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Topics - walksalone11

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16
Debate & Discuss / Good Thinking 4 All Our Relations
« on: August 21, 2011, 02:17:03 am »Message ID: 404882
Please take a moment to view the short video on this page.

http://4allourrelations.org/

17
Debate & Discuss / Admin. please......
« on: August 09, 2011, 11:54:35 am »Message ID: 399157
I applaud the move to add the sub-catagory of D&D to the off topics board, in an effort to give those who were offended by some of the more heated debates the choice of whether to be subjected to them or not.

May I please make the suggestion that you also add a sub-catagory title some thing to the effect of "Trivial Bull *bleep*" board, for the more "intellectually discerning members here?

18
Debate & Discuss / New Legislation on Tribal Rape Cases........
« on: August 09, 2011, 11:32:32 am »Message ID: 399138
"Signed into law July 21, 2010, the Tribal Law and Order Act in part aims to fight the atrocious rate of sexual violence in native communities living on reservations by strengthening the tribal criminal justice system and tightening communication between tribal, local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies.  In a long overdue step towards amending the federal government’s ignorance of Native American rights issues, the act highlights another painful burden born by American women of color due to government socio-economic strategy.

In a mess of jurisdiction regulations and legislative loopholes, the federal, state, and tribal law enforcement facilities have struggled for decades with the prosecution of sexual violence offenders in native communities.  The Amnesty International 2007 report Maze of Injustice: the Failure to Protect Indigenous Women from Sexual Violence in the USA publicized statistics on unprosecuted rape and sexual assault cases on reservations.  US Department of Justice data shows that Native American and Alaska Native women are over 2.5 times more likely to be raped or sexually assaulted than the average American woman.  Over 1 out of 3 American Indian and Alaska Native women will be raped during her lifetime, while the national figure for women is less than 1 of 5.

More disturbing is the statistic indicative of the grave abuses that our federal government treaties allow non-native Americans to impose upon Native American and Alaska Native women.  According to the US Department of Justice, in 86% of reported rape or sexual assault cases against Native American and Alaska Native women, the perpetrators are non-native men.  Federal legislation in these treaties prohibiting tribal courts from trying non-native persons gives complete impunity to the majority of sexual violence perpetrators on Indian reservations."

Read more @ http://www.stanford.edu/group/progressive/cgi-bin/?p=945

19
Debate & Discuss / America's native prisoners of war
« on: August 09, 2011, 11:25:48 am »Message ID: 399135

20
Debate & Discuss / International Day of the World’s Indigenous People (9 August)
« on: August 09, 2011, 10:30:34 am »Message ID: 399099
http://www.un.org/en/events/indigenousday/


"The International Day of the World’s Indigenous People (9 August) was first proclaimed by the General Assembly in December 1994, to be celebrated every year during the first International Decade of the World's Indigenous People (1995 – 2004).

In 2004, the Assembly proclaimed a Second International Decade, from 2005 – 2015, with the theme of “A Decade for Action and Dignity.”

The focus of this year’s International Day will be Indigenous designs: celebrating stories and cultures, crafting our own future.

This theme highlights the need for preservation and revitalization of indigenous cultures, including their art and intellectual property.  It can also be used to showcase indigenous artists and cooperatives or businesses who are taking inspiration from indigenous peoples' customs and the indigenous communities who may have participated or benefited from this.

It is also a reminder of the responsibility of individuals as consumers, to understand that there is a story and a personal experience behind every piece of cloth, textile or artwork from an indigenous individual or community. 

At UN Headquarters on 9 August, there will be a special event focusing on intellectual property in relation to indigenous designs, as well as best practices for protecting indigenous arts and crafts. "

21
Debate & Discuss / Amazon tribe may have fallen victim to drug traffickers
« on: August 09, 2011, 10:26:51 am »Message ID: 399088
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/08/09/report-amazon-tribe-may-have-fallen-victim-to-drug-traffickers/


"Suspected Peruvian drug traffickers have destroyed a guard post protecting a recently discovered indigenous tribe in Brazil's Amazon rain forest, the aid group Survival International reports.

