Filed under: Civil Rights, climate change, coal, Cold War, Downwinders, enivornment, Indigenous, Mining on Native Lands, nuclear, Nuclear Clean Up, Nuclear contamination, Nuclear Protestors, Nuclear Waste, nuclear weapons, Shundahai Network Blog, The Real Truth, Uncategorized, Uranium, war on terrorism, Water | 1 Comment »
An Indian Prayer Christmas Day
An Indian Prayer Christmas Day Larry Kibby Great Spirit Grandfather, I send these words to you, To Father Sun, Grandmother Moon, To all of my relations, To Mother Earth, And to the Four Winds The Sacred Seasons of Life. Grandfather, Today you gave The breath of Life To an Indian Child, In a most Sacred [...]
Filed under: enivornment, Indigenous, Shundahai Network Blog, The Real Truth | 1 Comment »
How Native American Drums Play A Spiritual Role In Indigenous Culture
Read original article by clicking link below How Native American Drums Play A Spiritual Role In Indigenous Culture Native American drums are undeniably the most loved Native American instruments among Native and non Indian people alike. Drums for hundreds of years have always been at the center of Indian lifestyle, forming what is the channel [...]
Filed under: enivornment, Indigenous, religious freedom, Shundahai Network Blog, The Real Truth | Tagged: American Indian Drums, American Indian Drums American Indian Tribes Beat Of The Earth Great Spirit Hand Drums History Of American Indians Hoop Drums Indian Lifestyle Inner Feelings Native American Drums Native American Inst, American Indian Tribes, Beat Of The Earth, Great Spirit, Hand Drums, History Of American Indians, Hoop Drums, Indian Lifestyle Inner Feelings, Native American Drums, Native American Instruments, Native American Powwow Native Drummers, Native Drums, North America History, Personal Artwork, Public Ceremonies, Religion AndSpirituality, Shaman Drums, Spiritual Role | Leave a Comment »
Timbisha Shoshone to Obama: Adopt UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Greetings. Upon this historical event, we wish to thank you for your commitment and dedication to bring forth meaningful change for our Peoples. On behalf of the Timbisha Shoshone of the Western Shoshone Nation and the many other Nations and Pueblos of Indigenous Peoples of North America, we call upon the government of the United States of America (USA) to act in due haste to adopt and implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), which was adopted by the UN General Assembly Resolution #61/295 at its 107th plenary on September 13, 2007.
We are confident that through your leadership and peacemaking goals as exemplified in your membership on the UN Human Rights Council, you will adopt this historic human rights instrument. We ask for this action immediately.
Filed under: coal, enivornment, Indigenous, nuclear, Nuclear Clean Up, Nuclear contamination, religious freedom, Shundahai Network Blog, Water | Leave a Comment »
Johnny Cash: Foe of hypocrisy
President Nixon to Johnny Cash: “Johnny, would you be willing to play a few songs for us,” Nixon asked Cash. “I like Merle Haggard’s ‘Okie From Muskogee’ and Guy Drake’s ‘Welfare Cadillac.’” The architect of the GOP’s Southern strategy was asking for two famous expressions of white working-class resentment.
“I don’t know those songs,” replied Cash, “but I got a few of my own I can play for you.” Dressed in his trademark black suit, his jet-black hair a little longer than usual, Cash draped the strap of his Martin guitar over his right shoulder and played three songs, all of them decidedly to the left of “Okie From Muskogee.” With the nation still mired in Vietnam, Cash had far more than prison reform on his mind. Nixon listened with a frozen smile to the singer’s rendition of the explicitly antiwar “What Is Truth?” and “Man in Black” (“Each week we lose a hundred fine young men”) and to a folk protest song about the plight of Native Americans called “The Ballad of Ira Hayes.” It was a daring confrontation with a president who was popular with Cash’s fans and about to sweep to a crushing reelection victory, but a glimpse of how Cash saw himself — a foe of hypocrisy, an ally of the downtrodden. An American protest singer, in short, as much as a country music legend.
Read article at Salon:
Filed under: enivornment, Indigenous, Shundahai Network Blog, The Real Truth, Water | Leave a Comment »
Join The Caravan In Support Of Big Mountain Resistance Communities of Black Mesa, AZ.
