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Sunday, December 14, 2025

Undergrad Researchers Find Harvard Owned, Sold Indigenous Land in Maine

12/10/2025
Massachusetts Hall, the oldest surviving building at Harvard, is home to the offices of its president and provost.
Massachusetts Hall, the oldest surviving building at Harvard, is home to the offices of its president and provost. By Pavan V. Thakkar

Scholars have spent years studying Harvard’s colonial-era land holdings in New England. Now, undergraduate research on the University’s ownership of Indigenous land in Maine is helping push the research forward.

Laura C. Cleves ’28 and Christian D. Topinio ’27 traced Harvard’s financial entanglements to a piece of land in southern Maine using archival documents and interviews with members of the Penobscot Nation.

The two found that an alumnus gifted the land to Harvard in 1678, though the University did not touch the land until a century later. Harvard sold the land in 1780, though members of the Penobscot and Abenaki peoples lived there at the time.

English settlers at the time, including the original donor of the land, assumed that tribal leaders had agreed to hand over exclusive rights to the land. The land was sold for $1,877 — the equivalent of $54,000 today — though tribal leaders disputed any such agreement.

Alan Niles, a lecturer in English who advised the research, said that sale of the land allowed Harvard to use Indigenous land as an instrument of financial gain.

History professor Philip J. Deloria, another adviser of the research, said many of Harvard’s land sales were tied to the Massachusetts government, which used land to fund the University.

“Harvard was set up to be a college, not a colonial institution,” Deloria said. “It was not meant to colonize and town-found.”

History professor Philip J. Deloria in a 2019 portrait.
History professor Philip J. Deloria in a 2019 portrait. By Ryan N. Gajarawala

“There’s an important ethical question there,” Topinio said. “If we or other researchers have found serious legacies of land expropriation and land theft from Indigenous nations that have been unaddressed, there is an ethical call to address that.”

Cleves and Topinio’s work was conducted as part of the inaugural Caleb Cheeshahteaumuck and Joel Iacoombs Fellowship, a summer fellowship open to Harvard undergraduates interested in archival research on Indigenous history.

The summer work — conducted in partnership with the Harvard University Native American Program, the FAS Inequality in America Initiative, and the Build Learning through Inquiry in the Social Sciences program — is an extension of the Harvard and Native Lands course, where students produce original research on Harvard’s involvement with Indigenous land.

Deloria, one of the advisers, started the Harvard and Native Lands course in 2022 and will return to its teaching staff for the first time next spring. He said that the fellowship was an opportunity for students to dive deeper into their research than the academic semester normally allows.

The summer gave Cleves and Topinio the opportunity not only to examine Harvard’s archives, but also to travel to Maine and interview members of the Penobscot Nation, Deloria said.

“It was very, very valuable in terms of knowing what exactly community research looks like,” said Topinio. “What values do they hold of the land? How do they think through these issues of sovereignty? What does it mean to take that land as part of your home?”

Deloria — who also sits on the Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery initiative’s advisory council — said that ongoing research on Harvard’s Indigenous land ownership could follow a similar trajectory to the Legacy of Slavery report.

The Legacy of Slavery report also began as an undergraduate research seminar and later became a task force culminating in the report’s release in 2022.

Deloria pointed to regular meetings between University Provost John F. Manning ’82 and tribal leaders as a starting point for the collaborative work he envisions for the field’s future.

“It's really, going forward, an opportunity for tribes and Harvard to produce knowledge together, in collaboration,” he said.

  www.thecrimson.com /article/2025/12/10/new-research-harvard-indigenous-land/  

—Staff writer Sophie Gao can be reached at sophie.gao@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @sophiegao22.

December 12, 2025 | ICT NEWSCAST: Shop Native for the holiday

Joel Pedersen talks '60s Scoop, rising through the military ranks | Face to Face...