Aerial film and still images of the tribe were first shown to the world in February. The Brazilian government's National Indian Foundation established the guard station near the tribe's territory along Brazil's border with Peru to protect the Indians from outsiders.

Survival International said Monday that Brazilian authorities can now find no sign of the tribe.

"We think the Peruvians made the Indians flee. ... We are more worried than ever. This situation could be one of the biggest blows we have ever seen in the protection of uncontacted Indians in recent decades. It’s a catastrophe," Carlos Travassos, the head of Brazil's isolated Indians department, said in a Survival International statement.

Survival International reports the tribe's lands are near the Envira River, which Peruvian cocaine smugglers reportedly use as a route into Brazil.

Brazilian authorities report groups of men armed with machine guns and rifles are in the nearby forest, according to the aid group.

Authorities had recovered a drug trafficker's rucksack with a broken Indian arrow in it, Survival International reported.

"This is extremely distressing news. There is no knowing how many tribal peoples the drug trade has wiped out in the past, but all possible measures should be taken to stop it happening again. The world’s attention should be on these uncontacted Indians, just as it was at the beginning of this year when they were first captured on film," Survival International Director Stephen Corry said in a statement."

22
Debate & Discuss / Native Mother Attacked and Beaten
« on: July 21, 2011, 07:09:35 pm »Message ID: 388880
CLOVIS, Calif. – On June 14th, also known as Flag Day, Patty Dawson dropped her Apache uncle off at the Fresno train station after a family visit, and headed for home around 2:30 p.m.

What happened next she will never forget.

Dawson, who is Navajo and San Carlos Apache, said she was at a stop sign in the small town of Clovis when a car behind her bumped into her lightly. She glanced in the rearview mirror and saw three people in the car, and decided to keep going.

As she continued down the two-lane highway, the car behind her sped up alongside her and tried to force her off the road. Dawson said she tried to evade them, but the car then tried passing her on the right dirt shoulder of the road, forcing her into the oncoming traffic lane.

Fearful of their intentions, Dawson headed for the next business she saw, an Arco station with people in the parking lot where she thought she’d be safe.

Before she could get out of her car, she was attacked by one of three people, who she described as “skinheads,” that had followed her into the parking lot.

Witnesses told police they saw a white woman and two men with swastika tattoos and shaved heads kick and beat Dawson, leaving her unconscious and bleeding in the parking lot.

Dawson, a mother of a young family, said all she remembers is a woman covered in tattoos spitting on her, then hitting her so hard she blacked out. Two men – one with a swastika tattoo on his face and the other with a shaved head – joined in the beating, but it was mainly the woman attacking her, according to witness statements to the local police.

Cindy Dawson, the victim’s sister, said Patty woke up in a Fresno emergency room, in shock and pain, and unable to remember her name.

“She had a broken nose and a concussion when she was released,” said Cindy. “I don’t think they should have let her go without a thorough exam. I think she also had a broken rib, and now she may have to have surgery for her injuries.”

Cindy Dawson also said her sister is having a hard time coping with the trauma of an inexplicable and random attack. “She has no idea why anyone would do this to her, and she’s trying to recover from her injuries.”

Because of a lack of federal funding to Indian Health Service facilities, Dawson was told that if her injuries required rehabilitation or surgery, she would have to travel to the nearest IHS facility in Phoenix, Arizona for medical care.

“My sister is a kind and quiet person who did nothing to deserve this,” said Cindy. The family has no insurance, so treatment for trauma or counseling is out of reach, and she worries how this will affect them in the long term.

“Her head injuries are still causing vomiting and other problems, and there’s damage to her upper cheek. The doctor told my sister she’s not to be working and she was the sole source of income for her family. We’re still waiting to hear from victim’s services to see if we can get some assistance.”

She speculated that ongoing racial tensions and “deep-rooted hatred for Indian people” in the region was part of the motive for the attack on her sister.

The family has been concerned that they were not getting a response from local police, despite repeated calls by family and community members.

“My dad and I started contacting people because we couldn’t believe something like this could happen without being noticed. People need to be aware of this, and the fact that no one was punished,” said Cindy.

ICTMN left messages at the Clovis Sheriff’s Department for the detective assigned to the case, but calls were not returned.  Another staff member said he was on vacation.

