Shirlee Stone
Jeani O’Brien-Kehoe
Norby Blake
Louise Erdrich

Lunch will be served
Free and open to the public

Questions? Comments? Contact the AISCC at:
Phone: 612.624.0243
E-mail: aiscc@umn.edu

Hiawatha Insane Asylum for Indians

Oct 20th, 2008 Posted in Dakota History | no comment »

Hiawatha Insane Asylum for Indians

Carlisle Indian Industrial School.

Oct 20th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

Carlisle Indian Industrial School History

My grandmother was forced to go to this school.

College Horizons is a great program for Native people

Oct 20th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »
College Horizons is a great program for Native people with college aspirations as an undergraduate or graduate student.  They have 2 separate conferences, one for undergrad and one for graduates.
http://www.collegehorizons.org/ (link to application and information)
http://www.redstarfilms.net/GH_2008_(LQ).html (short video on graduate program)
Please pass this along to any Native student, or potential Native student, or university recruitment who may be interested in participating.
Thank you,
Kim
Kimberly Strand
2008 Bush Foundation Leadership Fellow

Indian Gaming Regulatory Act

Oct 19th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

Friends, Warriors, Fellow coffee drinkers:

Oct 19th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »
Friends, Warriors, Fellow coffee drinkers:
The leaves are changing and the summer has made way to autumn… the time is ripe to replenish our supplies of freshly roasted coffee from the Chiapas Mountains!
For your home, office, organization, or others you may know who are interested in drinking great coffee at a fraction of the price of buying it brewed in styrofoam from the gas station or coffee shop!
This coffee directly supports an autonomous Indigenous school and health clinic in the Ch’ol Maya speaking community of Ricardo Flores Magon.  100% of the profits go to the community because all of our work in ordering, selling and getting the coffee from the roaster to you is organized by volunteers.  Buying this coffee makes a difference in the lives of many Ch’ol Maya children who are learning about how to ensure the survival of our people into the future, bringing ancient knowledge into practical application to solve the many challenges that we face as Indigenous communities today.
Creating our own healthy economic systems is one way to do this.  Please let me know if you are interested in setting up an account to buy coffee on a regular basis for your home, office, business or organization, or if you would like to volunteer your time.  We also need people who can talk to owners of restaurants, shops, cafe’s and grocery stores about selling Cafe Para La Vida Digna.  Feel free to share this message with others, we need to find the people who want to help with this work!
There are many crises that we are seeing in our lifetime, this is one action that we can make in our daily life toward creating a world where every human being has the opportunity to live a full life, a dignified life.
Order by sending me an email, text message or online.  It’s $10 per 1 lb bag. Choose from Vienna (medium), Dignity Blend (darker medium) or French Roasts (smooth dark).  If you make an order, be sure to say whether you want it pre-ground or whole bean as well as which roast you prefer.
Tara
(612) 600-8272

NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES PRESENTED AT SCHOOL BOARD

Oct 19th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES PRESENTED AT SCHOOL BOARD

Beginning Sept, 1, 1991, Wisconsin schools were required by law to
incorporate Native American Studies into their curriculums. Funds were
allocated in 1989 to start these programs.
These funds were used to hire staff to implement these new
requirements, develop curriculum, classroom, and resource material,
proviede training for teachers and conduct conferences to aid school
districts through the startof teaching th new curriculum.
Sam Rivers of the Native American Studies program at the Unity School
District presented to the school borard information on Act 31, which
requires Wisconsin schools to teach Wisconsin Indian history, culture
and tribal sovereignty.
The Ojibwe of Wisconsin signed three major land cession treaties in
1837, 1842, and 1857. These treaties included the ceding of their
homeland to the United States, but in return establishing four
reservations in the state while retaining their right to hunt, fish,
and gather on ceded land.
In 1983, the United States Federal Court became involved and
ultimately decided to uphold the laws allowing the Ojibwe's their
right to hunt.
In 1987, the Culture Education Board drafted a resolution for Native
American studies in Wisonsin Schools. As a result of escalting
tensions between Native Americans and non-Native American communties
over treaty rights, the Native American studies program was created.
Rivers brought to the board 58 new books, all with relations to Native
Americans and their lives.
"Our goal was to revamp our resources for use," Rivers stated.
The books include sports, documentaries, speeches, weapons, plays,
poetry, short stories and many others demonstrating Native American
experiences.
The 2008 Native American week is Nov. 17-21.

That took almost 20 years to accomplish.

