Posts Tagged bb22

Steve Blake, 51, artist and advocate for American Indians

Sep 4th, 2008 Posted in OBITUARIES | Comments Off

By BEN COHEN, Star Tribune

September 3, 2008

When Steve Blake of Minneapolis was a boy, the artist and future chairman of the Twin Cities chapter of the American Indian Movement would sketch the whirl of activity around the Wounded Knee conflict of the early 1970s.

Blake, who as a teenager designed the American Indian Movement, or AIM, logo widely recognized as the symbol of the movement, died of lung ailments on Wednesday in Minneapolis. He was 51.

Blake, whose father, Francis Blake II, helped establish the AIM, became a teacher in his Ojibwe culture, fluent in the language and a force for justice in Minnesota, said his family and friends.

His mother, Norby Blake of St. Paul, recalled that he sketched the activities of the early AIM leaders in the late 1960s and early 1970s. “He was a curious and very active young man,” she said.

He was a graduate of Heart of the Earth School and South High School in Minneapolis.

As a member of the Minneapolis Police Community Relations Council, he worked to ensure that people receive fair treatment when dealing with the police. Clyde Bellecourt, American Indian activist and co-chairman of the Police Community Relations Council, said Blake had been reviving the AIM street patrols he helped establish in the 1980s.

“If someone needed help day or night, he would respond,” Bellecourt said. “If it was Red Lake or anywhere, he would go.”

In recent years, Blake helped establish AIM chapters at St. Cloud State University, in Red Lake, Minn., and in Fargo, N.D.

He was an accomplished dancer and singer in native ceremonies, participating in powwows around the nation. He crafted ceremonial drums and ceremonial dress.

His “top-notch” paintings were “seen around the world,” Bellecourt said.

Two years ago, Blake underwent a double lung transplant. In April, he struggled anew with illness, but he had bounced back until recent weeks, said his cousin, Minneapolis Police Sgt. Bill Blake, who also serves on the Police Community Relations Council.

“Steve really had a strong passion to help people and reach out to others,” Bill Blake said.

Floyd (Buck) Jourdain, tribal chairman of the Red Lake Ojibwe Nation, said Steve Blake was a leader who would also roll up his sleeves and do the grass-roots work, such as teaching the culture to children in Minnesota and Wisconsin or taking kids to Pipestone, Minn., to teach about its sacred quarry.

“He was articulate and outspoken” but didn’t waste words, Jourdain said. “He backed up his talk with action. He practiced the culture hands-on.”

In addition to his mother, he is survived by his fiancée, Lani Moran of Minneapolis; a brother, Francis III of St. Paul; a sister, Valerie of St. Paul, and nephew Jesse and niece Neegahnee, both of St. Paul.


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At 7:20 a.m. this morning Steve Blake passed away after treatment during a lengthy hospital stay at Fairview University Medical Center in Minneapolis his family said.

Sep 3rd, 2008 Posted in OBITUARIES | Comments Off


  • Thursday, September 4 – 4 p.m. A Celebration Wake for our departed brother will take place at All Nations Church located at 1515 E. 23rd Street in South Minneapolis .  If you have images of Steve, or artistic renderings by him that you would like to share as we celebrate his life – please bring them.  (They will be returned to you afterward.)  In lieu of flowers, monetary donations are welcome to help offset service expenses.  For those interested in contributing to food-serving efforts, please call Susan Bellecourt at (612) 735-2607 for more information.
  • Friday, September 5 & Saturday, September 6 [Exact time TBD]  Mr. Tommy Stillday will lead Midewiwin services at the Little Rock Community Center located about 5 miles west of Red Lake, MN. (218) 679-3594 or (218) 368-2172 North of Bemidji , follow Highway 89, then go west on Highway 1; see Center on left across from Beaulieu’s Store.
  • Saturday, September 6 [Exact time TBD]  The funeral will take place at the Little Rock Community Center west of Red Lake, MN (218) 679-3594 or (218) 368-2172.

William (Bill) Carter
American Indian Community Advocate
City of Minneapolis
Direct: (612) 673-3028
Fax: (612) 673-2599
Strength and answers (to you.)