“Detective Tuscano from the Sheriff’s Department assured my sister that they will find the people who did this to her,” said Cindy. “I’m told they may know who the assailants are because witnesses reported the license plate number.”

In the meantime, the family is trying to get on with life and seeking treatment for Patty’s physical and emotional trauma.

A fund has been set up to help the Dawson family. Those who wish to help may contribute at any Wells Fargo Bank, to the Patty Dawson One Love Fund.

23
Debate & Discuss / Submit applications to the soon to be famous, Amy Rouse fan club, here
« on: July 01, 2011, 10:39:05 am »Message ID: 377822
....if accepted you will also get two free autographs and a life sized cardboard likeness of "yours truly"

You can't go wrong folks, don't wait, offer ends soon!

24
Debate & Discuss / Tension mounts as Brazilian Indians retake land
« on: May 27, 2011, 08:47:07 pm »Message ID: 359319
A community of Guarani Indians in Brazil has retaken part of its ancestral land in an act of desperation, having lived by the side of a highway for a year and a half.

The Guarani marched back to their land last week, unwilling further to endure the appalling living conditions they have been subject to on the roadside.

The Indians of Laranjeira Nanderu community had their lands stolen from them in the 1960s, to make way for cattle ranches. They returned to their land in 2008, but were evicted again in September 2009 – soon after, their village was brutally attacked and burned down.

Since then, the Guarani have been living under tarpaulin sheeting, with little access to clean water, food, or medical care, and subject to intense heat and flooding, by the side of a highway. Large trucks and cars thundered past day and night, and one Guarani was run over and killed.

Faride, spokesman of the community, told Survival researchers before the reoccupation, ‘Laranjeira Nanderu was my father’s land, my grandfather’s land, my great grandfather’s land… We need to go back there so we can work and live in peace… that is our dream.’

Watch a film clip of Faride talking about his community’s land, and read more @ http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/7319

25
Debate & Discuss / UN Indigenous: Doctrine of Discovery 'Racism and Genocide'
« on: May 24, 2011, 10:23:29 am »Message ID: 357941
http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2011/05/un-indigenous-doctrine-of-discovery.html




UN Indigenous: Doctrine of Discovery 'Racism and Genocide'
TENTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS PERMANENT FORUM ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES

The Doctrine of Discovery is directly responsible for the disproportionate levels of incarceration, the violent assaults committed upon our children in boarding and residential schools and the devastating trauma experienced by our families, communities and Nations.

May 16 to 27, 2011 – UN Headquarters, New York City, NY

STATEMENT OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ CAUCUS

Agenda Item 8: Future Work of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
Subject: Doctrine of Discovery as the special theme for the 11th session in 2012
Presented by: Christopher H. Peters, Seventh Generation Fund, President

1. Thank you Madam Chair for the opportunity to speak today. I am honored to addressed this distinguished body of experts on this agenda item. The Indigenous Peoples of the North America region express our sincere appreciation for the decision made by members of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues to advance the critical topic of the Doctrine of Discovery as the special theme of the 11th session of the Forum.

2. The historic edict of Christendom proclaimed by Pope Alexander the 6th nearly 520 years ago, known around the world as the Papal Bulls of 1493, has caused far-reaching and devastatingly negative impacts on the lives, cultures, and ecosystems of Indigenous Peoples throughout the world.

3. The Doctrine of Discovery as the theme for the 11th session of the Permanent Forum will provide an opportunity to redress the social, political and legal constructs that have resulted from the Papal Bulls and the accompanying edict of Terra Nullus. Both of which have perpetuated the ongoing genocide, colonization, and domination of Indigenous Peoples and our homelands. We recognize that it will provide the mechanism for Indigenous Peoples and governments to begin the laborious task of repudiating and deconstructing this vicious framework of colonization within our Nations and communities.

4. We commend the Expert Members of the Permanent Forum for their courage and vision in forwarding this important issues at this time when the world searches for a new ecologically centered paradigm and for a moral and socially conscious process for transforming and protecting the dignity and equality for all citizens of the world community.