We are excited to inform you that a caravan of work crews will once again be converging from across the country in support of residents of the Big Mountain regions of Black Mesa. On behalf of their peoples, their sacred ancestral lands and future generations, these communities continue to carry out a staunch resistance to the efforts of the US Government, which is acting in the interests of the Peabody Coal Company, to devastate whole communities and ecosystems and greatly de-stabilize our planet’s climate for the profit of an elite few.
Filed under: Civil Rights, climate change, coal, enivornment, Indigenous, Nuclear Waste, Shundahai Network Blog, Water | 2 Comments »
CIA Knew About Iran’s Secret Nuclear Plant Long Before Disclosure
This summer, as the Obama Administration prepared to confront Iran with proof of its undisclosed uranium-enrichment plant in Qum, CIA Director Leon Panetta ordered his staff to work with European intelligence agencies to compile a comprehensive presentation about the facility. Although the Iranians had taken great pains to keep the facility a secret, building it into a mountain 100 miles southwest from Tehran, the CIA had known about it for three years.
Filed under: enivornment, Indigenous, nuclear, Nuclear Waste, nuclear weapons, Shundahai Network Blog, The Real Truth | Leave a Comment »
Denver American Indian Commission: Transform Columbus Day
The Denver American Indian Commission believes the city’s rich community of diverse tribes deserves a proactive change most of us can agree on — that rapidly approaching Columbus Day could be transformed into a day to honor our all of cultures and values. Only in recent years and in some places has the holiday become a tribute to Indian America, but the DAIC believes our Denver community could join the growing chorus of tribal nations and other Native and non-Native entities that choose to honor the continent’s original residents and its vital, pre-1492 history. We feel this is an opportunity we can’t take lightly.
Our present and future generations view their culture and themselves as being directly affected by how we celebrate our history. As it stands, the holiday reinforces the inaccurate notion that North America came into being in 1492, when “uncivilized” Native inhabitants appeared only to play a short-lived role in the founding myth, and soon vanished into history.
With growing, abundant evidence of complex pre-Columbian cultures in North as well as South America, we want to restore our ancestral tribal nations to the dignity they deserve. Therefore, the DAIC is joining a growing number of tribes and nations, like the sentiment of the 10,000-member Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians that this year voted unanimously to replace recognition of Columbus Day with a day to commemorate the cultural and religious center of Choctaw life.
“For Native Americans, Columbus Day should not be a day of celebration,” said Mississippi Band Chief (Miko) Beasley Denson. “His arrival on our shores marked the beginning of centuries of exploitation of our people and our land. Much better that we should celebrate our rich culture and our traditions.”The following have eliminated, replaced or changed Columbus Day, according to media and internet information: Navajo Nation, Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, Tohono O’odham Nation, Saginaw Chippewa Tribe of Michigan, Jicarilla Apache Tribe, and Gila River Indian Community; Cities of Berkeley, Portland, and Duluth; the states of Alaska, South Dakota, Hawaii, Nevada, and Alabama, and several colleges and universities, including Brown University, Rhode Island.
Filed under: Civil Rights, enivornment, Indigenous, Shundahai Network Blog, Water | Leave a Comment »
Sioux leaders work on Black Hills Land proposal for Omama
Sympathetic signs from President Barack Obama have inspired hope among Sioux spiritual and government leaders that some federal land in the Black Hills might one day be returned to Native American control.
Leaders for Sioux tribes in the Dakotas, Montana and Nebraska are holding meetings to shape a proposal on Black Hills land for the Obama administration, one they hope will be better than the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1980. That forced settlement was about millions of dollars, not acres of land, and it has consistently been rejected by tribes of the Great Sioux Nation.
Filed under: Civil Rights, enivornment, Indigenous, religious freedom, Shundahai Network Blog, Water | Leave a Comment »
Cause Announcement from Dooda (No) Desert Rock
Cause Announcement from Dooda (No) Desert Rock GREAT NEWS folks: US EPA Environmental Appeals Board Remands PSD Permit for the desert rock energy project! Celebration information coming forth! Here’s another opportunity for you to contribute to DDR, we need your help! FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 25, 2009 Contact: Elouise Brown, Dooda (NO) Desert Rock Committee [...]
Filed under: Civil Rights, climate change, coal, enivornment, Indigenous, religious freedom, Shundahai Network Blog, Water | 1 Comment »
Stumble It!