Joel Pedersen has spent more than half his life serving in the Canadian Armed Forces reserves. First joining when he was 17, he credits the idea to his adoptive mother saying both her and his father both served as well. Pedersen himself is a child of the Sixties Scoop and the Adopt an Indian & Metis (AIM) Program. However, he said, it was never seen as an obstacle or disadvantage.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Tribes ponder blood quantum alternative

 

Native America Calling: https://www.nativeamericacalling.com/tuesday-december-9-2025-tribes-ponder-blood-quantum-alternative/

Crow leadership are working toward revamping their tribal citizenship requirements. If their proposal goes through, any currently enrolled tribal citizens would be designated as having 100% Crow blood.  The St. Croix Ojibwe Tribe in Wisconsin is seeing their first tribal enrollment gains in years after they got rid of their blood quantum requirement. They are among the tribes looking down the road and mapping a future away from the Indian blood requirement.

GUESTS

Levi Black Eagle (Apsáalooke), secretary of the Crow Tribe

Conrad St. John (St. Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin), chairman of St. Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin

Jill Doerfler (White Earth Anishinaabe), professor of American Indian Studies at the University of Minnesota-Duluth

Cheyenne Robinson (Omaha), treasurer for the Omaha Tribe of Nebraska

Jonaye Doney (Aaniih), student at the University of Montana

Black-market Adoption Ring in Georgia?

 


Thomas J. Hicks’s Cause of Death Explained After Adoption Scandal Exposure

He died in 1972, but the truth about Thomas J. Hicks's secret life kept families searching for answers years later.

By  | Dec. 8 2025

Dr. Thomas J. Hicks was the small-town Georgia doctor who secretly ran a black-market adoption ring out of his clinic in McCaysville. None of this came out while Hicks was alive. The truth didn’t start to unravel until 1997, when adoptees and local journalists noticed a pattern linking unusual McCaysville birth certificates to families in places like Akron, Ohio.

Hicks never faced criminal charges for the illegal adoptions, and the families he affected never got the chance to see him questioned in court. Now, decades after his death, people still wonder what caused his death. Here is what we know about the circumstances surrounding his passing.

What was Thomas J. Hicks’s cause of death?

By the time Hicks died, his medical career had already collapsed. In 1964, authorities indicted him for performing an illegal abortion, according to the Los Angeles Times. He surrendered his medical license soon after. That charge stood separate from the black-market adoption operation he quietly ran out of the same building. His clinic in McCaysville, Ga., shut down, and Hicks slipped into local obscurity.

Hicks died of leukemia, a type of blood cancer, in 1972. A Johnson City Press death notice at the time said Dr. Hicks, a Kingsport, Tenn., native who had practiced medicine in Copperhill/McCaysville for nearly 50 years, “died at his home Sunday of leukemia” at age 83.

Born in 1888 in Pickett County, Tenn., he studied at Tusculum College, Carson-Newman College, and later Emory University’s medical school before going into practice. In McCaysville, Hicks reinvented himself as the town doctor. The Hicks Community Clinic handled everyday checkups and minor emergencies for local families in the front rooms.

Thomas J. Hicks’s “babies” have spoken out since his death.

Behind that wholesome image, Hicks was running something much darker. In the 1950s and early 1960s, he began advertising abortion and adoption services on phone booths, bus stations, and bridges — at a time when abortion was illegal in Georgia. Women traveled from across the region to his clinic.

Some came seeking abortions, paying around $100 for the procedure. Others were persuaded to carry their pregnancies to term, only to have Hicks quietly place their newborns with out-of-state couples in off-the-books adoptions. Hicks was later linked to more than 200 babies who were sold or “given away” from the back of his clinic between roughly 1950 and 1965, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

In one documented case, Thelma Tipton said Hicks told her that her baby girl was stillborn and even had her sign a death certificate. In reality, the doctor had sold the child to adoptive parents a week later. “He stole my daughter,” Tipton told ABC News. “He robbed me of my life. … I missed out seeing [Kristie] growing up, missed out on her first tooth … her first day in school. … I missed out on her wedding, I missed out on everything.”