5. Madam Chair, on March 18th and 19th, 2011 Indigenous Peoples and organizations from North America gathered at Blue Lake, California to discuss a number of urgent concerns and propose recommendations for the future work of the Permanent Forum. We were mindful of the Forum’s Final Report on UNPFII-9, (E/2010/43-E/C.19/2010/15) of May 19, 2010, and its acknowledgement of the Preliminary Study of the Impact on Indigenous Peoples of the International Legal Construct Known as the Doctrine of Discovery, E/C.19/2010/13, (4 February 2010), by Special Rapporteur, Tonya Gonnella Frichner, the North American Indigenous Peoples’ Caucus, and in that regard, offer the following recommendations:

Recommendations:

6. We reiterate a call for additional attention, study and documentation of the racist and genocidal doctrine of Christian discovery;

7. Advance our appeal for a deep exploration of the manner in which the doctrine of Christian discovery has been constructed, elaborated, applied, and extended in law, policy, socio-cultural practices, through both secular and religious practices, and to set the stage for its eradication and reversal as a fundamental element of colonialism and imperialism, with full and equal participation by Indigenous Peoples;

8. Request that the following recommendation of the Special Rapporteur be acted upon:

· This study shall be expanded to include a global review of this doctrine and call upon the other Indigenous caucuses to discuss and prepare studies documenting the impacts in their regions.

· That an international expert group meeting be convened to discuss the findings and implications of the preliminary study of the Doctrine of Discovery, and to present its findings to the next UNPFII session (2012) and to ascertain to what extent and how the Doctrine of Discovery and its attendant framework of domination are applied to Indigenous Peoples, and our lands and territories, throughout the world.

9. Call on this Forum (UNPFII-10) to take into consideration the recommendations of the Regional Hearing on the Impact of the Doctrine of Discovery on Indigenous Peoples, held on March 14, 2011 in Pueblo Grande, Phoenix and the upcoming hearings in Mexico and India, in preparation and to help shape the agenda for next year’s theme.


10. Finally Madam Chair, we implore that the future work of this distinguished body examines the legacy the Doctrine of Discovery, and that it remains mindful of the current and continued impacts on the sovereign and human rights of Indigenous Peoples of the world.

11. The pernicious edicts of the Doctrine of Discovery of 520 years ago are directly responsible for and connected to current polices that perpetrate treaty violations, destructions of sacred places, loss of lands, cultures and languages. It is also directly responsible for the disproportionate levels of incarceration, the violent assaults committed upon our children in boarding and residential schools and the devastating trauma experienced by our families, communities and Nations.

12. Without prejudice to the work and recommendations on Doctrine of Discovery, we support the call for a proposal for the creation of a Doctrine of Reconciliation. We further support the call for an Expert Group Seminar on Truth and Reconciliation Commissions as proposed by the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in its 3rd Report to be hosted by the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Madame Pillay.

Wok lau

Source:

http://unpfii10.blogspot.com/

26
Debate & Discuss / The International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers
« on: April 16, 2011, 06:20:39 pm »Message ID: 340938
http://www.su-spectator.com/news/grandmothers-form-unique-alliance-become-activists-for-native-people-1.2146143
2011.4.6_News_Grandmothers_MarisolVillanueva1


The International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers

Each of the grandmothers is descended from a Native American Tribe.
2011.4.6_News_Grandmothers_MarisolVillanueva2

The microphones in Pigott auditorium were chirping and screeching over and above the voices of the two indigenous women speaking on stage.

Gail Lasprogata, director of the Center for the Study of Justice in Society hurried on to the stage in an effort to quiet the microphones.

Lasprogata conferred for a moment with the women on stage while the audience waited. Rita Pitka Blumenstein, an elder of the Yup'ik tribe of Alaska, bumped her clip-on microphone sending a low feedback screech through the auditorium again. She threw her weathered hands up and covered her eyes, giggling.

"Technology!" said Blumenstein, as the microphone screeched again. She shifted in her chair and her microphone squawked again; she slapped her thighs, bursting into a fit of laughter.

Blumenstein and Hopi elder Mona Polacca spoke to a packed Pigott auditorium about the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers, of which they are a part. The Council was founded in upstate New York in 2004, the vision of Jeneane Prevatt of the Center for Sacred Studies.