TRICK OR JAY TREATY? CANADA BORDER ASSAULTS REMIND INDIGENOUS WOMEN OF OLD INDIAN STORY

Oct 18th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »

TRICK OR JAY TREATY?  CANADA BORDER ASSAULTS REMIND INDIGENOUS WOMEN OF OLD INDIAN STORY

MNN.  Oct. 17, 2008.  The hundreds of Mohawk women who have been  harassed, assaulted, threatened, abused, raped, almost killed and “disappeared” at the Cornwall Ontario border crossing are getting to the point where they must challenge the Canadian Border Services Agency CBSA goons.  This check point has been illegally put right in the middle of the Mohawk community of Akwesasne disrupting the normal flow of life, forcing people to submit to questioning and examinations by officials of a foreign state  whose rule we never consented to.

There is no way the CBSA can be confused with honorable defenders of peace loving people against “terrorism”.  Like common criminals the goons have become terrorists themselves.  They behave worse than street gangs.  They are part of a scheme designed to make us defenseless.  Their training is created to take advantage of their primitive instincts and emotions.  It’s the “Abu Graib” syndrome where soldiers tortured, maimed and killed thousands of innocent Iraqis.

The CBSA goons usually attack the women in packs of 4 to 6 when they catch these women passing through the border alone, night or day.  The goons are well armed with all the latest so called non lethal weaponry like pepper spray, batons, handcuffs and other “pain compliance” gewgaws.  They now have the technology to aim and send micro wave pulses to fry us.  They also have sound battering weapons which can destroy internal organs.  Other electro magnetic pulse weaponry can disable electronic equipment and render people non-functional.  They are in the process of forcing everyone to carry biometric radio frequency ID [RFID].

The goons uniform consists of steel toed shoes, flak jackets with badges that have numbers instead of names, everything to remove them from personal responsibility for their brutality.  Many look bulked up with steroids and appear to be under the influence of legal and non-legal drugs.  It’s well known that people under such influence are prone to violent unprovoked behavior.  They act together in an out-of-control frenzy.  All levels involved back each other up, be they border guards, local cops, courts or other crown agencies.  They started out as civil servants and are now “foreign” gangsters who steal and protect goods stolen from us.

The manufactured 911 event is used as their justification.  According to the December 3, 2001 “Joint Statement on Cooperation” adopted by the Solicitor General of Canada, Minister of Citizenship and immigration and the Attorney General of the United States, the main concern is protecting the “flow of commerce”.  They were careful not to mention that what they are protecting are the resources they are stealing from Indigenous peoples.

The border crossing system is designed to victimize us and eventually eliminate us, not to protect human rights.  There are now over 300 and growing reports of abuses of our people at Akwesasne.  No one is there to defend or protect us.  Because of the climate of fear created by the Canadian government, most of the complaints have been submitted to the Akwesasne Mohawk Council [who work for the government] and not to the Canadian government, courts or human rights commission CHRC.  Canadian justice tends to be slow when it isn’t non-existent.  After a two year investigation of one case, the CHRC did confirm that discrimination took place and an inquiry was warranted.  Euro Canadians are rarely hassled.  The average Canadian citizens would probably be shocked to learn what’s really happening at Akwesasne.

The wise Ms. Red XY, an Indigenous sage of the fourth dimension, has been watching this.  She is urging Mohawk woman to stand up and protect our rights and that of our children.  She is appalled by the behavior these goons are getting away with.  They handcuff the women behind their backs and assault them in a mob.  They subject them to strip searches and get extra jollies by doing cavity searches.

One elder was almost killed when she was subjected to the well known “stress position” that is used by the U.S. armed forces in their overseas operations.  She was violently removed from her car, cuffed and put in a cell in the customs building.  While she was suffering a heart attack, she was ordered to bend forward as one stood in front of her trying to pull her down and another tried to push her over from behind.  This would have caused death, given the heart attack they had already induced.

Five border guards jumped one woman and tried to rape her in broad day light while video cameras filmed the whole pileup.  The result?  She was charged with assault because she resisted.

One young woman was forced to drive her SUV under an untested VACIS X-ray machine that was meant for transport and commercial vehicles only.  She was pregnant and lost her baby.

Their favorite trick is to wave the Mohawks through the “Indian lane” and then accuse them of “running the border”.  From then on they give themselves the right to harass, charge, arrest and assault these women and their family members for many years.