One adoptee, Melinda Dawson, told investigators that her parents were instructed to walk in the front, take the baby, and leave through the back alley. "They were instructed to come down ... come through the front door, pick the baby up and leave through the back door, and go home immediately," Dawson said, per Country Living.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Eastern WA man must relinquish 500-plus ancestral belongings to Nez Perce

Archaeologists estimate the restoration and repair of the area where Caldwell dug test pits will cost almost $6,000.

At Caldwell’s sentencing hearing Ekstrom said that “there has been, historically in the United States, a lack of respect for items that belong to First Nation folks, and it has been a blind spot in the United States for a long period of time” and acknowledged the frustration of tribes at continuing theft of items.

Caldwell apologized at the hearing, according to the Eastern Washington U.S. attorney’s office.

The 522 artifacts that will be restored to the Nez Perce Tribe will be taken care of according to traditional protocols, said Nakia Williamson, director of the Nez Perce Tribe Cultural Resource Program.

“As the original people of this Land, the Nez Perce community view this act as not only ‘disturbing archaeological resources’ within a National Forest, but also ignoring and undermining our basic humanity as a living culture, which is connected to the land and resources managed by the U.S. Forest Service,” she said. “These are not simply ‘resources’ to our community, but are a testament to our enduring connection to federally managed lands and a reminder of our collective responsibilities to take care of the land which provides for all of us.”

Monday, December 8, 2025

Is the return of 62 Indigenous cultural belongings a big step for truth ...

Sixty-two Indigenous cultural items previously held in Vatican museums and vaults for a century are being repatriated to Canada.  Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux, Chair on Truth and Reconciliation at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ont., explains why she’s ‘a bit conflicted’ about the return of these cultural belongings.
 

Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation Reclaims 900 Acres Of Yosemite #LandBack

 Bryant-Jon Anteola, The Fresno Bee

The land transfer, from Pacific Forest Trust, is considered a major milestone for Indigenous cultural and land restoration in California.

In addition, the move could lead to better management and control of wildfires in and around the areas.

The South Sierra Miwuk Nation has reattained nearly 900 acres bordering Yosemite National Park — 175 years after the tribe was originally expelled from the lands.

The returned lands represent approximately 1.4 square miles of Yosemite National Park’s 1,169 square miles.

“Having this significant piece of our ancestral Yosemite land back will bring our community together to celebrate tradition and provide a healing place for our children and grandchildren,” said Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation’s Tribal Council Chair and elder Sandra Chapman. “It will be a sanctuary for our people.”

Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation are people indigenous to Yosemite and greater Mariposa County.

With nearby Yosemite National Park attracting 4 million visitors annually, the lands provide a large platform for public education of Indigenous climate-smart land stewardship.

Among them is the Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation’s traditional ecological practices of using fire to promote healthy forests.

Henness Ridge slope, a portion of the 900 acres of Yosemite returned to the Souther Sierra Miwuk (Photo from PACIFIC FOREST TRUST)
Henness Ridge slope, a portion of the 900 acres of Yosemite returned to the Souther Sierra Miwuk (Photo from PACIFIC FOREST TRUST)

Friday, December 5, 2025

After federal funding cuts, tribal radio station says silence is not an option



Tami Graham, executive director of KSUT Public Radio, says the last year has been "the most unreal roller coaster ride," as the station lost crucial federal funding followed by record-breaking donations.
Frank Langfitt/NPR

READ:  https://www.npr.org/2025/12/02/nx-s1-5571009/how-one-tribal-radio-station-is-fighting-to-survive-following-federal-funding-cuts 

Thursday, December 4, 2025

“Tribal IDs—the government issued those damn cards to us like a pedigree dog! It’s not fake!”

 


Native American actor says she was detained by ICE officers who said tribal ID ‘looked fake’

Elaine Miles of Northern Exposure was stopped by four masked men in Seattle while walking to bus stop

Fri 28 Nov 2025 14.17 EST

A Native American actor known for her role in Northern Exposure has said she was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Seattle, Washington, who told her that her tribal identification “looked fake”.

Elaine Miles, an Indigenous actor, alleges that she was stopped by four masked men while she was walking to a bus stop in Redmond. She offered them her ID card from the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in Oregon but was told by an ICE agent that “anyone can make that.”