Prevatt sent out invitations to many indigenous grandmothers, but only these 13 came. In New York they decided to form an official organization and to continue to meet. The women had come from Tibet, Mexico, Arizona, Alaska, Brazil, Gabon and Nepal. Over the next several years the women would travel to each other's homes, even boating down the Amazon River to visit two of the Grandmothers at their home in the Amazon Jungle. The formation and subsequent journeys of the 13 Grandmothers has been turned into a documentary called "For the Next 7 Generations." The Grandmothers are currently touring the world sharing their documentary and vision.

"The elders used to say, you don't make a kayak in one day," Blumenstein told the audience, but these Grandmothers seem to have gone from little known tribal leaders to international advocates for peace, stars of their own documentary and world travelers in just a few years.

The film documents the Grandmothers' visit to Dharamsala where they met the Dalai Lama.

"I think females should take more of a role," the Dalai Lama told them.

"In order to have compassion in society, mothers' role is very very crucial," said the Dalai Lama.

The 13 Grandmothers asked for a letter of introduction to the Pope from the Dalai Lama. The Grandmothers had sent a letter to a high-ranking cardinal asking for an outdated papal decree sanctioning the suppression of indigenous cultures and customs to be taken off the books. They had received a polite reply, but nothing had been done. The Dalai Lama agreed, but the Grandmothers decided to travel to Rome anyway to attend a public audience with the Pope.

In Rome, the Grandmothers discovered the audience had been canceled. They decided to leave an offering at the Vatican for the Pope nonetheless but were harassed by security. That episode is just part of a reoccurring theme of grievances with the church despite the respect that the Grandmothers have for Catholicism.

The presence of the Grandmothers at Seattle University, then, is part of the effort of this university to bridge that divide, and heal the wounds inflicted by the church.

The Grandmothers will meet again for the ninth time at the home of Grandmother Rita Pitka Blumenstein in May.

27
Debate & Discuss / Native Americans Occupy Glen Cove Sacred Site
« on: April 14, 2011, 03:49:42 pm »Message ID: 340054
Native Americans Occupy Glen Cove Sacred Site
by International Indian Treaty Council on Thursday, April 14, 2011 at 3:27pm

Sacred Site Protection & Rights of Indigenous Tribes (SSP&RIT)

For Immediate Release:

Contact:  Norman “Wounded Knee” Deocampo 707-373-7195

 Corrina Gould 510-575-8408  * Mark Anquoe (415) 680 0110  * Morning Star Gali (510) 827 6719

 

 

 

 

                                       As Bulldozers May Arrive Any Day at Ancient Burial Site,

                            Native Americans To Occupy Sacred Land at Glen Cove in Vallejo

                 Spiritual Ceremony and Occupation Beginning Friday, April 15, 2011 at 8 am

 

 

Vallejo, California (April 14, 2011) – Faced with the imminent arrival of bulldozers at the Native American sacred burial site at Glen Cove, Vallejo, members of the local Native American community will hold a religious ceremony to commence an occupation of Sogorea Te, otherwise known as Glen Cove, in the City of Vallejo beginning at 8 am on Friday, April 15, 2011. Native Americans and their supporters have vowed to physically block bulldozers or any other work that would desecrate the burial site.

 

Native American activists consider this to be the last stand in a struggle that has been going on for over a decade, since the Greater Vallejo Recreation District (GVRD) first proposed plans for a “fully featured public park” including construction of a paved parking lot, paved hiking trails, 1000 pound picnic tables and a public restroom on top of the 3500 year old burial site.

 

On Wednesday, April 13th, Sacred Site Protection and Rights of Indigenous Tribes (SSP&RIT), a Vallejo-based community organization, filed an administrative civil rights complaint to the State of California alleging that the City and GVRD are discriminating on the basis of race in threatening to destroy and desecrate significant parts of the Glen Cove Shellmound and burial site, for harming Native Americans’ religious and spiritual well-being, and effectively excluding Native Americans from their right to full participation in decision-making regarding the site.