Women are pulled over for groceries, toys and whatever else the goons feel like taking.  Our cars are searched, torn apart and taken away.  When they can’t find anything, they look for receipts.  “Ah, we thought you were up to something” after finding a receipt for shoes.  They are taken into the Customs building and verbally brow beaten.  If the woman reacts defensively, then plan 2 is put into motion.  The goons don’t let the woman call anyone to let them know what’s happening.  Some are abused and some have even been “disappeared”, panicking our families who don’t know what happened to us.

When a women stands up to them, their cop friends follow us on the highway, stop us and give us tickets.  Many put their hands out for money or try to get us to “help them out with information” on our families and people in exchange for dropping their threats and charges against us.

Ms. Red XY decided to remind us of an old story about General Clinton when he was in a battle with the Mohawks.  He saw one Mohawk warrior standing on top of a hill.  He sent ten of his soldiers to go up the hill and kill him.  A big fight broke out.  Not one returned.  His soldiers all died.  The lone warrior stood back on the hill and looked down at the colonial army.  General Clinton then sent 25 of his best up the hill to kill him.  Once again, not a one returned.  They too were all killed.  Finally, the general send the rest of his army up the hill to finish off this lone warrior.  A huge battle ensued.  All were killed except for one.  He limped back bloody and beaten down the hill.  The general asked him, “How could that one warrior stand up to our whole army?”  The soldier answered, “He wasn’t alone.  He had a Mohawk woman behind him”.  Is this the new/old reality?

Staff of MNN Mohawk Nation News www.mohawknationnews.com
Katenies20@yahoo.com kahentinetha2@yahoo.com

Note:  These challenges of abuses at the border require support and money.  Your financial help is needed.  Please send donations to PayPal at www.mohawknationnews.com, or by check or money order to “MNN Mohawk Nation News”, Box 991, Kahnawake [Quebec, Canada] J0L 1B0.  Nia:wen thank you very much.

Some of the culprits involved:  Phil Fontaine of the AFN is a partner in CBSA’s Sustainable Development Strategy 2007-9; Chris Kealey, Canada Customs Excise, Immigration Taxation Board, CBSA Media Relations 613-991-5197; President CBSA 613-952-3200, 613-957-0612, CBSA-ASFC@Canada.gc.ca; National Aboriginal Initiative CHRC 204-983-2189 1-866-772-4880 info.com@chrc-ccdp.ca; Canada Customs Port of Entry at Cornwall Island Ontario; Gaetan Cousineau, Quebec Human Rights presidence@cdpdj.gc.ca; Akwesasne Mohawk Police 613-575-2250 ex 2400; Mohawk Security at the border 613-932-5183, 613-575-2340; Lance Markel, District Director CBSA 613-930-3234, 613-991-1214; Brent Lafave, Investigator CBSA; Susan St. Clair, Canadian Human Rights Commission, 344 Slater, Ottawa 613-995-1151, 1-888-214-1090, 613-943-5188; CBSA National Spokesperson 613-957-6500; Quebec Media Relations CBSA 514-350-6130; Chief Mohawk Council Akwesasne 613-575-2250 nbenedict@akwesasne.ca; Minister Stockwell Day, Ottawa 613-995-4432; Melissa Leclair Communications Pub. Safety 613-991-2863.

Go to MNN “Border” category for more stories; New MNN Books Available now!  Purchase t-shirts, mugs and more at our CafePressStore http://www.cafepress.com/mohawknews; Subscribe to MNN for breaking news updates http://.mohawknationnews.com/news/subscription.php; Sign Women Title Holders petition! http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/Iroquois

Its Native Tongue Facing Extinction, Arapaho Tribe Teaches the Young By DAN FROSCH

Oct 18th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | no comment »
The New York Times

Its Native Tongue Facing Extinction, Arapaho Tribe Teaches the Young

Published: October 16, 2008

RIVERTON, Wyo. — At 69, her eyes soft and creased with age, Alvena Oldman remembers how the teachers at St. Stephens boarding school on the Wind River Reservation would strike students with rulers if they dared to talk in their native Arapaho language.

Kevin Moloney for the New York Times

A tribe elder, Mark Soldier Wolf, greeted his granddaughter, Blue Moccasin Soldier Wolf, 2, at the school’s inauguration.

The New York Times

Wind River Reservation is about the size of Yellowstone.

“We were afraid to speak it,” she said. “We knew we would be punished.”

More than a half-century later, only about 200 Arapaho speakers are still alive, and tribal leaders at Wind River, Wyoming’s only Indian reservation, fear their language will not survive. As part of an intensifying effort to save that language, this tribe of 8,791, known as the Northern Arapaho, recently opened a new school where students will be taught in Arapaho. Elders and educators say they hope it will create a new generation of native speakers.