Miles, who also appeared in The Last of Us, Smoke Signals, The Business of Fancydancing and Skins, told the ICE agents to call the tribal enrollment office number on the card.

According to a report of the encounter by the Seattle Times, the officers refused. Miles called the office herself, whereupon one officer tried to take her phone but failed. Then the men released her and departed in their vehicles.

Miles alleges that a similar thing has happened to her son and uncle – they have previously been detained and later released by ICE officers who would not initially accept their tribal identification.

According to a post on Facebook by the Lakota People’s Law Project, Miles told the group: “Tribal IDs—the government issued those damn cards to us like a pedigree dog! It’s not fake!”

Miles’ account chimes with others of Native Americans being swept up in the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. Native News Online reports that an Indigenous woman born in Phoenix was mistakenly detained by immigration authorities after being released from jail in Des Moines, Iowa.

“What we’re talking about here is racial profiling,” Seattle-based Indigenous rights attorney Gabriel Galanda told the Seattle newspaper. “People are getting pulled over or detained on the street because of the dark color of their skin.”

Galanda said that the agents’ refusal to accept Miles’ ID points to “a fair amount of ignorance about tribal citizenship generally in society and in government”.

According to the outlet, the actor’s encounter with ICE agents came on the same day that ICE agents made several arrests at Redmond’s Bear Creek Village shopping center, prompting city council to switch off its license-plate-reading cameras.

Earlier this year, the Navajo nation announced it was taking steps to protect its community from federal immigration actions, amid reports that some Indigenous Americans have been swept up in US deportation raids.

After Miles was detained, she said she was now afraid to leave the house alone or at night. Galanda said that the prospect of Native Americans being detained is reminiscent of the country’s troubled history with Indigenous peoples.

“It’s also deeply troubling that in 2025, the first people of this country have to essentially look over their shoulders,” she added.

SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/nov/28/elaine-miles-actor-ice-detained-id-fake 

Monday, November 24, 2025

#MMIW in the United States #StolenSisters (reblog 2022)


(reblog from 2022)

Violence is the third leading cause of death for native women between 10 and 24 years of age and the fifth leading cause of death for women 25 to 34 years (Simpson 5). Today American Indian women face murder 10 times the national average according to the Department of Justice.  The government has failed to address the violence against Native women despite staggering statistics that provide evidence for the high rates of violence perpetrated against this marginalized group (Simpson 5).  In 2015, the federal government approved an act that would provide additional resources to improve tribes’ access to databases that had data of MMIW but have not followed through.  In response to the lack of a database that includes all the MMIW, I have created a web map that will visualize the Indigenous women that have been reported missing and murdered.  The ultimate goal is to try to understand what is unique about the situation that causes Native American women to experience higher rates of violence. In the future I hope to be able to provide statistical analysis for my theory about the relation between map camps and missing women.

Keep Reading 

The MMIWG2 Database logs cases of missing and murdered indigenous women, girls, and two spirit people, from 1900 to the present.

There are many lists and sources of information online, but no central database that is routinely updated, spans beyond colonial borders, and thoroughly logs important aspects of the data, and overall, there is a chronic lack of data on this violence. The Database works to address that need, by maintaining a comprehensive resource to support community members, advocates, activists, and researchers in their work towards justice for our stolen sisters.

 The Database originally included cases from the US and Canada, but starting in 2019, we have expanded its reach to include all Indigenous women, girls, and two spirit people. We will continue to pursue archival research in the US and Canada, and will rely on partnerships with Indigenous women’s collectives and organizations in other regions to include our sisters indigenous to lands occupied by other colonial entities.

