They Took Us Away

They Took Us Away
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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

“TO RISE ABOVE THE COMMON MOLD”

From Peter D'Errico's blog

Osage / Cherokee Professor Rennard Strickland passed on January 5, 2021. He was a major figure in law and legal history, a law teacher and Dean at several schools, and a major contributor to Indigenous Peoples’ rights.

He wrote this essay fifty years ago, based on a speech before the Tenth Circuit Roundtable of the Law Student Division of the ABA in October 1974.  His essay was published in the same issue as mine on “The Law is Terror Put Into Words”.

Strickland said his law student audience were “preparing to move into the mad world of the twentieth century.” He called on them “to free us from the traditional molds of thinking and to come face to face with the reality of this changing world.”

His description of the problems they faced and his advice to them are as relevant in 2025 as in 1975:

He said:

“It is not enough to hold all of the ‘right views’ and espouse all the ‘right causes’ without asking why are these the ‘right views’ and the ‘right causes’…. Your challenge as young lawyers is to …lead us into an age of ‘reality, reason, and common sense.’"

University of Oklahoma College of Law Photo


And I will add that we lawyers as public policy leaders in executive and legislative posts have not let down this tradition of “credulity, superstition, and fanaticism.” Your challenge as young lawyers is to break out of this mold, free us from the limitations of your age, and lead us into an age of “reality, reason, and common sense.”

 

KEEP READING:  https://peterderrico.substack.com/p/in-memory-rennard-strickland-to-rise

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Cree singer-songwriter hopes her story can inspire others to find healing - APTN News


Cree singer-songwriter Jessa Sky 2024 album, Sky's the Limit, shares her very raw thoughts and emotions about MMIWG, mental health and addiction recovery by sharing her own personal battles.   She hopes her story can inspire others to find healing. 

WATCH INTERVIEW

https://www.aptnnews.ca/videos/cree-singer-songwriter-hopes-her-story-can-inspire-others-to-find-healing/

Use youtube to see more videos.

Accounting for those who never made it home from Indian Boarding Schools

 

Seven children died in the first year of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School’s operation.  Another 220 died over the school’s next 38 years.  They are among the more than 3,100 students a year-long Washington Post investigation finds died while separated from their families in Indian Boarding Schools.  Their tally is three times that of the recent investigation by the U.S. Department of Interior

Many of the deaths are attributed to illness, accidents, or neglect.  Others have no official explanation or remain suspicious.  We’ll discuss the Post’s investigation and why having an accurate accounting is important.

GUESTS

Jim LaBelle (Iñupiaq), board member for the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition

Benjamin Jacuk (Dena’ina Athabascan and Sugpiaq), researcher at the Alaska Native Heritage Center

Dana Hedgpeth (Haliwa-Saponi), reporter at the Washington Post

Monday, January 20, 2025

BREAKING NEWS: Leonard Peltier to Leave Prison After 50 Years, Biden Grants Commutation

 


Leonard Peltier: “I’m going home”

Leonard Peltier will spend the remainder of his prison sentence at home after the 11th-hour action by President Joe Biden. Friends, family and supporters expressed surprise and relief as they heard the news Monday. National Congress of American Indians President Mark Macarro said Biden’s decision comes after “50 years of unjust imprisonment,” and is a powerful act of compassion and an important step toward healing.” In December, Macarro personally asked Biden to take action on Peltier’s behalf. Among the many advocates for Peltier’s release over the past five decades include South African President Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa and the United Nations High Commissioner on Human Rights. We’ll hear from Peltier’s family and others who have followed his case about what this action means for him and how it will be viewed historically.

 

I was able to interview Leonard when he was at Leavenworth Prison in Kansas in 1998. I never lost touch with him and he even wrote me a few times. I did a story about this interview:  https://laratracehentz.wordpress.com/2016/08/05/parole-denied-peltier-waits-for-justice/ - Trace, blog editor

Lost City: Chaco Canyon and the Chaco Phenomenon

 

In a series of Lost Cities: here: https://www.thetravel.com/lost-cities-around-the-world-besides-atlantis/