“This is a race against the clock, and we’re in the 59th minute of the last hour,” said a National Indian Education Association board member, Ryan Wilson, whom the tribe hired as a consultant to help get the school off the ground. Like other tribes, the Northern Arapaho have suffered from the legacy of Indian boarding institutions, established by the federal government in the late 1800s to “Americanize” Native American children. It was at such schools that teachers instilled the “kill the Indian, save the man” philosophy, young boys had their traditional braids shorn, and students were forbidden to speak tribal languages.

The discipline of those days was drummed into an entire generation of Northern Arapaho, and most tribal members never passed down the language. Of all the remaining fluent speakers, none are younger than 55.

That is what tribal leaders hope to change. About 22 children from pre-kindergarten through first grade started classes at the school — a rectangular one-story structure with a fresh coat of white paint and the words Hinono’ Eitiino’ Oowu’ (translation: Arapaho Language Lodge) written across its siding.

Here, set against an endless stretch of windswept plains and tufts of cottonwoods, instructors are using a state-approved curriculum to teach students exclusively in Arapaho. All costs related to the school, which has an operating budget of $340,000 a year, are paid for by the tribe and private donors. Administrators plan to add a grade each year until it comprises pre-kindergarten through 12th-grade classes.

“This environment is a complete reversal of what occurs too often in schools, where a child is ridiculed or reprimanded for speaking one’s heritage language,” said Inée Y. Slaughter, executive director of the Indigenous Language Institute, a group in Santa Fe, N.M., that works with tribes on native languages.

“I want my son to talk nothing but Arapaho to me and my grandparents,” said Kayla Howling Buffalo, who enrolled her 4-year-old son, RyLee, in the school.

Ms. Howling Buffalo, 25, said she, too, had been inspired to take Arapaho classes because her grandmother no longer has anyone to speak with and fears she is losing her first language.

Such sentiments are not uncommon on the reservation and have become more pronounced in the five years since Helen Cedar Tree, at 96 the oldest living Northern Arapaho, made an impassioned plea to the tribe’s council of elders.

“She said: ‘Look at all of you guys talking English, and you know your own language. It’s like the white man has conquered us,’ ” said Gerald Redman Sr., the chairman of the council of elders. “It was a wake-up call.”

A group of Arapaho families had sent their children to a pre-kindergarten language program for years, but it was not enough. Heeding Ms. Cedar Tree’s words, the tribe began using Arapaho dictionaries, night classes, CDs made by the tribe, and anything they could find to help resuscitate the language. In the end, “we knew in our hearts that immersion was the only way we were going to turn this around,” said Mr. Wilson, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe.

He was referring not just to the potential for the Arapaho language’s extinction but to a host of other problems that have long plagued the vast reservation, which the tribe shares with the Eastern Shoshone.

“Language-immersion schools offer an environment that goes beyond teaching the language,” Ms. Slaughter said. “It provides a safe place where a child’s roots are nurtured, its culture honored, and its being valued.”

According to tribal statistics and the United States Attorney’s Office in Wyoming, 78 percent of household heads on the reservation are unemployed, the student dropout rate is 52 percent and crime has been rising.

Most recently, in June, three teenage girls were found dead in a low-income housing complex. The F.B.I. has not yet released autopsy results, but many tribal members think drugs or alcohol were involved. The deaths left the reservation reeling. Officials here hope that the school will herald a positive change, just as programs elsewhere have helped native youth become conversational in their tribal languages, enhancing cultural pride and participation in the process. A groundswell of language revitalization efforts has led to successful Indian immersion schools in Hawaii, Montana and New York.

Studies show that language fluency among young Indians is tied to overall academic achievement, and experts say such learning can have other positive effects.

“Language seems to be a healing force for Native American communities,” said Ellen Lutz, executive director of Cultural Survival, a group based in Cambridge, Mass., that is working with the Northern Arapaho. At a recent ceremony to celebrate the school’s opening, held in an old tribal meeting hall, three young girls sang shyly in Arapaho. Behind them, a row of elders sat quietly, their faces wizened and stoic, legs shuffling rhythmically as familiar words carried through the building.

“They are the ones who whispered it on the playground when nobody was looking,” Mr. Wilson said, referring to the elders. “If we lose that language, we lose who we are.”


This page was sent to you by: whitemanmi08@gmail.com

US | October 17, 2008
Its Native Tongue Facing Extinction, Arapaho Tribe Teaches the Young
By DAN FROSCH
With only about 200 Arapaho speakers still alive, a new school on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming will teach students in Arapaho.