Posts Tagged bb22


Many Voices Residencies for Minnesota writers of color.

Aug 21st, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

Apply, apply, apply!!

—–Forwarded Message—–
From: “Kevin S. McLaughlin”
Sent: Aug 21, 2008 2:33 PM
To: “Kevin S. McLaughlin”
Subject: The 2008-09 Many Voices Residencies for Minnesota writers of color.

Hello friends of The Playwrights’ Center,

I’m writing to ask your help in spreading the word about the Center’s Many Voices Residency program to writers, theater artists, and others who have an interest in playwriting.  Although the deadline is approaching soon, there is still plenty of time to prepare and submit an application.

NEW in 2008-09
Based upon feedback from an independent program review, The Playwrights’ Center and the Jerome Foundation have been working to deepen and enhance the Many Voices program for 2008-09 and beyond in two major ways:

- by reducing the total number of residencies from (eight to five) to increase the overall level of support for the writers, and

- by tailoring the residencies to writers of varying levels of experience by creating two tracks, a beginning track for those brand new to playwriting, and an emerging track for more experienced dramatists who want to work on refining their craft and developing their scripts further

The program will continue  to enjoy the excellent leadership of Many Voices Coordinator Christina Ham, a former Jerome and McKnight fellow at the Playwrights Center. In addition, the residency year will be lengthened to a full 12 months for 2009-2010 (2008-09 is the last year of the 9-month term). We are convinced that these changes will give writers a better experience and help them continue to make vibrant, important theater.

KEY FACTS
Made possible by a grant from the Jerome Foundation, Many Voices provides cash grants, education, and opportunities to develop new work with theater professionals. The program is designed to increase cultural diversity in the contemporary theater, both locally and nationally.

Application deadline:            August 29, 2008 (receipt).
Application form (PDF):        http://www.pwcenter.org/files/ManyVoices2008-09App.pdf
Residency year:                   September 30, 2008 – June 30, 2009


Thanks for your help in referring prospective applicants … please do not hesitate to call or email with any questions.

Best,

–Kevin


Kevin McLaughlin
Fellowships and Technology Manager
The Playwrights’ Center
2301 East Franklin Ave
Minneapolis, MN 55406-1099

kevinm@pwcenter.org
612-332-7481 x15
612-332-6037 fax

Our new website is designed to inspire
http://www.pwcenter.org

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Many Voices Residencies for Minnesota writers of color. Apply, apply, apply!!

Healthy Economies, Healthy People, Healthy Environment and Energy Independence.

Aug 21st, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off
KFAI’s Indian Uprising, August 24, 2008 from 7:00 – 8:00 p.m. CDT #279

Daryl Sager (Turtle Mountain Ojibwe), Energy Justice Program Associate, Fresh Energy, Inc.

Fresh Energy of St. Paul, Minnesota is an organization leading the transition to a clean, efficient and fair energy system.  Its goals are: Healthy Economies, Healthy People, Healthy Environment and Energy Independence.  Fresh Energy focus areas are: Clean Electricity, Energy Efficiency, Transportation Policy, Global Warming Solutions and Energy Justice. www.fresh-energy.org

“Fresh Energy is the only nonprofit in Minnesota whose sole focus is a clean, just energy future for the Upper Midwest. Often, the economically disadvantaged are the most adversely affected by energy decisions. The Energy Justice program at Fresh Energy works to pass policies that help build the capacity of low-income individuals to have a strong voice in those decisions.”

Tom Goldtooth (Dine’/Dakota), Executive Director, Indigenous Environmental Network, Bemidji, Minnesota

IEN (nonprofit) is a network of grass-roots Indigenous Peoples empowering Indigenous Nations and communities towards sustainable livelihoods, demanding environmental justice and maintaining the Sacred Fire of cultural traditions. IEN is dependent on private foundations and individual donations but does not solicit for federal grants. www.ienearth.org

One immediate concern, says Goldtooth, is the proposed 36-inch diameter tar sand oil pipeline cutting through northern Minnesota running almost 1,000 miles, from Alberta, Canada, to Superior, Wisconsin, dubbed the Alberta Clipper.

“The Real Price of Tar Sands Oil Enbridge, a Canadian company, seeks to build a pipeline to carry synthetic crude oil from Alberta, Canada, into southern Illinois. Of the many problems with this project, the greatest one stems from the energy approach driving its construction: bitumen extraction from Alberta’s tar sands.

Tar sands oil is produced through a destructive process that has deplorable consequences. Extraction and processing of just one barrel of synthetic crude oil from bitumen requires up to five barrels of fresh water and 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas. The gasoline yield from that single barrel is only enough to fill a Chevrolet Avalanche’s tank three-quarters full.

The environmental impact is severe. In 2007, greenhouse gas emissions from tar sands plants were roughly equivalent to the annual emissions of 27 million American passenger vehicles. High levels of carcinogens in fish, water and sediment have been found downstream from tar sands areas.

Meanwhile, annual production of tar sands oil from Alberta is expected to at least triple by 2015, fueled principally by U.S. demand.

While no one enjoys reliance on OPEC oil, the alternative of a pending environmental catastrophe is intolerable.” – Brian P. Granahan, Staff Attorney, Environment Illinois Research and Education Center (washingtonpost.com, Jan. 2008).