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Thanks, Mona for the pictures at Cold Water

Sep 2nd, 2008 Posted in ANNOUNCEMENTS | Comments Off

But there are a few photos at http://gallery.me.com/alliesms#100134
Download if you can make use of anything…

Good day.

m

Mona M Smith
Producer/director/media artist
Allies: media/art
The Ded Unkunpi Projects
4720 32nd Avenue South
Mpls., MN 55406
612.721.8055

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So far Canada’s response has been violence. Bring out the guns and bats!

Sep 1st, 2008 Posted in NEWS & POLITICS | Comments Off

So far Canada’s response has been violence.  Bring out the guns and bats!

Canada and the world knows this is wrong.  They have no choice but to deal with us, the landowners.  We are the legal trustees of Onowaregeh, Turtle Island.  Each time they hit us, they remind us of our duties.  We struggle even harder to uphold them.

The use of force can never produce a legal result.  The Supreme Court of Canada and international law agree with our law, the Kaianerehkowa/Great Law.  The only legal way to solve problems is through discussions, negotiations and understandings.

Canada must start listening to our legal reasoning. The violence against Indigenous peoples has got to stop.  We know what’s right and wrong.  The more they beat us, the more they make it clear that they are wrong.  They must back off, stop arresting us, stop beating us up and stop shoving their kangeroo court documents down our throats.

On Tuesday, at 9:00 a.m., some of our people will be brought into the Brantford Court.  There is no proof that it has jurisdiction over our people and our land.  Many Indigenous people have been asserting our law.  They have refused to attorn to the court.  They have declared that they stand on the law of the land, the Kaianerehkowa.  Or they have demanded proof of the court’s jurisdiction.

So far Canada’s colonial courts have all refused to provide proof for their authority.  They know they have none.  So they find some way of putting things off. They don’t know what to do when indigenous people who have been accused for political reasons demand proof of their jurisdiction or evidence of the valid termination of our law.  They know full well that we never gave our informed consent to become Canadians.  We are not Canadians.

If you can, please come to witness the court proceedings and provide support. We need to tell Kingspan of Ireland, Hampton Hotels of the U.S. all the other shysters trying to trespass on our land to go away.

MNN Staff
www.mohawknationnews.com
Contact:  Sonehahs 519-761-8094

Please Note.  It’s becoming critical for legal actions to be taken to protect our rights.  We have no funds.  If you can donate anything to our cause, it will be greatly appreciated.  Donate to PayPal, www.mohawknationnews.com, or “MNN Mohawk Nation News”, Box 991, Kahnawake [Quebec, Canada] J0L 1B0.  Nia:wen.

Go to MNN “Six Nations” 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

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Monday’s protests at the RNC.

Sep 1st, 2008 Posted in NEWS & POLITICS | Comments Off

This Photo gallery from StarTribune.com has been sent to you by MarthaFastHorse.
*Please note, the sender’s identity has not been verified.

The full Photo gallery, with any associated images and links can be viewed here.

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TRIBAL WRITERS CHAPBOOK SERIES

Sep 1st, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS, PEOPLE | Comments Off
PLEASE FORWARD TO NEW NATIVE WRITERS

TRIBAL WRITERS CHAPBOOK SERIES

The Sequoyah Research Center announces its second series of Tribal
Writers Chapbooks.  The first series published chapbooks (small,
limited editions of poetry, prose, or drama) by such noted Indian
writers as Maurice Kenny, Lance Henson, Glen McGuire, Ron Wellborn,
and Doris Seale.  We hope to continue to bring out writing of the same
high quality with this second series.  Stuart Hoahwah (Comanche) leads
off with a collection of poems, Black Knife, followed by Elgin
Jumper's (Florida Seminole) work Nightfall, Doyle Turner's (White
Earth Ojibwe) Time is a Parlor Trick and Other Poems, and
The.Indian.In.Indian.School by Linda Grover (Ojibwe).

The focus of the second series is on new Native writers, those who
have not published a significant body of work, either as individual
pieces or in book or anthology formats.  We are attempting to give
exposure to new (not necessarily young) writers.