The kind of information the Database cares for is determined by ongoing consultation with Indigenous communities. The Database currently logs the following:

​About Victims:

Name, Indigenous name and translation, tribal affiliation(s), birth date, age, if they were a mother, if they have other MMIWG2 cases in their family

​About Perpetrators:

Race, gender, relationship to the victim

​About the Violence:

Missing or murdered, incident date, violence perpetrated against murder victims after they are deceased, relevant issues (domestic violence, sexual assault, sex work/sex trafficking, foster care, police brutality, trans victim, death in custody, unsheltered, residential/boarding school)

​About Police & Court Response:

Reward amount (if any), case classification, conviction status, which entities located deceased individuals

​About Geography:

City, state/province, country, location type (tribal land, rural, urban)

 

NOT ONE MORE: Report on MMIW wiped off Federal website


STORY: 

The commission titled its report Not One More and detailed calls to action for multiple federal agencies — including the Departments of Justice and the Interior, Health and Human Services and the Administration for Children and Families. This year, legislators and policymakers were supposed to establish ways to better track the missing, and step up efforts to find them. 

https://ictnews.org/news/mmiw-report-a-casualty-of-federal-purge-of-government-data/ 

 

 BACKGROUND:

 But on Feb. 18, the 212-page, comprehensive set of findings and recommendations that 41 commissioners worked on for three years suddenly vanished from the U.S. Department of Justice website.

WASHINGTON (NEXSTAR) – As the president aims to root out diversity, equity and inclusion in the federal government, some lawmakers say important policy documents have been swept up with it.  That includes a report aimed at addressing missing and murdered indigenous people.

“It’s really kind of a slap in the face of the community that we’re trying to work with and protect,” said Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.).

Nevada Senator Catherine Cortez Masto’s bipartisan “Not Invisible Act” created the commission that reported those recommendations.

President Trump signed it into law his first term, with the White House at the time touting him as, “the first president to formally recognize the tragedy…”, but now the report isn’t on the DOJ site anymore.

An Interior Department page that links to the DOJ has a note that says links may not work and quote, “…any previously issued diversity, equity, inclusion or gender-related guidance on this webpage should be considered rescinded.”

The DOJ does still have a page dedicated to missing or murdered indigenous people that summarizes the report’s recommendations.

The Justice Department did not respond to requests for comment when asked about why the report was removed.

Cortez Masto says on this National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, lawmakers and the administration should be working together to address the tragedy.

“This is not a partisan issue. This is bipartisan. We’ve got great legislation coming from it,” said Cortez Masto.

Cortez Masto is currently working to pass two bills aimed at supporting tribal law enforcement. 


REPORTS:

https://mmiwhoismissing.org/mmip-reports 

Bill restoring citizenship for 'Lost Canadians' becomes law

Court ruled government must pass law covering some children born abroad


People swear an oath together.
Applicants recite the oath of Citizenship in March. Some children of Canadians who were born abroad will become Canadian citizens after Parliament passed a bill to change citizenship rules that were deemed unconstitutional. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

The "Lost Canadians" legislation, which aims to fix Canada's unconstitutional citizenship by descent rules, passed in the Senate Nov. 19 and received royal assent Thursday afternoon.

The term refers to people who were born outside of the country to Canadian parents who were also born in another country.

In 2009, the federal government changed the law so that Canadians born abroad could only pass down their citizenship if their child was born in Canada, but that was deemed unconstitutional by the Ontario Superior Court in December 2023.

The legislation proposed Canadian citizenship could be passed down to people born abroad, beyond the first generation, if the parents spent a cumulative three years in Canada before the child's birth or adoption.

A man in a suit, wearing glasses, speaks to someone off screen. Canadian flags are seen in the background.
Sen. David Arnot argued the bill does not apply to 'intercountry adoptees,' international children adopted by Canadian parents and raised in Canada. If those adoptees have children of their own born outside Canada, they would not be Canadian citizens.  (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

Saskatchewan Sen. David Arnot argued the bill unfairly applies a "substantial connection" test to "intercountry adoptees" when it comes to passing down citizenship.  This is a legal term that applies to adopted children who were born abroad and raised in Canada by Canadian parents.

Arnot said the bill uses the general term "international adoption," which can include intercountry adoptees. He said these children go through a rigorous immigration process before their adoption in Canada is finalized.

Arnot said that includes provincial and territorial approval, anti-trafficking screens, foreign state approval, federal citizenship reviews and other measures.