* * * *

Indian Uprising is a KFAI Public & Cultural Affairs program relevant to Native Indigenous people, broadcast each Sunday on 90.3 FM Minneapolis and 106.7 FM St. Paul. Volunteer producer & host is Chris Spotted Eagle.  Note: Chris is taking a leave of absence for five months, starting September 1st.

For internet listening, visit www.kfai.org <http://www.kfai.org/> , click Play under ON AIR NOW or for listening later via their archives, click PROGRAMS & SCHEDULE > Indian Uprising > STREAM.  Programs are archived for two weeks.

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Healthy Economies, Healthy People, Healthy Environment and Energy Independence.

Americans Indians in Minnesota have greatly elevated cancer rates

Aug 21st, 2008 Posted in NEWS & POLITICS | Comments Off

American Indians in Minnesota have greatly elevated cancer rates


MAURA LERNER, Star Tribune

American Indians in Minnesota and surrounding states have dramatically higher rates of colon cancer and several other types of the disease than whites, a University of Minnesota researcher and his colleagues reported Wednesday.

They found that American Indians in the Northern Plains have nearly triple the rate of liver cancer and more than twice the rate of stomach and gallbladder cancer than whites in that region, according to their studies in the journal Cancer.

At the same time, cancer rates vary widely among American Indians in different regions of the country. Those in the Southwest reported some of the lowest rates of cancer, often far below those of whites, while Native Alaskans had some of the highest rates in the country.

Numerous factors could explain the dramatic differences, including diet, genetic makeup, smoking, diabetes and environmental conditions, said Dr. David Perdue, a University of Minnesota gastroenterologist and one of the lead scientists.

“American Indians tend to be diagnosed with later stage disease,” he said. “The problem with later stage disease is, it’s harder to treat and harder to survive.” He added that early detection and lifestyle changes “can prevent a majority of these cancers.”

Perdue, who is a member of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma, has specialized in research on cancer and health disparities involving Native Americans.

When compared with whites, American Indians in the Northern Plains, which includes Minnesota, had:

• 39 percent more colon and rectal cancer.

• 135 percent more stomach cancer.

• 148 percent more gallbladder cancer.

• 197 percent more liver cancer.

The Northern Plains Indians also have the highest rates of lung cancer among Native Americans in the country, the studies found.

At the same time, the breast-cancer rate is about the same among American Indian and white women in this region, the research showed. In the Southwest, however, American Indian women reported half the rate of breast cancer compared with white women.

Some of the regional and racial differences surprised Perdue. He noted that American Indians are often lumped into one group for research purposes, but that their genetic and cultural differences can play a huge role in cancer rates. “We need to know more about what’s driving these rates,” he said. With more study, he said, they may be able to find why some American Indians are more resistant to certain types of cancer, while others are more vulnerable.

Some differences, though, are well known, he said. He noted that Indians in Minnesota tend to smoke more than those in the Southwest. They also have high rates of obesity and diabetes, which are linked to cancer. More than 78,000 American Indians live in Minnesota, according to a 2005 state estimate. “It’s really important for these communities to realize that they have higher rates,” he said, and put more money into cancer screening and treatment. “It is evident from this research that much more needs to be done to close the disparity gap,” he said.

Maura Lerner • 612-673-7384

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Americans Indians in Minnesota have greatly elevated cancer rates American Indi

Do Native Americans Have First Amendment Rights?

Aug 20th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

Do Native Americans Have First Amendment Rights?

by: Leslie Thatcher, t r u t h o u t | Interview
http://www.truthout.org/article/do-native-americans-have-first-amendment-rights

Ninth Circuit rules effluent does not defile sacred space. Forest Service argued skiing on treated sewage “a compelling government interest.”

The San Francisco Peaks of Northern Arizona “are sacred to at least 13 formally recognized Indian tribes … and this religious significance is of centuries duration.”(1) In February 2005, the US Forest Service issued a Final Environmental Impact Statement and Record of Decision approving a proposal to make artificial snow using treated sewage effluent at the Snowbowl Resort located on Humphrey’s Peak, the highest and – to the tribes – most holy of the San Francisco Peaks. That decision was appealed by the Navajo Nation, the Hopi Tribe, the Havasupai Tribe, the Hualapai Tribe, the Yavapai-Apache Nation and the White Mountain Apache Nation. The Circuit Court ruled for the Forest Service. In February 2007, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court unanimously overturned the lower court’s decision. On Friday, August 8, 2008, the en banc majority of the Ninth Circuit Court ruled that “using treated sewage effluent to make artificial snow on the most sacred mountain of southwestern Indian tribes does not violate the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (‘RFRA’). It also holds that a supposed pleading mistake prevents the tribes from arguing under the National Environmental Act (‘NEPA‘) that the Forest Service failed to consider the likelihood that children and others would ingest snow made from the effluent.”(2)

On August 18, Leslie Thatcher, of Truthout, spoke with the Navajo Nation’s lead attorney in the case, Howard Shanker, who is also running in the Democratic primary for Arizona Congressional District One, the seat currently held by retiring Representative Rick Renzi (R-Arizona), presently under indictment for extortion, wire fraud, money laundering, and other charges related to an Arizona land deal.

Leslie Thatcher, for Truthout: Howard, what do you consider the most important issues in the Snowbowl case to be?

The San Francisco Peaks are federal land and the government has documented for years that the Peaks – especially Humphreys where Snowbowl is located – are sacred to local tribes. Nonetheless, the Feds issued a special use permit to operate a ski resort there that was unsuccessfully challenged in the 1970′s. Most recently, the Forest Service ruled that the resort could pipe up to 1.5 million gallons of treated sewage effluent to the resort for snowmaking in winters when natural snowfall is inadequate. The tribes have appealed that ruling.