The major dif
ference between the first and second series is that in
addition to publishing in hard-copy the new works will appear in
digital format in the Tribal Writers Digital Library.  We hope in this
way to reach a wider readership for what we think are some exciting
new Indian poets, storytellers, and dramatists.  You may view the
first volumes at http://anpa.ualr.edu in the Digital Library.

Payment to authors will be in the form of copies of their chapbook.
The SRC will print 250 copies that will be furnished to the author
upon completion of the press run.  No funds are required from the
author; no funds will be disbursed to the author.  Copyright will
remain with the author.

We envision that two chapbooks will be published each year under a
grant from the Bay and Paul Foundations.  An editorial board of
prominent Native writers review all submissions and make
recommendations to the editors.  The target date for chapbook
publication each year will be the annual Sequoyah Research Center
Symposium, held in the third week of October.  Submissions are
accepted at any time during the year.

Native writers should submit manuscripts that are no longer than 36
pages to fit the print format.  Further information should be
requested from or submissions sent to James W. Parins, Sequoyah
Research Center, Suite 500 University Plaza, University of Arkansas at
Little Rock, Little Rock, AR 72204, or e-mailed to <  a href="mailto:jwparins@ualr.edu" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; cursor: pointer; ">jwparins@ualr.edu.

MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION

•   Use Microsoft Word only.
•   Use Times New Roman font.  If you have a preference for another
font, please let me know separately.
•   Turn OFF all "AutoCorrect functions" under "Tools."  These features
make encoding more difficult.
•   When typing poetry, indent where appropriate according to your text.
•   Double space between paragraphs.
•   Provide a hard copy of your manuscript.
•   Provide a digital copy of your manuscript via email to jwparins@ualr.edu
•   Submit questions to the same email address.

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Native health care legislation occupies forum.

Aug 29th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off
Native health care legislation occupies forum at the DNC E

by Carol Berry
DENVER – A key bill assuring health care for Natives is stalled in the U.S. House of Representatives where adjournment is only a few weeks away, but legislators and tribal leaders hope for a last-minute strategy to ensure its passage.

The Indian Health Care Improvement Act has languished 17 years without reauthorization and, ”

Native health care legislation occupies forum at the DNC E

by Carol Berry
DENVER – A key bill assuring health care for Natives is stalled in the U.S. House of Representatives where adjournment is only a few weeks away, but legislators and tribal leaders hope for a last-minute strategy to ensure its passage.

The Indian Health Care Improvement Act has languished 17 years without reauthorization and, ”There are no circumstances under which Indian people should have second-class health care,” said Sen. Byron Dorgan , D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee.

Indian communities should ”demand that it be passed this Congress,” he said of the health bill.

His remarks were addressed to a panel Aug. 27 of tribal leaders and delegates at the Democratic National Convention moderated by Joe Garcia, president of the National Congress of American Indians, whose executive director, Jackie Johnson, was also a panelist.

Two hurdles to its passage are an anti-abortion amendment and an objection to the Cherokee Nation’s decision to deny citizenship status to freedmen. The latter also affects funding to the Cherokees under the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act.

Dorgan said he hopes the health bill will clear the House in the next few weeks, but if that fails, he will work to attach it to an omnibus bill or appropriations bill in order to ensure passage because ”we don’t have to wait anymore.”

The housing bill, funding for tribal colleges and Indian education, and law enforcement improvement are also on his agenda, and consultation with tribes and others is important to ”find out what works.”

Citing an Amnesty International report on crime in Indian country, he said one in three Native women will be raped or sexually abused in her lifetime; yet on a reservation the size of Connecticut, there are only nine officers and they may not reach a violent crime scene for 90 minutes because of the vast distances they have to cover.

Off-reservation law enforcement and U.S. attorneys decline to enforce cases referred to them at rates ranging from 50 to 76 percent for murder and rape or other sexual abuse, and ”we have to ask U.S. attorneys to stop declining cases,” he noted. Jurisdictional authority in Indian country can vary according to whether the crime is a felony, whether it takes place on Indian lands, is committed by or against a tribal member, and other factors.