"Intercountry adoptees must be treated the same as domestic adoptees. It is a requirement of the Hague Convention that intercountry adoptees have the same rights and treatment as in-country adoptees," Arnot said.

"Another way to say this is that, because domestic adoptees do not have a substantial connection test, neither should intercountry adoptees."

Arnot did not try to amend the law because the court has set a deadline for the law to be enacted by Jan. 20, but he urged the immigration minister to make the change in the future.

LINK: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/lost-canadians-bill-senate-9.6986432 

"I may never see him again"


I'm A U.S. Citizen. I'm Terrified My Adopted Son Will Be Snatched By ICE Due To A Heartbreaking Loophole.  

My son isn’t the only one facing a potentially unimaginably bleak future. Michael is one of an estimated 45,000 adults adopted as children by American families who have yet to obtain U.S. citizenship, according to Adoptee Rights Campaign. Some advocates believe there are as many as 70,000 transnational adoptees in limbo. They’re often merely missing or unable to secure minor information to complete the incredibly complicated process, or their American parents assumed a legal adoption made their child a U.S. citizen and took no further action to make certain.

READ:  https://www.huffpost.com/entry/us-citizen-international-adoptee-ice-deportation_n_691b4af0e4b085766d7e35a1

Friday, November 21, 2025

US Senate Unanimously Recognizes November as National Native American Heritage Month

archive photo

11-19-2025

The U.S. Senate on Wednesday passed a bipartisan resolution recognizing November 2025 as National Native American Heritage Month, honoring the cultures, histories, and contributions of Native Americans to the United States.

The resolution, led by U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, and U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i), vice chairman, highlights the importance of preserving Indigenous traditions, strengthening government-to-government relationships with Tribal Nations, and reaffirming federal trust and treaty responsibilities.

MORE:  https://nativenewsonline.net/currents/us-senate-unanimously-recognizes-november-as-national-native-american-heritage-month

The full resolution can be read here. 

National Congress of American Indians chooses leadership at big convention

indianz.com /News/2025/11/20/national-congress-of-american-indians-chooses-leadership-at-big-convention/


Shannon Wheeler, Jackie Pata and Mark Macarro
From left: Shannon Wheeler, Jackie Pata and Mark Macarro, stand on stage after delivering campaign speeches to serve as President of the National Congress of Americans at the organization’s 82nd annual convention in Seattle, Washington, on November 19, 2025. Photo by Indianz.Com (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

November 20, 2025

SEATTLE, Washington — Election season kicked into high gear at the largest inter-tribal conference here, with last-minute additions shaking up the race to lead the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI). Three candidates each are running for President, 1st Vice President and Recording Secretary of NCAI, along with two for Treasurer. The crowded field highlights the big turnout for the organization’s 82nd annual convention in Washington’s most populous city. And three of the four races have drawn candidates from Alaska, reflecting the potential for some major changes in NCAI’s direction. The organization has not elected a president from the 49th state since its founding in 1944. President Mark Macarro, the chair of the Pechanga Band of Indians from California, is one of two incumbents seeking re-election at NCAI. He was nominated to the post by Ben Barnes, the chief of the Shawnee Tribe in Oklahoma, as the convention resumed on Wednesday morning. 
“As I stand here looking out at all of you, I am reminded of our strength when we stand together as a unified voice on the issues and battlefronts that we face today in the Congress, in the courts, and at the ballot box,” said Macarro, who first won election at NCAI’s annual convention in 2023. “We are strongest when we speak with that unified voice.”  

Monday, November 17, 2025

Cricket: A Native American Adoptee Discovers Her Roots

 

A Native American Adoptee Discovers Her Roots

Suzie's mom was a supermodel

When Susan Fedorko was growing up she was content with her life and felt secure and cared for.  In the back of her mind, however, this adoptee always wondered about the family that had allowed her to be adopted and who they might be.  When Susan reached adulthood she put out her information in the hopes that she would discover her first family.  It wasn’t until she was 40 that she received a phone call that connected her to her first family.  Among the surprises she learned one of them was the truth about her Native American ethnicity and tribal membership.  She was one of many Native American adoptees in America who didn’t discover their connection until later in life.  Thankfully for Susan, she can now celebrate her roots and is working to pass the membership down to her children.