The central issue that’s going on and that’s really important is that Native tribes have no First Amendment rights when it comes to government land-use decisions. And the federal government holds thousands of acres of land across the country that the tribes hold sacred. Up until we used the Religious Freedom Restoration Act [RFRA] successfully, there was no way for the tribes to challenge federal use of sacred lands. Now, they have to show there is a compelling government interest and that they are using the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling government interest when government action substantially burdens the exercise of religion.

The current ruling is that there is no substantial burden on the exercise of religion. The judges have said there is no objective evidence of impact on religious belief and practice.

Short of producing God in the courtroom, there’s no way to produce “objective” evidence. A Navajo elder testified that putting effluent on the mountain would be like raping his mother. Other testimonies – the sincerity of which were never challenged – described the disruptions to the spiritual world and contamination of the ritual purity of materials essential to Native ceremonies that spraying the effluent would result in.

The en banc court adopted a very restrictive reading of “Sherbet and Yoder” that does not seem to speak to the statute. In any event, spraying the Peaks can certainly be interpreted as a form of punishment or coercion.

The tribes appealed the Forest Service decision under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) rather than the First Amendment to the US Constitution. Can you explain how the RFRA differs from the First Amendment and why Congress passed the act?

In “Smith,” the Supreme Court said laws of general application can’t constitute a general burden under the Constitution. So then, Congress passed RFRA to say that even though a law may be of general applicability, if it results in a substantial burden to the exercise of religion, you have to do this balancing of interests. Then in 2003, Congress passed the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act [RLUIPA] amending and broadening RFRA’s definition of “exercise of religion.”

The Ninth Circuit Court dissent, written by Judge Fletcher, joined by Judges Pregerson and Fisher, notes that “Under our prior case law, a ‘substantial burden’ on the ‘exercise of religion’ exists where government action prevents an individual ‘from engaging in [religious] conduct or having a religious experience’ and the interference is ‘more than an inconvenience.’” Can you explain how spraying up to 1.5 million gallons of effluent a day on the sacred mountains burdens the various plaintiff tribes’ exercise of religion?

For the Hopi, the Mountain is where the Katsina live; that’s their only sacred mountain; the Katsina are responsible for making the moisture that is essential to Hopi life. It was on Mt. Humphreys that the Hopi had their revelation and they return there for pilgrimages.

For the Navajo, it’s one of four sacred mountains, but it is essential to all blessing way ceremonies which depend on ritually pure materials gathered from the mountain.

The tribes see the Peaks as a single living entity; this is a living being. You can’t poison just one part of it without poisoning the whole.

One man testified that current ski runs are like a scar on the body, something the body can live with, but that putting effluent on the Peaks is like a toxic injection.

For the Apache, the mountain is where souls go after death; the transfer station of souls to Heaven and the spraying will interfere with that operation.

For both the Hualapai and the Navajo, the mountain is their Garden of Eden, where life started.

The government has never questioned the specific special holiness of these mountains to the Native tribes. In fact, in the very beginning, the National Historic Preservation Act uses the Peaks as an example of a sacred space.

Do I understand correctly that the Forest Service essentially admitted the burden to the tribes’ exercise of their religion, but argued there was a “compelling government interest” in allowing snowmaking? What interest is that?

The lower court found that we didn’t show substantial burden, but it also found that the federal government had compelling interest in skier safety. That makes no sense since the best way of eliminating the possibility of accidents would be to ban skiing entirely. The lower court found there was a compelling government interest – you have to understand, compelling government interest is a very heavy-duty term, the kind of thing they wield to prevent epidemics – in government land management, although the Forest Service specifically said that the absence of snowmaking would not prevent recreational land use. Finally, the lower court ruled that there was a compelling interest because NOT spraying artificial snow would create “religious servitude,” as though failing to injure a religion created religious servitude.

In the dissent, Judge Fletcher writes, “The Majority’s misunderstanding of the nature of religious belief and exercise as merely ‘subjective’ is an excuse for refusing to accept the Indians’ religion as worthy of protection under the RFRA.” Can you explain the difference in the three-judge panel understanding of what religion is versus that of the en banc majority?

I don’t know; is that the difference between Democrats and Republicans? Seriously, the majority of the en banc panel becomes arbiters of religion, whereas what they’re supposed to do is make a determination that a religion is sincere and then rule in accord with the law. The last thing we want is for our judges to become arbiters of religion.

The majority ruled that the use of effluent on the Peaks would change only the tribes’ “subjective spiritual experience.” In the dissent, Judge Fletcher suggested a thought experiment: What if the government ordered that all water in baptismal fonts had to be this same treated sewage effluent? How can non-Native people be sensitized to the Peaks’ position as Sinai, Jerusalem, the sole source of living waters, the home of the deities for the plaintiff tribes?

I don’t know the answer, but that’s exactly right; that’s what needs to happen. I’m outraged; I get all choked up when I talk about it or think about it.

As a nation where we pay lip service to and pride ourselves on religious freedom and religious diversity, it’s outrageous that we designate Native Americans and their religious beliefs for lesser treatment, and that’s one reason I’m running for Congress.

I understand that all across the United States, the Snowbowl case is a primary concern of Native Americans in their dealings with the United States government and its agencies. What possible repercussions does this case have locally and nationally?