Dorgan said the basic question is, ”What is our value system?” and the answer is revealed in part by what the nation spends its money on. Terming the question a ”matter of priorities,” he said ”keeping this country’s promise” should take precedence.

The NCAI in a prepared release distributed to attendees said the Native health bill delay continues ”despite the fact that Natives suffer higher health disparity rates than all other U.S. populations, and that health services are only available to Natives if ‘life or limb’ is at stake.”

Health care spending for Natives is less than half the amount the U.S. spends for federal prisoners, although infant mortality is 150 percent higher for Natives than whites, suicides 2.5 times the national average, and life expectancy 5 years less than for all others, it states.

Rep. Dale Kildee, D-Mich., who established the Native American Caucus, told attendees he will urge his fellow members of Congress to get past the anti-abortion and freedmen issues surrounding the health care bill and will work to see that it is ”enacted into law one way or another.”

Kildee also described issues concerning tax-exempt bonds and pension reform in Indian country and tribally controlled community colleges, urging the motto, ”Sovereignty today, sovereignty tomorrow, and sovereignty forever.”

Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., a sponsor of the Indian health care bill, said such authorization is ”always a problem when the president isn’t supportive.”

Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., said ”We cannot afford $10 to $15 billion a month on this war,” and urged a change in priorities.

Other speakers included Mark Macarro, tribal chairman, Pechanga Band of Luise�o Indians, DNC platform committee member, who termed the platform a ”very powerful document” that reaffirms tribal sovereignty and is the ‘’strongest ever” platform for Indian country.

Keith Harper, Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, an attorney specializing in Indian affairs, said, ”We’ve suffered through a long, cold winter of George W. Bush” and ”we need a fundamental change.”

Indian country ‘’suffers from invisibility,” he said, but Illinois Sen. Barack Obama is committed to a ”new politics that includes voices from disenfranchised communities.”

Harper called for a senior policy adviser for Indian affairs for day-to-day contact with the president, for a tribal ”G8” summit, and for influence on judicial selection to develop a more tribe-friendly Supreme Court, or ”tribal sovereignty as we know it will be fundamentally undermined.”

Wizi Garriott, Obama’s chief organizer in Indian country, said North Dakota, Montana, New Mexico, and Alaska are among states where the Indian vote is very important, and Native vote coordinators and field organizers will be working to get voter turnout.

Tribal sponsors of the event at Denver Art Museum conducted by NVisionIt LLC were the Eastern Band of Cherokee, Gila River Indian Community, Mississippi Band of Choctaw, Pechanga Band of Luise�o Indians, San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, and Seneca Nation.

There are no circumstances under which Indian people should have second-class health care,” said Sen. Byron Dorgan , D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee.

Indian communities should ”demand that it be passed this Congress,” he said of the health bill.

His remarks were addressed to a panel Aug. 27 of tribal leaders and delegates at the Democratic National Convention moderated by Joe Garcia, president of the National Congress of American Indians, whose executive director, Jackie Johnson, was also a panelist.

Two hurdles to its passage are an anti-abortion amendment and an objection to the Cherokee Nation’s decision to deny citizenship status to freedmen. The latter also affects funding to the Cherokees under the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act.

Dorgan said he hopes the health bill will clear the House in the next few weeks, but if that fails, he will work to attach it to an omnibus bill or appropriations bill in order to ensure passage because ”we don’t have to wait anymore.”

The housing bill, funding for tribal colleges and Indian education, and law enforcement improvement are also on his agenda, and consultation with tribes and others is important to ”find out what works.”

Citing an Amnesty International report on crime in Indian country, he said one in three Native women will be raped or sexually abused in her lifetime; yet on a reservation the size of Connecticut, there are only nine officers and they may not reach a violent crime scene for 90 minutes because of the vast distances they have to cover.

Off-reservation law enforcement and U.S. attorneys decline to enforce cases referred to them at rates ranging from 50 to 76 percent for murder and rape or other sexual abuse, and ”we have to ask U.S. attorneys to stop declining cases,” he noted. Jurisdictional authority in Indian country can vary according to whether the crime is a felony, whether it takes place on Indian lands, is committed by or against a tribal member, and other factors.

