Indigenous News Roundup


Running for Their Lives: 500-Mile Youth Spiritual Run Against Dakota Access Pipeline.

The public outcry against the Dakota Access Pipeline has been joined by a group of youth, both Native and non-Native, who are running a 500-mile spiritual relay this week from Cannonball, North Dakota to the district office of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in Omaha, Nebraska.

“We ask that everyone stand with us against this threat to our health, our culture, and our sovereignty,” said the group in a statement. “We ask that everyone who lives on or near the Missouri River and its tributaries, everyone who farms or ranches in the local area, and everyone who cares about clean air and clean drinking water stand with us against the Dakota Access Pipeline!” Full story at the link.

Europe Reintroduces Its Own Brand of Bison, Also Driven to Near Extinction.

Valène Aure via Wikipedia European bison, known as wisent, are being reintroduced into the wild across the Pond from Turtle Island. Here, wisent frolic in the Réserve biologique des Monts d'Azur, Haut-Thorenc, France.

Valène Aure via Wikipedia
European bison, known as wisent, are being reintroduced into the wild across the Pond from Turtle Island. Here, wisent frolic in the Réserve biologique des Monts d’Azur, Haut-Thorenc, France.

Amid all the bison buzz on Turtle Island, what with the National Bison Legacy Act having passed both houses of Congress and currently sitting on President Barack Obama’s desk, a lesser-known but parallel phenomenon is happening across the Pond.

Full Story here.

Marty Two Bulls

Marty Two Bulls

Reconciliation Is the New Assimilation: New NAIPC Co-Chair.

Courtesy Tamara Starblanket “Indigenous Peoples have the right to self-determination in international law. Minorities do not have the rights of self-determination.”

Courtesy Tamara Starblanket
“Indigenous Peoples have the right to self-determination in international law. Minorities do not have the rights of self-determination.”

Tamara Starblanket (Spider Woman), Cree, from Ahtahkakoop First Nation in Treaty Six Territory, Canada, recently accepted the international appointment as Co-Chair of the North American Indigenous Peoples Caucus (NAIPC). She was nominated by Indigenous participants from the U.S. and Canada attending the NAIPC gathering last March, there to discuss critical issues, find common ground and create a collective platform in preparation for the 15th Session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues at the UN Headquarters in New York City in May.

Starblanket is the Instructor and Program Coordinator for the Aboriginal Justice Studies Certificate Program at Native Education College. She used her education in law to prove that genocide occurred in Canada. She is the author of the forthcoming book, “Suffer the Little Children – Genocide: Indigenous Nations in the Canadian State.” Noam Chomsky said of her book, “Settler-colonialism reveals the brutal face of imperialism in some of its most vicious forms. This carefully researched and penetrating study focuses on one of its ugliest manifestations, the forcible transferring of indigenous children, and makes a strong case for Canadian complicity in a form of ‘cultural genocide’ – with implications that reach to the Anglosphere generally, and to some of the worst crimes of the ‘civilized world’ in the modern era.”

We spoke with Starblanket about her new role.

Full Story Here.

Courtesy santarosacahuilla-nsn.gov The Santa Rosa Band of Cahuilla Indians has a General Council, which elects a Tribal Council for two-year terms. The people of Sew’ia are one of eight Cahuilla Bands, which include Cahuilla, Ramona, Los Coyotes, Torres-Martinez, Augustine, Cabazon, Agua Caliente, and Morongo.

Courtesy santarosacahuilla-nsn.gov
The Santa Rosa Band of Cahuilla Indians has a General Council, which elects a Tribal Council for two-year terms. The people of Sew’ia are one of eight Cahuilla Bands, which include Cahuilla, Ramona, Los Coyotes, Torres-Martinez, Augustine, Cabazon, Agua Caliente, and Morongo.

Kinship and Tribal Nations.

Tribes usually are composed of kinship groups. The difference between a tribe and Western democracy is the difference between individualism and place, and kinship and place. Tribes have kinship groups that have rights to places.

Democracies do not recognize extended kinship groups, but rather recognized territorial areas, “demos” on the original Greek. A demos, like a precinct, organized the nation according to places, and recognizing individuals or populations within those places. This is how the United States is organized into states, counties, townships, and precincts. The trend toward western forms of nation states or democracies is a movement toward individual citizenship and individual votes. Lineage groups or kinship structures are explicitly put to the side. The nation is seen as a population of individuals who share the same rights and obligations of citizenship.

Full Story Here.

Courtesy LA Skins Fest LA Skins Fest, a Native American film festival, in partnership with Comcast/NBCUniversal, CBS Entertainment Diversity and HBO, announced a week ago Friday they have selected seven participants for the inaugural Native American TV Writers Lab.

Courtesy LA Skins Fest
LA Skins Fest, a Native American film festival, in partnership with Comcast/NBCUniversal, CBS Entertainment Diversity and HBO, announced a week ago Friday they have selected seven participants for the inaugural Native American TV Writers Lab.

The Write Stuff: Native Participants Picked For 2016 Native American Writers Lab.

LA Skins Fest, a Native American film festival, in partnership with Comcast/NBCUniversal, CBS Entertainment Diversity and HBO, announced a week ago Friday they have selected seven participants for the inaugural Native American TV Writers Lab, a talent development program that aims to boost the careers of Native American writers.

According to a release, the Native American TV Writers Lab received more than 100 applicants recommended by such entities as Universal Studios and the Writers Guild of America-West. The participants will take part in a five-week curriculum curated by seasoned writing executives.

The lab will consist of daily workshops, seminars and one-on-one mentoring to help each writer develop and complete a pilot in five weeks and hone skills to prepare the writers to move into staff writing jobs.

Full Story Here.

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