Native Americans have no First Amendment rights and can’t protect their sacred sites. Of course they’re upset about it. It’s a politically charged issue.

In the end, you have a for-profit, private, federal government bailout for a private corporation doomed by global warming at the cost of desecrating land sacred to hundreds of thousands of people.

The majority also disallowed a pleading in violation of NEPA for technical legal reasons. What specific issues did the NEPA fail to address?

The Environmental Impact Study did not address the probability of children and others eating the snow.

The court ruled against us on all our environmental issues.

The first panel ruled in our favor on the NEPA issue that no analysis had been conducted on snow eating, so the en banc Ninth Circuit concocted a procedural irregularity rather than ruling. We had also pleaded that the NEPA never considered the impact of withdrawing the present daily discharge into the Rio de Flag versus spraying it on the mountain. The other NEPA issue was that there was no adequate response to the report by Dr. Paul Torrence on endocrine-disrupting and other chemical residues in the treated effluent.

After the sewage is treated, what chemicals, bacteria and viruses remain in the effluent that will be used to make snow?

Detectable levels of enteric bacteria, viruses and protozoa, including Cryptosporidium and Giardia.

There’s not only a host of what they call endocrine-disruptors, which feminize amphibians, but also traces of birth control drugs, Viagra, Prozac, Valium, Claritin and other pharmaceuticals. There is Triclosan, which breaks down to become dioxin, the active agent in Agent Orange, and a number of other chemicals.

The lawyers for the other side got up and declared that the effluent meets drinking water standards, but the fact is that when they test drinking water, they don’t test for the stuff that’s in industrial or other waste water, so that was a completely misleading statement.

Did the Forest Service evaluate the impact of long-term exposure to the effluent for humans or the environment?

No.

The NEPA was contracted by the Snowbowl owner to a company that specializes in the development and construction of ski areas. Did the case address the inherent conflict of interest of having the environmental impact assessed by a company reasonably likely to profit from a specific outcome?

No, that’s what they always do. The three-judge panel questioned the Justice Department lawyer as to whether the Justice Department or the Forest Service were getting money, but that didn’t go anywhere.

What do you think?

I think the whole thing stinks. I think the Forest Service never should have approved this in the first place. In the lower court, we also had a number of other allegations. Now we’re just talking about the ones that went up on appeal.

Do you expect the tribes to appeal the current decision to the Supreme Court?

I do.

Would you expect the Supreme Court to hear the case?

You know, they hear very few cases, but I suspect they might hear this one.

How do you think it would go?

If we don’t think it’ll go well, we’d have to talk about whether to do it or not. But I think my clients are pretty adamant about appealing. This is really important to them.

Howard how have you been personally affected by arguing this case?

This has been a learning experience for me and a growing experience for me and I am personally committed to doing whatever it takes to continue this struggle. The fight for justice didn’t begin today, but it also doesn’t end today,

You live and work in Flagstaff. What attitudes characterize non-Native American locals to the snow-making issue?

It’s depends. There are a lot of non-Natives and people of all walks of life, people of conscience, who support the tribes. There are some people who are just skiers and that’s the beginning and the end of it for them. Then there are some people who are opposed. The Flagstaff Chamber of Commerce is collecting money and giving it to the millionaire’s consortium to fight this case.

Flagstaff Chamber of Commerce President Julie Pastrick argues that the decision will lead to year-round job creation and higher winter receipts at local businesses. Is that accurate so far as you know?

The record shows Snowbowl pays no city taxes and accounts for less than 1 percent of the Bed Board and Beverage taxes collected by the city. There is literally no correlation between Snowbowl doing well and local businesses doing well. Studies actually show Flagstaff does better when streets are clear in the winter since it’s a regional shopping hub. Channel 2 came and asked me about that, and when I showed them the statistics, they went back to the Chamber of Commerce and they said the Chamber said, “Shanker should mind his own business.”

You know the Chamber organizes the Fourth of July parade, and when I signed up to put in a Shanker for Congress float, they put it last in the parade and told me any money I gave would go to the “Reclaim the Peaks” campaign.

There’s a lot of racially-driven commentary and whispering campaigns, like, “the Indians really want to keep everybody out,” which is ridiculous since “everybody” is already there, and that they want to build a casino on the Peaks, which is even more ridiculous when you know the parties involved. There’s a rumor that Sunrise Resort in the White Mountains uses reclaimed water, but that mountain is not sacred; that land is not federal and the water being used is not sewage.

You are running in the September 2nd primary to become the Democratic candidate to represent Arizona’s First District. What led you to enter the race?

As I said earlier, this case has been a big factor.

What are the most serious issues facing the District at this time? How does your approach differ from that of the other Democratic candidates?

This is the largest geographic district in the nation that’s not one state and it’s incredibly diverse. The district comprises the Navajo Nation and other tribes, Flagstaff and Sedona, the mining towns of Miami and Globe and a new residential division south of Phoenix, so there are a lot of different issues facing the different parts of the District. I’ve been really honored by some of the endorsements, like that of the Diné Hataalii Association (Navajo Medicine Men) who have never endorsed a candidate before. I also represent the Navajo on uranium contamination issues.

My approach is really not driven by party affiliation or ideology and I found out it is much more progressive. I’ve been endorsed by the Progressive Democrats of America. I’m running as a Democrat, but I frankly think both the Republicans and the Democrats running have an interest in maintaining the status quo. And the status quo is broken.

