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To save Cherokee language, a digital tool shares tales of Standing Rock and Big Snake with the next generation
Cherokees Writing the Keetoowah Way provides English translations of historic documents and lessons to help the next generation learn.
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Navajo Quilt Project co-founder wins national arts fellowship
Hudson is a co-founder of the Navajo Quilt Project, which donates fabric to elders all across the Navajo Nation.
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Through gardens, these Native communities are cultivating a solution to climate change
How a small home garden can preserve traditional food-growing practices.
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On This Day-Sitting Bull Shot By Indian Police, His Legacy Remains
Sitting Bull was shot on December 15, 1890 at the age of 59, but his legacy lives on in his descendants. To his people, he was known as a Sun Dancer.
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The map of Native American tribes you've never seen before
Aaron Carapella, a self-taught mapmaker in Warner, Oklahoma, has pinpointed the locations and original names of hundreds of American Indian nations before their first contact with Europeans.
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US agrees $500m Navajo Tribe Payout
The US government has agreed to pay $554m (£339m) to the Native American Navajo tribe to settle a legal dispute.
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Half Acre Senita Pale Ale
Recently, members of the Lakota community (Native Americans from the Great Plans of the United States) reached out to Half Acre about the use of “Heyoka.” Heyoka, translates roughly to “jester.” The Lakota community was disappointed in Half Acre’s use of the word.
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Native Actors Walk off Set of Adam Sandler Movie After Insults to Women, Elders
When Native actors working on an Adam Sandler western objected to the film's racially-offensive humor, they were told they could leave. So they did.
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Searching for Clues to Mystery of Ancient Americans
Among the things they left behind are beautiful ruins, a gorgeously woven basket and a nearly impossible to get to granary on a cliff.
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Luminous Lantern Slides of Blackfeet Tipis on the Prairies of Montana in the Early 20th Century
This group of lantern slides by photographer Walter McClintock depicts Blackfoot tipis in Montana, between 1896 and 1914.
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Blackhorse: Do You Prefer ‘Native American’ or ‘American Indian’? 6 Prominent Voices Respond
Amanda Blackhorse, Diné, speaks with prominent Native American voices about the discussion over the terms 'Native American' and 'American Indian.'
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[Canadian] Truth and Reconciliation report brings calls for action, not words
Commission releases 94 recommendations to confront 'cultural genocide' of schools
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DNA reignites Kennewick Man debate
DNA tests show an ancient skeleton known as Kennewick Man is related to modern Native Americans - reigniting a debate over whether his bones should be returned to local tribes and reburied.
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25th June 1876 - Battle of Little Bighorn
Native American forces led by Chiefs Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull defeat the U.S. Army troops of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer
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U.S. grants federal recognition to Virginia's Pamunkey tribe
RICHMOND — More than 400 years after Pocahontas, arguably the most famous Pamunkey Indian, saved the life of Englishman John Smith, the tribe once again made history Thursday by becoming the first Indian tribe in Virginia to be recognized by the federal government.
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UV Body Painting - "Shelter From the Storm"
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Mysterious link emerges between Native Americans and people half a globe away
Traces of Australo-Melanesian ancestry in some Native Americans could shed light on the peopling of the Americas. By Michael Balter .
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DNA uncovers mystery migration to the Americas
Two separate genetic analyses have found evidence for a surprising genetic link between the native populations of the Americas and Oceania.
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Native American Woman Dies in Jail, Begging for Help. Officers Told Her to “Quit Faking”
Earlier this month, a Lakota woman, was jailed on an alleged bond violation over a driving infraction. Her pleas for help allegedly fell on deaf ears and she died in jail.
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Apaches Refuse to Relinquish Sacred Land
When San Carlos Apache Tribal Council member Wendsler Nosie found out late last year that Arizona Sen. John McCain had tucked a rider into the National Defense Authorization Act that transfers 2,500 acres of Apache land to a foreign copper company, anger and resolve bubbled up inside in him, he said. By Barrington M. Salmon.
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