Read all about Susan Fedorko’s discovery of her first family in her memoir, “Cricket”

You can also find Susan’s story in this article from Visible Magazine.

FROM: https://adoptionuncovered.com/2024/07/12/a-native-american-adoptee-discovers-her-roots/ 

Suzie is in the first anthology TWO WORLDS and followup anthologies. 

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Forced Sterlization of Native Women?

 

If passed, the resolution would make New Mexico the first state in the nation to formally acknowledge the reproductive abuse wrought on Native women by the federal government.

Jean Whitehorse's (Diné) Native name means "Many Children," but she only has one child. This spring, she spoke at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York to explain why.

In the 1970s, during an emergency visit to a Gallup, New Mexico, Indian Health Service facility, Whitehorse was coerced into signing consent papers for a procedure she later learned rendered her unable to have any more children.

READ:  https://nativenewsonline.net/health/stolen-generations-new-mexico-takes-historic-step-to-address-forced-sterilization-of-native-american-women 

Saturday, November 15, 2025

An Act of Resilience (in two stories)


During Native American Heritage Month, our stories are a good time to reflect on who we are and how far we've come... 

For Native people, our very existence is an act of resilience. We descend from ancestors who endured policies designed to erase us — removal, forced assimilation, boarding schools and termination. Yet we’re still here. Our languages are being spoken again, our ceremonies practiced openly, and our children are growing up learning that being Native is a strength, not a burden. - Levi Rickert

READ:

 https://nativenewsonline.net/opinion/remembering-my-grandma-during-native-american-heritage-month 

The number of people in the United States who claim Native identity has exploded — increasing 85% in 10 years — though the number of people formally enrolled in Native American tribes has not.  Carrie Lowry-Schuettpelz weaves together the history of Native identity along with sharing her own perspective and those of other Indigenous people in her book, The Indian Card: Who Gets to Be Native in America.

Lowry-Schuettpelz was born and raised in Cedar Rapids, but is an enrolled member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina. She discusses growing up in Iowa and identifying as a Native American. Also, how her work and her book led her to form the Native Policy Lab at the University of Iowa School of Planning and Public Affairs.

LISTEN:  

https://www.iowapublicradio.org/podcast/talk-of-iowa/2025-11-05/the-history-of-native-american-identity-unpacked-in-iowans-debut-book 



 

Brah… We Aren’t Going Anywhere | LANDBACK FOR THE PEOPLE S3 E3


 

“We need to think big and plan big and be big and bold and visionary and to imagine the world that we want.” 

Founded in 2018, NDN Collective has become a leading Indigenous rights group offering grants and loans, and supporting grassroots organizing, narrative change, and political education, including the international LandBack movement.

STORY: https://nonprofitquarterly.org/an-indigenous-nonprofit-responds-to-budget-cuts-with-a-new-strategic-vision/


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You are not alone

You are not alone

To Veronica Brown

Veronica, we adult adoptees are thinking of you today and every day. We will be here when you need us. Your journey in the adopted life has begun, nothing can revoke that now, the damage cannot be undone. Be courageous, you have what no adoptee before you has had; a strong group of adult adoptees who know your story, who are behind you and will always be so.

Diane Tells His Name


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Lost Birds on Al Jazeera Fault Lines

Lost Birds on Al Jazeera Fault Lines
click to read and listen about Trace, Diane, Julie and Suzie

NO MORE STOLEN SISTERS

NO MORE STOLEN SISTERS
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ADOPTION TRUTH

As the single largest unregulated industry in the United States, adoption is viewed as a benevolent action that results in the formation of “forever families.”
The truth is that it is a very lucrative business with a known sales pitch. With profits last estimated at over $1.44 billion dollars a year, mothers who consider adoption for their babies need to be very aware that all of this promotion clouds the facts and only though independent research can they get an accurate account of what life might be like for both them and their child after signing the adoption paperwork.

Original Birth Certificate Map in the USA

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