Dorgan said the basic question is, ”What is our value system?” and the answer is revealed in part by what the nation spends its money on. Terming the question a ”matter of priorities,” he said ”keeping this country’s promise” should take precedence.

The NCAI in a prepared release distributed to attendees said the Native health bill delay continues ”despite the fact that Natives suffer higher health disparity rates than all other U.S. populations, and that health services are only available to Natives if ‘life or limb’ is at stake.”

Health care spending for Natives is less than half the amount the U.S. spends for federal prisoners, although infant mortality is 150 percent higher for Natives than whites, suicides 2.5 times the national average, and life expectancy 5 years less than for all others, it states.

Rep. Dale Kildee, D-Mich., who established the Native American Caucus, told attendees he will urge his fellow members of Congress to get past the anti-abortion and freedmen issues surrounding the health care bill and will work to see that it is ”enacted into law one way or another.”

Kildee also described issues concerning tax-exempt bonds and pension reform in Indian country and tribally controlled community colleges, urging the motto, ”Sovereignty today, sovereignty tomorrow, and sovereignty forever.”

Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., a sponsor of the Indian health care bill, said such authorization is ”always a problem when the president isn’t supportive.”

Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., said ”We cannot afford $10 to $15 billion a month on this war,” and urged a change in priorities.

Other speakers included Mark Macarro, tribal chairman, Pechanga Band of Luise�o Indians, DNC platform committee member, who termed the platform a ”very powerful document” that reaffirms tribal sovereignty and is the ‘’strongest ever” platform for Indian country.

Keith Harper, Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, an attorney specializing in Indian affairs, said, ”We’ve suffered through a long, cold winter of George W. Bush” and ”we need a fundamental change.”

Indian country ‘’suffers from invisibility,” he said, but Illinois Sen. Barack Obama is committed to a ”new politics that includes voices from disenfranchised communities.”

Harper called for a senior policy adviser for Indian affairs for day-to-day contact with the president, for a tribal ”G8” summit, and for influence on judicial selection to develop a more tribe-friendly Supreme Court, or ”tribal sovereignty as we know it will be fundamentally undermined.”

Wizi Garriott, Obama’s chief organizer in Indian country, said North Dakota, Montana, New Mexico, and Alaska are among states where the Indian vote is very important, and Native vote coordinators and field organizers will be working to get voter turnout.

Tribal sponsors of the event at Denver Art Museum conducted by NVisionIt LLC were the Eastern Band of Cherokee, Gila River Indian Community, Mississippi Band of Choctaw, Pechanga Band of Luise�o Indians, San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, and Seneca Nation.

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$427 million. That’s what the oil and coal industries spent during the first half of 2008 on lobbying and advertising.

Aug 28th, 2008 Posted in NEWS & POLITICS | Comments Off

$427 million. That’s what the oil and coal industries spent during the first half of 2008 on lobbying and advertising. They’re protecting their interests — and hurting ours.

I just watched a new ad from the We Campaign that tells the truth about what needs to be done — demanding our leaders FREE US from an addiction to expensive fossil fuels.

Watch it here:
http://www.wecansolveit.org/freeusad

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Chris Spotted Eagle: Starting September 1st, 2008, I will take a five-month leave-of-absence to travel

Aug 28th, 2008 Posted in ANNOUNCEMENTS | Comments Off

Hi, everyone

Ref. KFAI’s weekly radio program, Indian Uprising, Sundays 7:00 p.m. CDT (www.kfai.org). It’s been about six years since I first volunteered to produce/host Indian Uprising.

Starting September 1st, 2008, I will take a five-month leave-of-absence to travel and take care of personal affairs/business. Friends have asked if I’m okay. Yes, I am… also, my health is good. As to who will produce/host Indian Uprising in the meantime, KFAI will decide that.