Thank you, Howard Shanker.

Thank you. And please remind any registered Democrats in Arizona’s District One to vote in the September 2 primary!

End Note: Judge Fletcher concluded his dissent from the majority opinion:

The San Francisco Peaks have been at the center of religious beliefs and practices of Indian tribes of the Southwest since time out of mind. Humphrey’s Peak, the holiest of the San Francisco peaks, will from this time forward be desecrated and spiritually impure. In part, the majority justifies its holding on the ground that what it calls “public park land” is land that “belongs to everyone.” Maj. op. at 10042. There is a tragic irony in this justification. The United States government took this land from the Indians by force. The majority now uses that forcible deprivation as a justification for spraying treated sewage effluent on the holiest of the Indians’ holy mountains, and for refusing to recognize this action constitutes a substantial burden on the Indians’ exercise of their religion.

RFRA was passed to protect the exercise of all religions, including the religions of American Indians. If Indians’ land-based exercise of religion is not protected by RFRA in this case, I cannot imagine a case in which it will be. I am truly sorry the majority has effectively read American Indians out of RFRA. (1)

(1) Dissent in Navajo Nation v. USFS. pp.10077-78.
(2) Ibid., p. 10076.
(3) Ibid., p. 10137.

———

Leslie Thatcher is Truthout’s French Language Editor.

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Do Native Americans Have First Amendment Rights? Do Native Americans Have First

Celebrate Recovery in our Community.

Aug 20th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

All too often we as Indian people are stricken with grief and anguish around drugs and alcohol.  Let us come together on September 20th to celebrate recovery in our community.

Please see attached documents for the event: flier for posting in your agency, vendor/booth form, donation letter.  We also attached a letter of proclamation if you or your agency/tribe would like to sign and add to the many others.

If you are interested in volunteering, please contact Tosha White at the Division of Indian Work (612)722-8722


MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA

“HEARTBEAT OF RECOVERY” – BLOOMINGTON MILE- RUN/WALK RACE

Date: September 20th, 2008 9:00am to 3:00pm

Location: Walk/Run will begin at Bloomington Ave and Lake St

Events will take place at the Mpls American Indian Center

Description: This event is about promoting healing and recovery in our communities by celebrating with a Bloomington Mile Run/Walk from Lake St. to Franklin Avenue and ending at the block of the Minneapolis American Indian Center and Wakiagun House. At the conclusion of the walk/run their will be an address by National and local leaders along with a picnic and an open Microphone so community members will have the opportunity to share their story of recovery along with music, and the Wellbriety Drums.  This event is comprised of several Native American Non-Profit Organizations and committed community members in partnership with White Bison’s Wellbriety Movement and is part of the National Rally for Recovery

Program Agenda:

9:00am Registration at Bloomington/Lake location

10:00am Walk/Run Begins

11:00am Speakers: Don Coyhis / Ivette Torres

12:00 pm Picnic

1:00-3:00 pm Speakers: Carol Falkowski

Entertainment includes: Music, Performances and Children’s Activities

Open Microphone

Invited Speakers:

President and Founder of White Bison, Inc and recognized leader and impetus behind the Wellbriety Movement, Don Coyhis,  SAMHSA, Consumer Affairs Director, Ivette Torres, Department Human Services, Chemical Health Director, Carol Falkowski.

Expected number of participants:  300

Invited Participants/Audience:

Any and all who are in or who support recovery

Primary Contacts

Betty R. Poitra

651-431-2477

Betty.poitra@state.mn.us

Jackie Crow Shoe

651 431 4676

Jackie.crowshoe@state.mn.us

Secondary Contact:

Michael A. Goze

612-813-1610

mgoze@aicdc-mn.org

Kateri Vergez

(719)548-1000

Kateri@whitebison.org

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Celebrate Recovery in our Community. All too often we as Indian people are stri

The last major legs of the Great Plains/Great Prairie Sacred Sites Run 2008

Aug 19th, 2008 Posted in ANNOUNCEMENTS | Comments Off

The last major legs of the Great Plains/Great Prairie Sacred Sites Run 2008 will be in the Milwaukee Area: Labor Day weekend and the following weekend at Indian Summer Festival, Sept. 6-7.  Below is the schedule of WI events.  Fell free to pass on to your contacts.

Please join us for the Aztalan to Milwaukee Run/Walk on Labor Day weekend, Aug. 30 and 31, and Sept 1.  Then the following weekend, come find our SSR literature table Saturday and Sunday (Sept. 6-7) at Indian Summer Festival (ISF) at the lakefront and join us that Sunday morning Sept. 7 for the ceremonies: 8 AM at the Lake Park Mound (Locust St. and Lake Dr.); Walk/Run to Summerfest grounds at 9 AM and then at 10AM–Indian Summer religious service honoring sacred sites and Native harvests.

We have had a strong year of running; political work (especially with the Dakota and Crow Creek); good coverage in the Native press; and just enough money to do our work.  Check out all the good things at our Indian Summer Festival literature table; sign our petition for protection of sacred sites; come meet the runners and writers in Earth Keeper Voices for Native America; and join our work this autumn and next year for SSR 2009.

Late Summer/Autumn 2008 SSR schedule:

Aug 15, 16: Run honoring mounds of Montello, WI, and educational event

Labor Day weekend: Run/Walk from Aztalan State Park to Milwaukee:

Relay 20 miles per day with Milwaukee area Indigenous runners from Aztalan Mounds State Park, Aztalan, WI to Milwaukee Lake Park Mound.