 

The history and cultural value of the site has never been disputed. Human remains have been consistently unearthed as the area around the site has been developed.  Native Americans continue to hold ceremonies at Sogorea Te just as they have for thousands of years. The Glen Cove Shell Mound spans fifteen acres along the Carquinez Strait.  It is the final resting place of many Indigenous People dating back more than 3,500 years, and has served as a traditional meeting place for dozens of California Indian tribes.  The site continues to be spiritually important to California tribes. The Glen Cove site is acknowledged by GVRD and the City to have many burials and to be an important cultural site, yet they are moving forward as early as Friday with plans to build a toilet and parking lot on this sacred site and to grade a hill that likely contains human remains and important cultural artifacts.

 

SSP&RIT have asked GVRD to reconsider their plans to grade the hill and build toilets and a parking lot at the site.

 

Glen Cove is located near the intersection of South Regatta and Whitesides Drive in Vallejo.

For more information and directions: www.protectglencove.org

28
Debate & Discuss / NDN wars are not over...519 years and counting
« on: April 14, 2011, 08:25:27 am »Message ID: 339842
Then, as now the struggle is not to remove all nons from Turtle Island. It is simply us asserting our right simply to be. Be who we are. Be where we wish. Protect and preserve our Cultures, our dignity, our resting places of the Ancestors and other sacred sites that have been our places of Ceremony(churches if you will) for many many generations "before contact".

Creator brought into existance Mother Earth for all peoples and in fact all life. We all have a right to her so long as we preserve, nurture and protect her.

Many time our Nations ceded lands or surrendered particular battles, but, never have any of our Nations surrendered the war.

The vast majority of the time you will never witness our struggle on the evening news or the morning papers, but trust me...the fight continues. The People and our struggle consumes my entire existence. We don't think in terms of this battle or that occupation, nor days weeks years or centuries. We are in it for as many generations as it takes to win peace and acceptance for us all(that means you too).
We will see victory, if not thru my eyes, then thru my descendants eyes.......one day.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WADDk471O8

29
Debate & Discuss / Come on Over, What D'ya say?
« on: April 14, 2011, 07:44:16 am »Message ID: 339807

30
Debate & Discuss / Authentic NDN Powwow
« on: April 12, 2011, 07:58:11 pm »Message ID: 339306
....which began when my honorary Nephew Oz (Caleb) from Northern Ontario made a comment about my pic.


Caleb John Robert Musgrave GAH! Put a shirt on uncle! Geez! By the way, need me some of that Maxwell House coffee you got there.

John Jonas Introduce you to my daughter and now you want my coffee???.....you better have some damn fine ponies.

Caleb John Robert Musgrave I'm Ojibway, we don't got no stinkin' ponies.. I'll bring ya some pelts, and maybe a nice birchbark canoe.. that depends on if she can cook good.

John Jonas what kind of pelts? and no maybes on the canoe

Caleb John Robert Musgrave Wolf, lynx, marten, Beaver, ermine, maybe some arctic fox...

John Jonas Got plenty of beaver and ermine?...Dude that IS maxwell house....danged Nish canadindian son of.......

Caleb John Robert Musgrave Lol, yeah, plenty of beaver and ermine, though their pelts have already shifted to summer. And yes, that is Maxwell House, I know my coffees..

John Jonas ol' ratty, chewwed, rubbed summer pelts????...Nephew, I think this pow wow is pretty much concluded

Caleb John Robert Musgrave No, I'm sayin' wait till next fall when I can give ya some beavers that would make your jaw drop.

John Jonas If you can travel west, and touch one of those sweaty california Choctaws....and live, perhaps we can continue this trade?

Caleb John Robert Musgrave Dude, I live amongst Mohawks, and French Canadiens.. have I not tested my bravery enough?

Caleb John Robert Musgrave I was also dating and sleeping with a Texan woman in her father's house. That is the best Coup I can imagine

John Jonas ewwwww....get ur dirty filthy paws off my damn coffee

John Jonas for that....maybe a shoulders up pic of the girl.....and you sleep outside and down wind!

Caleb John Robert Musgrave Riiiight.. for "inspection" I'm sure.

John Jonas No, don't want to smell no texas, but let you smell the coffee

.........

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