Chris Spotted Eagle

chris@spottedeagle.org

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Remembrance Of Highway 55

Aug 28th, 2008 Posted in STORIES, FOLKLORE & HISTORY | Comments Off

FACES of RESISTANCE
GALLERY 7

HIGHWAY 55
PART 1 | PART 2 | PART 3



36-37. Mary O’Brien, CSJ, John Harmon and Rita McDonald, CSJ, keep vigil with others across from the cottonwood tree wherein the remaining four environmental activists had “locked down” in their attempt to halt construction of the Highway 55 reroute and save the almost 100-year-old cottonwood – October 1999. Mary’s sign contains a quote by Eleanor Roosevelt: “I say to the young: Do not stop thinking of life as an adventure. You have no security unless you can live bravely, excitingly, imaginatively.”



38-39. Zach of the Objibway nation drums and chants support for activists “locked down” in the cottonwood tree which can be seen to bear the scars of attempts by cutting crews to remove the activists from its branches.



40. Theresa O’Brien, CSJ, braves the cold of an autumn afternoon to support the activists high atop the cottonwood. “I came to support the young people here who have a vision for the future – one that they struggle to be true to. Their vision encompasses all of us and the earth. It’s a vision of interdependence and respect for all things.”



41. Zach looks towards the strong police presence gathered at the base of the cottonwood tree and preventing any food or water reaching the activists within its sheltering branches. For the duration of the activists’ occupation of the cottonwood, supporters kept a 24 hour vigil across the street. After ten days, the last of the activists were forced from the tree. The cottonwood and several other surrounding trees were subsequently destroyed.



42. Susu Jeffrey, flanked by Mary Jo Iverson and James McNamara, holds an acorn from the felled Princess Oak – October 1999. Located above Minnehaha Falls, and south of Minnehaha Creek, the Princess Oak was one of several large bur oak that grew around the first railroad track connecting St. Paul and Minneapolis to the Falls.



43. Ken Pentel of the Green Party of Minnesota, expresses his outrage during an interview beside the felled Princess Oak – October 1999. Over 200-years-old, the Princess Oak was destroyed as MnDOT crews cut a swathe of destruction in their advance southwards towards the Four Oaks Spiritual Encampment.



44-45. By early November 1999, tree-cutting crews working for the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) were felling trees south of the former Camp Two Pines. Activists prevented the immediate destruction of several trees by setting up camp high within their branches.



46. Jan from St. Paul places a lighted candle upon the stump of one of the trees destroyed by MnDOT. Referring to the destruction of the trees and to the activism of the young people from the encampment, Jan expressed her belief that “the hope for the whole is in the people and Earth. Not ‘the’ earth, but Earth. I will not objectify the planet. It is the common sense and insights of the people that are the gifts needed to restore all to wholeness.”



47. Emily – Four Oaks Spiritual Encampment, November 1999.



48-52. Under the shadow of MnDOT’s relentless approach, life at the Four Oaks Spiritual Encampment continued – with time even for celebration. In late November a birthday breakfast was held for longtime reroute opponent and encampment supporter, Susu. Among those celebrating were Solstice, Tree, John and David.



53. A member of the Four Oaks Spiritual Encampment offers prayers at the sacred fire within the sanctuary of the threatened grove of oaks – November 1999. As MnDOT destruction crews drew closer, the encampment began bracing itself for another police raid. On December 2, the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community facilitated a special pipe ceremony at the four oaks. During the ceremony each tree was scaled by a climber who placed in their uppermost branches a sacred eagle feather – a powerful symbol of protection. One week later on December 9, an eviction notice was served to the occupants of the encampment.



54. The Four Oaks Spiritual Encampment – December 1999. With prospects of the destruction of the encampment and the four sacred oaks increasing daily, a commentary by Nick Raleigh was published in the alternative newspaper, Siren, which attempted to account for the failure of the many and varied efforts made to halt the reroute: “Lobbying the legislature, going to court, occupying houses slated for demolition, squatting in parks, and [people] chaining themselves to trees. So far, nothing has worked and the project continues. The outcome of the protest has left a number of people wondering what went wrong . . . Perhaps the best thing to blame is cultural imperialism.”