Saturday August 30, at 7:00 AM the relay begins at Aztalan.

Sunday August 31, at 7:00 AM continue the run.

Monday September 1, 7:00 AM the run picks up and enters Milwaukee.

[Probable route: Hiway B from Aztalan, 16 miles to Oconomowoc (possible stop near Aurora Medical Center disturbed mound); highways to Waukesha, then to West Allis State Fair Park mound; and then 7 miles into Milwaukee.]

For exact times, routes, locations of circle gatherings, contact Ben Yahola: (414) 383-7072 or email at humoti@yahoo.com

Thurs. Sept. 4: “The Water Speaks” Conference: Native Perspectives on the Great Lakes, 6 AM to 4:30 PM; Discovery World, at Pier Wisconsin, Milwaukee lakefront. Look for SSR table.

Sat./Sun. Sept. 6, 7  Indian Summer Festival at Milwaukee’s lakefront (literature  table Sat. and Sunday, plus Sunday ceremony at 10 AM)

Sept. 20 Fall Equinox Gathering, Milwaukee, WI

Thurs., Sept. 18th-Sun. 21st: “Growing Food & Justice-for-All Initiative,” WI State Fairgrounds, Milwaukee, Wisconsin [Ben Yahola, presenter; Winona LaDuke also presents]

Oct 4 Honoring mounds in WI

Sacred Sites Run 2006-2010 and

Earth Keeper Voices of Native America (EKVNA)

c/o  Ben Yahola: (414) 383-7072 or email at humoti@yahoo.com

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The last major legs of the Great Plains/Great Prairie Sacred Sites Run 2008 The

PETITION IN SUPPORT OF PAROLE OF LEONARD PELTIER

Aug 19th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

PETITION IN SUPPORT OF PAROLE OF LEONARD PELTIER

Convicted in connection with the deaths on June 26, 1975, of Ronald Williams and Jack Coler, agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Mr. Leonard Peltier remains imprisoned at the United States Penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, despite proof that he was convicted on the basis of fabricated and suppressed evidence, as well as coerced testimony. In fact, the court record clearly shows that government prosecutors have long held that they do not know who killed Mr. Coler and Mr. Williams and, according to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals: “…Much of the government’s behavior at the Pine Ridge Reservation and its prosecution of Mr. Peltier is to be condemned. The government withheld evidence. It intimidated witnesses. These facts are not disputed.” In spite of these facts, Mr. Peltier has served more than 30 years in prison.

After careful consideration of the facts in Mr. Peltier’s case, we have concluded that Leonard Peltier does not represent a risk to the public. First, Mr. Peltier has no prior convictions and has advocated for non-violence throughout his prison term. Furthermore, Mr. Peltier has been a model prisoner. He has received excellent evaluations from his work supervisors on a regular basis. He continues to mentor young Native prisoners, encouraging them to lead clean and sober lives. He has used his time productively, disciplining himself to be a talented painter and an expressive writer. Although Mr. Peltier maintains that he did not kill the agents, he has openly expressed remorse and sadness over their deaths.

Most admirably, Mr. Peltier contributes regular support to those in need. He donates his paintings to charities including battered women’s shelters, half way houses, alcohol and drug treatment programs, and Native American scholarship funds. He also coordinates an annual gift drive for the children of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservationa successful program that, in 2006, expanded to include other reservations throughout the country.

Leonard Peltier is widely recognized in the human rights community for his good deeds and in turn has won several human rights awards including the North Star Frederick Douglas Award; Federation of Labour (Ontario, Canada) Humanist of the Year Award; Human Rights Commission of Spain International Human Rights Prize; and 2004 Silver Arrow Award for Lifetime Achievement. In 2004, 2006 and again in 2007, Mr. Peltier also was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Mr. Peltier is now over 60 years of age—a great-grandfather—and suffers from partial blindness, diabetes, a heart condition, and high blood pressure.

Rather than presenting a threat to the public, Mr. Peltier’s release would help to heal a wound that has long impeded better relations between the federal government and American Indians.

Mr. Peltier deserves to be reunited with his family and allowed to live the remaining years of his life in peace.

We, the undersigned, support justice and human rights for all people of all nations; recognize that the U.S. courts, by their decisions, have recognized the undisputed misconduct in Peltier’s case, yet have failed to take corrective action; determine the U.S. government’s handling of the Peltier case as a clear abuse of the legal standards of American justice; and do hereby call for justice for Leonard Peltier in the form of an immediate grant of parole.

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PETITION IN SUPPORT OF PAROLE OF LEONARD PELTIER PETITION IN SUPPORT OF PAROLE

Wastewin Gonzalez, born 3/12/85, returned to Spirit on 8/16/08.

Aug 19th, 2008 Posted in OBITUARIES | Comments Off

WAKE
Tuesday, August 19 11AM
Minneapolis American Indian Center
1530 Franklin Avenue
The family asks that visitors please respect Our Ways by attending the wake and services free of drugs and alcohol.

BURIAL
Wastewin’s life and Return to Spirit will be honored on Wednesday, August 20th at the Minneapolis American Indian Center, 1530 Franklin Avenue in Minneapolis. Exact times will be posted soon on this site.

Donations to help defray expenses may be sent to any Bremer Bank in the name of WASTEWIN GONZALEZ MEMORIAL FUND. Thank you.

