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News from Native American Netroots

Cross Posted at Native American Netroots Welcome to News from Native American Netroots, a series focused on indigenous tribes primarily in the United States and Canada but inclusive of international peoples also. A special thanks to our team for contributing the links that have been compiled here. Please provide your news links in the comments … Continued

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Jesuit Missionaries in Arizona

( – promoted by navajo) photo credit: Aaron Huey The Spanish missionaries made a four-pronged approach into North America: Florida and the Southeast (beginning in 1549); New Mexico and Texas (beginning in 1581); California (beginning in 1769); and Arizona (beginning in 1687). While there are many histories about the Spanish missions in New Mexico and … Continued

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Still Dream Obama Signs UN Declaration on Indigenous Rights

( – promoted by navajo) I dreamed Obama signed the UN Declaration on Indigenous Rights, and I still do. Canada has endorsed the UN Declaration on indigenous peoples three years after the declaration was approved by the General Assembly. In a statement released last Friday, Canada’s Indian and Northern Affairs department said, ‘The Government of … Continued

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A new article of faith: Don’t make the poor balance the budget

( – promoted by oke) By Mark Trahant There is a political article of faith: “Don’t raise taxes during a recession.” Just Google the phrase and you’ll find some 2.5 million results. The popular idea is that deeply embedded into our political thinking. Of course it makes economic sense: You want people to spend their … Continued

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Indians 101: Murder in Montana (19th Century)

( – promoted by navajo) photo credit: Aaron Huey The West in the nineteenth century was at times violent and this violence was sometimes expressed in murder. This was particularly true with regard to interactions between Indians and Americans. Often, Americans who murdered Indians escaped any legal consequences for their actions. On the other hand, … Continued

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Information so my children do not grow up ignorant

My children and I are ignorant, not by choice, to much of our history.  What we learned in school is not true yet my educators had the nerve to call it teaching.  My son is half Siminole, because his father is full blooded native american.  I, however, am a mixture of Dutch-Irish and Cherokee.  I … Continued

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Growing Up Indian

photo credit: Aaron Huey The Argus Leader has an important and informative series on what it’s like to grow up Indian in South Dakota, on or off the reservations. The decades of multi-generational trauma and resulting pervasive poverty have taken their toll on our tribes whether they are fighting to maintain their traditional cultures or … Continued

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Thank You For Your Service

( – promoted by navajo) photo credit: Aaron Huey A short time ago, as Veterans Affairs Correspondent for Native American Netroots, I was assigned to read an email from a Prairie Band Pottawatomi veteran from the reservation at Mayetta, Kansas. Twenty years on active duty in the U.S. Army, an artilleryman, a bearer of heavy … Continued

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Mormon Missionaries and the Hopi Indians

( – promoted by navajo) For thousands of years the Hopi Indians have lived in permanent farming villages, called Pueblos by the Spanish. In 1847, the Mormons entered what is now Utah and began to proselytize the Utes, Paiutes, and Shoshones who have traditionally lived in this area. Within a decade, the Mormon missionaries began … Continued

Mormons and Indians