Raleigh goes on to clarify his analysis: “Cultural imperialism is what happens when a dominant group fails to recognize the validity of the interests, values and beliefs of other non-dominant groups. The colonial version looked something like this: a ship full of Europeans land in the ‘new’ world, encounter native people, declare the native people to be primitive and inferior to themselves, and exploit their land for all of its natural resources. The cultural imperialism faced by the Highway 55 protesters is more subtle. The dominant group here includes the common people of Minnesota and their decision-making institutions. The dominant group’s interests, values and beliefs are widely held as the norm. Using the norm, the dominant group has carelessly cast aside the critical viewpoints of others who do not fit its descriptions. The Highway 55 protesters were unable to stop the reroute because their values and interests didn’t match those of the dominant group. Because of this mismatch, their voice has been oppressed in the local media, MnDOT and the Legislative . . . [Such oppression has] shaped a general public sentiment that says the Highway 55 protest is both misguided and insignificant.”



55. Dawn at the Four Oaks Spiritual Encampment – Saturday, December 11, 1999. Even as this photograph was being taken, state troopers were swarming into the camp and surrounding a group of fifty protesters gathered at the four bur oaks.



56-59. Opponents of the reroute, including Kurt, Esther, Tom and Pepperwolf, had been called to the encampment during the early hours of December 11 after a tip-off of an imminent raid. Confirmation came at 5:00 a.m. when it was reported that state patrol cars and troopers were massing at MnDOT’s reroute depot. At 6:30 a.m. a large pile of wood used for construction at the camp and situated near the remnants of the labyrinth, was set ablaze.



60-61. As those present huddled together in the glow and warmth of the bonfire, Jim Anderson, Cultural Chair of the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota, thanked them for their support throughout the encampment’s sixteen month history. The crowd then moved into the circle of the four sacred oaks as over one hundred state police dressed in riot gear entered the encampment at 7:00 a.m.



62-63. Surrounded by police, those gathered within the circle of the oaks were led in a ceremony by members of the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota. The police respectfully allowed the ceremony, which involved drumming, singing, and words from Jim Anderson and Clyde Bellecourt, to be completed.



64-67. After the ceremony was completed those gathered were told that they could either leave the area without risk of arrest or remain and be arrested. About half of the group reluctantly chose to leave, including those present from the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community. Those who remained, as well as several activists who were occupying surrounding trees, were arrested and removed from the encampment. A total of 33 people were arrested. Later that day as tepees and a sweat lodge were dismantled and removed from the area, the encampment’s kitchen and starlodge were leveled.

At 4:31 p.m., the four sacred oak trees were felled.




68-69. “. . . Native Americans have already lost enough to cultural imperialism. It is unjust for Minnesota to continue using a subtler version to rob local tribes of culturally significant land.” Nick Raleigh, December 1999.



70-71. Bob Brown and other members of the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community observe the felled sacred oaks – Sunday, December 12, 1999. I find photograph 70 particularly poignant when recalling Bob’s deep love and respect for the trees and his role in introducing them and their significance to his people, to so many – myself included (see photograph 4).

Two weeks after these photographs were taken, Kurt Seaberg (picture 56) had a letter published in the Minneapolis Star Tribune: “Isn’t it interesting how the media collude with the institutions of power in denying the sacredness or significance of a place . . . The four oak trees that were cut down by the Minnesota Department of Transportation for Highway 55 were 137 years old and therefore, according to a December 17 article, ‘too young to have been significant in sacred American Indian ceremonies.’ If indeed the trees are 137 years old, that would mean they were planted in 1862, a date significant not only to Native Americans but all Minnesotans, as that was the year of the ill-fated Dakota conflict. It’s quite possible that the oaks were planted to heal the broken hearts and spirits of a people torn apart by that terrible war, which would make those trees very sacred and removal of them an unconscionable crime . . .”

PART 3




CONTENTS AND LINKS


INTRODUCTION
GALLERY 1 – FACES OF RESISTANCE


GALLERY 2 – CONFRONTING CORPORATE

GLOBALIZATION


GALLERY 3 – A16


GALLERY 4 – MAY DAY 2000


GALLERY 5 – RESPONDING TO THE CRISIS IN IRAQ


GALLERY 6 – CLOSING THE SCHOOL OF THE

AMERICAS


GALLERY 7 – HIGHWAY 55


GALLERY 8 – ALLIANT ACTION


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