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Wastewin Gonzalez, born 3/12/85, returned to Spirit on 8/16/08. WAKE Tuesday,

Crystal Shawanda C-D Release

Aug 17th, 2008 Posted in MUSIC / CONCERTS | Comments Off
Crystal Shawanda

K102 ‘s Crystal Shawanda CD Release Party
Tuesday, August 19th
6pm
Doors, 8pm PerformanceThe Cabooze (18+)
917 Cedar Ave South
Minneapolis MN, 55404

$10 at the door gets the new CD “Dawn of a New Day” and the performance!

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Crystal Shawanda C-D Release Crystal Shawanda K102 's Crystal Shawanda CD

The Fast Horse Report:

Aug 16th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

The Fast Horse Report:

Martha 

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The Fast Horse Report: The Fast Horse Report: Bemidji Pioneer:

KFAI’s Indian Uprising, August 17, 2008 from 7:00 – 8:00 p.m. CDT #278

Aug 16th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

KFAI’s Indian Uprising, August 17, 2008 from 7:00 – 8:00 p.m. CDT #278


Guests:

Brenda Norrell (NI), Independent Journalist for Censored News: http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com; Listen at Earthcycles: http://www.earthcycles.net. She was a reporter for Indian Country Today, now located in New York.

Clara NiiSka, (Ahnishinahbaeotjibway), Ph.D. Candidate, University of Minnesota and previously, a reporter for the Native American Press/Ojibwe News, Minnesota.

* * * *

Indian Uprising is a KFAI Public & Cultural Affairs program relevant to Native Indigenous people, broadcast each Sunday on 90.3 FM Minneapolis and 106.7 FM St. Paul. Volunteer producer & host is Chris Spotted Eagle.

For internet listening, visit www.kfai.org, click Play under ON AIR NOW or for listening later via their archives, click PROGRAMS & SCHEDULE > Indian Uprising > STREAM. Programs are archived for two weeks.

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KFAI’s Indian Uprising, August 17, 2008 from 7:00 – 8:00 p.m. CDT #2

Executive Proclamation Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate

Aug 14th, 2008 Posted in NEWS & POLITICS | Comments Off

Executive Proclamation
Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate
Office of the Tribal Chairman

Whereas, the Tribal Council of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate, by and
through its authority vested by the Revised Constitution and By-laws
adopted Resolution No. SW-08-079; and

Whereas, by that resolution the Tribal Council of the Sisseton-Wahpeton
Oyate Lake Traverse Reservation declared that the Dakota language
embodies the life, culture and identity of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate
and revitalization is paramount to the survival of our Nation; and,

Whereas, the Tribal Council of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Lake Traverse
Reservation
recognized the importance of revitalizing the Dakota
language and declared that it will be recognized as the first language
of the people of the Lake Traverse Reservation and we must eliminate the
disparity between the use of English and the Dakota language; and

Whereas, in this year, 2008, from January through this date, nine – and
possibly more – of our fluent treasured elders have went on their
journey to the spirit world representing a loss to the Oyate of nine
percent (9%) of the entire population of our fluent treasured elders:

Now, Therefore, I, Michael I. Selvage Sr., Tribal Chairman of  the
Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate, do hereby proclaim a Dakota Language Crisis and
further declare that the Dakota language is in a state of emergency.

In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused to be affixed
the Great Seal of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate, on the Lake Traverse
Reservation, in Agency Village, South Dakota, this 30th day of July,
2008.

/s/Michael I. Selvage Sr., Tribal Chairman

Tammy DeCoteau
AAIA Native Language Program
_______________________________________________
Dakota-net mailing list
Dakota-net@mail.socsci.umn.edu
https://mail.socsci.umn.edu/mailman/listinfo/dakota-net

________________________________________________________________________

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Executive Proclamation Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Executive Proclamation Sisseton

Lots of changes continue to occur on Franklin Avenue.

Aug 14th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

Lots of changes continue to occur on Franklin Avenue. New people, new buildings, new trees, new sidewalks, new flower pots, are all adding to a new history of the ave. Franklin Ave has a unique and colorful history, good and bad.  In either case, American Indians have been a critical part of this history.

It is important that the American Indian community continue to define and claim a geographic and cultural presence in Minneapolis and Franklin Ave is one of those critical anchors.

Please join us next Wednesday evening, starting at 6:00pm, at All Nations Indian Church and be a part of thinking about the future of Franklin Avenue–one of the most well-known urban American Indian streets in the United States.


Justin Kii Huenemann
President
Native American Community Development Institute (NACDI)
1404 East Franklin Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55404

612-872-4700
http://www.nacdi.org

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Lots of changes continue to occur on Franklin Avenue. Lots of changes continue

Birch Coulee Gathering of Kinship

Aug 14th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

Birch Coulee Gathering of Kinship
August 29-31
Birch Coulee Battlefield/State Park in Morton, MN.

MC is Dallas Goldtooth; Spiritual Advisor is Chris Leith.

This Traditional Wacipi brings the people together to commemorate all
who fought in the Battle of Birch Coulee and the 38+2 warriors hanged in
Mankato on December 26, 1862.  Birch Coulee is the site of the victory
battle during the War of 1862.  Camping is available, meals are
provided.  Friday is Camp Day with sessions on Saturday and Sunday.
Vendors are welcome.  Craft stands are charged $150 and Food Stands are
charged $100.  Local hotels are Jackpot Junction, Dakota Inn and Morton
Inn.

Pidamaya.

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Birch Coulee Gathering of Kinship Birch Coulee Gathering of Kinship August 29-

These teens are part of the Garden Warriors program.GARDEN MARKET at WOLVES DEN

Aug 14th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

GARDEN MARKET at WOLVES DEN
EVERY THURSDAY THROUGH AUGUST 21
Dream of Wild Health will be selling fresh, organic produce at the
Wolves Den, 1201 E. Franklin Avenue, Mpls, on Thursday, July 31, from 10
am to noon. This week Native teens from the Twin Cities will be selling
at low cost freshly picked produce including green beans, carrots, kale,
onion bunches, zucchini (summer squash), cabbage, radishes, flowers, and
more. These teens are part of the Garden Warriors program, a four-week
garden apprenticeship that teaches teens about healthy food, organic
gardening
, diabetes prevention, and job skills.

/Dream of Wild Health is a 10-acre Native owned and run farm in Hugo,
MN
. For more information, visit www.petawakantipi.org./

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These teens are part of the Garden Warriors program.GARDEN MARKET at WOLVES DEN

COMPOST NEWS!

Aug 14th, 2008 Posted in HEALTH & NUTRITION | Comments Off

COMPOST NEWS!

Garden legend Will Allen is coming to Dream of Wild Health on Sunday,
August 17
, for a working demonstration of setting up a compost site. A
former professional basketball player, Will Allen transformed a farm in
downtown Milwaukee into an intensively farmed greenhouse and
vermicompost site where youth from the city can work and sell produce.
For more information on Will Allen’s “Growing Power” business &
organization:
http://www.growingpower.org

DATE: Sunday, August 17th, approximately 10am-2pm.
LOCATION: Dream of Wild Health Farm, 16085 Jefferey Avenue, Hugo MN,
55038; 651-439-3840

WHAT: Set up the compost site and enjoy a healthy lunch.

WHAT TO BRING: Sunscreen, water, garden clothes, gloves, & several
dollars donation for Potluck.

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COMPOST NEWS! COMPOST NEWS! Garden legend Will Allen is coming to Dream of W

U.S. Senate candidate Al Franken, in Red Lake.

Aug 14th, 2008 Posted in NEWS & POLITICS | Comments Off
Senate hopeful Franken to campaign at powwow
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Filed Under: Politics | Red LakeU.S. Senate candidate Al Franken, a Democrat, will campaign on the Red Lake Nation in northern Minnesota on Friday. Franken, a well-known comedian, plans to attend the Red Lake Fair and Powwow. He will observe the grand entry and address attendees during the visit. Franken is facing Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minnesota), who supported the nomination of “Famous” Dave Anderson to run the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Polls show the race to be a tie.
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U.S. Senate candidate Al Franken, in Red Lake. Senate hopeful Franken to

NUIFC programs/conferences

Aug 13th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off

http://nuifc.org/programs/conferences/

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NUIFC programs/conferences http://nuifc.org/programs/conferences/

Navajo Textbook

Aug 13th, 2008 Posted in GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS | Comments Off
New Mexico first state to adopt Navajo
textbook
ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (AP) — In the Navajo language, there’s no one word that translates into “go” — it’s more like a sentence.

“There are so many ways of ‘going,”‘ said Evangeline Parsons Yazzie, a Navajo professor at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. “It states who is going, how many of us are going, where are we going. So the tense, the adverb, the subject, the number of people, all of that is tied up in one little tiny verb.”

Those verbs are part of what makes the Navajo language — one of seven American Indian languages taught in the New Mexico school system — one of the most difficult to learn, she said. Yazzie is hopeful a book she recently wrote will provide a user-friendly way for New Mexico students to learn not only the language but the culture of a tribe that long has tied the two elements.

State officials formally adopted Yazzie’s book, Dine Bizaad Binahoo’ahh, or Rediscovering the Navajo Language, this week in Santa Fe. While other books on Navajo language exist, state officials say New Mexico is the first to adopt a Navajo textbook for use in the public education system.

“Overall, we believe it will help improve academic achievement,” said state Education Secretary Veronica Garcia.

Garcia said research has shown that students who master their native language often have an easier time understanding more abstract concepts in the English language.

About 10 school districts in New Mexico provide Navajo language instruction. During the 2006-07 school year, 5,024 students were learning Navajo.

The Navajo language long had been an oral language, and many Navajo elders fluent in their native tongue cannot read or write the language. Tribal officials have expressed concern that the language is dying among the youth, leading to some immersion programs on the reservation.

School districts in New Mexico, as well as U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs schools, can review Yazzie’s book and decide whether to use it starting in the 2009-10 school year. The book will be accompanied by a CD with the voices of Yazzie and her brother, Berlyn Yazzie, a former educator and administrator on the Navajo Nation.

Each chapter of the book begins with a cultural lesson and guides readers through verbs and sentence construction.

It also includes pictures of people who have lived on the Navajo reservation, which stretches into New Mexico, Utah and Arizona. Yazzie said she looks forward to students sharing the book with Navajo elders and “pretty soon conversation will be sparking around fires.”

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Navajo Textbook New Mexico first state to adopt Navajo textbook ALBUQUERQU

Dakota-Sami Night

Aug 12th, 2008 Posted in ANNOUNCEMENTS | Comments Off

Mendota is having a Cultural Exchange evening on Tuesday September 9th. Look for more information coming soon.

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Dakota-Sami Night Mendota is having a Cultural Exchange evening on Tuesday Sept
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