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Thursday, November 13, 2025

Indigenous heritage is an ongoing story

November 12, 2025  By Vanessa Lillie

The author at the Great Swamp Massacre memorial in South Kingston, RI, 2025. (Courtesy Vanessa Lillie)

Five years ago, from the dark of my living room in Providence, I was surprised to see the action of HBO’s “Watchmen” open in a familiar but unexpected place: Tulsa, Oklahoma, about an hour from where I grew up.  It wasn’t superheroes and aliens, not yet, but instead a violent and harrowing recreation of real history: the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.  In the span of just 18 hours, 35 blocks of the affluent “Black Wall Street” community were leveled, killing as many as 300.  Even today, the search for mass graves continues.

My heart sank at my own ignorance.  I was shocked that these horrors happened just down the road from where I went to school, that the education I received did not include any mention of one the worst incidents of racial violence in the history of America.  Instead I was relying on an HBO adaptation of a dystopian graphic novel.

Being a citizen of the Cherokee Nation has long shaped how I see history.  My earliest memory of being Native is associated with my family cemetery, in Oklahoma.  Our ancestor, George Washington Walker, was on the Trail of Tears as a boy and built a new life in the northeast corner of the state.  I remember thinking, as I stood staring at his grave and the historical marker, how the reason we were in Oklahoma was because the government went back on their word. President Andrew Jackson ignored the Supreme Court and stole our land, while trying to erase our existence.  Even if some version of that was taught to me in school, I don’t remember any meaningful discussions about what was stolen or how the impact continues in communities today.

The author with Lorén Spears, executive director of the Tomaquag Museum, at the 350th August meeting and pow wow, in Charlestown, RI, 2025. (Courtesy Vanessa Lillie)


As I grew up, I sought to understand my family’s heritage and found it to be a reflection of the resiliency of the Cherokee Nation.  And as a writer, I realized how I could use story to share history and explore questions of colonization, both past and present. I’ve written seven novels, but it was only in the most recent that I learned how little I knew about the land and tribes in the smallest state I now call home.

Toward the end of King Phillip’s War (or, if you’d like to decolonialize the term, The War for New England), in December, 1675, English colonists attacked the winter homes of the Narragansett tribe. In what’s now known as the Great Swamp Massacre, at least 650 men, women and children were killed, and at least 300 were taken captive. It’s an echo of what President Jackson would later do to my own tribe: genocide perpetrated at the hands of men in power.

It wasn’t until recently, 2021, that the land was officially returned to the Narragansett tribe, having belonged to the Rhode Island Historical Society since 1906.  The grounds are open to the public, with small rocks, shells and feathers placed around the obelisk that stands sentry at the memorial where tribal members gather every year to remember.

While as Cherokee, we were forced out of our homelands, the Narragansett remained. One of my first summers in Rhode Island, I attended the Narragansett August Meeting and Pow Wow in Charlestown.  During the Grand Entry, I watched as many citizens of the tribe, dressed in regalia passed down generation to generation, entered to the sounds of drums and voices, often with the refrain, “we are still here.”  The Narragansett have been gathering there for over 350 years; it’s the oldest recorded pow wow in North America.

And yet, I’ve also spoken to young citizens of the tribe who were told in school that the Narragansett no longer exist, as if they’re extinct like the dinosaurs.  It’s a sentiment supported by hundreds of years of treating Indigenous remains and cultural items as trophies or objects to exploit.  When it comes to preserving and amplifying Indigenous culture, it’s not enough to understand history.  We must also ask: who’s doing the telling?

These are questions I often ask myself when I’m researching a plot or just enjoying a museum with my family.  Who’s creating the narrative on those small plaques near the objects in the museums we shuffle through? Or fund?  I know there are thousands of Indigenous remains on shelves across the country, from museums to academic institutions, despite federal laws meant to mandate their return.  They’re questions I explored in my research for my new book, “The Bone Thief,” using real examples from history: from Yale’s Skull & Bones club allegedly stealing, and hiding, the skull of Geronimo to the history of grave robbers in colonial America.

Even the language I used changed.  Thanks to guidance from the Tomaquag Museum, an Indigenous led museum telling first person histories, and leaders like Executive Director Lorén M. Spears, I’ve decolonized my language from “artifacts” to “belongings.”  Because these objects belong somewhere — to a place, a people — and they should be returned and shared by the people from which they originated.

While on book tour this month, I’ve been speaking at stores and events across New England, and I like to ask people to raise their hands if they’ve heard of the Great Swamp Massacre. Some crowds have more hands up than others, but it’s rarely more than half, and often a lot fewer.

Native American Heritage Month puts a well-deserved spotlight on books by Native American authors (including some of my own “must-reads”), and that’s a good thing. But it’s hardly something that can be highlighted, even honored, one month out of the year.

As for me, I hope by taking the real history of a place, and wrapping it in the page-turning plot of a thriller, I’m able to give people that same experience I had with “Watchmen”: not only shock, or even embarrassment, but a charge to go out and find the hidden truths of our homelands. Our heritage is an ongoing story. Our people are still telling it.

On Wednesday, Nov. 12, Vanessa Lillie spoke & signed copies of "The Bone Thief" at Authors on Stage at Wellesley College . and Brookline Booksmith 

SOURCE:  

 

Revisit the country’s beginnings through a more inclusive Indigenous lens

 

(Photo/Cherokee Nation)

(Photo/Cherokee Nation)

As the nation observes Native American History Month, Cherokee Film is inviting audiences to revisit the country’s beginnings through a more inclusive lens — one that recognizes the deep role of Indigenous nations in shaping early America.

That story unfolds in The American Revolution, a sweeping new documentary series from Ken Burns, Sarah Botstein and David Schmidt, premiering Sunday, Nov. 16, on PBS stations nationwide.  The six-part, 12-hour series airs over six consecutive nights, offering a panoramic look at the nation’s eight-year War for Independence and the birth of the United States.

The project has been nearly a decade in the making, timed to coincide with the 250th anniversary of the war’s first battles in 1775 — a year before the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

“American Indian history is central to the story of the American Revolution,” Burns said. “We have been working with Native people and nations, including the Cherokee Film Office, since the start of editing to make sure we get that story right.”

Throughout the series, the filmmakers delve into the far-reaching consequences of the Revolution — not only for the 13 colonies but for the Indigenous nations whose homelands became the contested ground of a new republic.

“The American Revolution was a war for the future of North America,” Schmidt said. “The choices Native people and nations made during the war reflect careful consideration of how they could best protect their own sovereignty and independence.”

Cherokee Film Senior Director Jen Loren served as an advisor for the production, helping ensure that Indigenous voices and perspectives were woven authentically into the storytelling.

“This film sheds light on pivotal moments in our nation’s history and thoughtfully includes the stories of many Indigenous people and nations,” Loren said. “At Cherokee Film, we commend this production’s commitment to inclusive and accurate storytelling and look forward to audiences experiencing it.”

Cherokee warrior used in "The American Revolution." (Photo/Cherokee Film Office)
Cherokee warrior used in "The American Revolution." (Photo/Cherokee Film Office)

 

Among the Indigenous nations featured are the Anishinaabe, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Creek Confederacy (Muscogee), Delaware (Lenape), Mohawk, Seneca and Shawnee. Their leaders and warriors — including Tsiyu Gansini (Dragging Canoe), Thayendanegea (Joseph Brant), Solomon Uhhaunauwaunmut, Canassatego and Tecumseh — stand at the heart of the series’ exploration of diplomacy, conflict and resilience.

For the filmmakers, capturing those stories was essential to understanding the Revolution as a truly continental event.

“The story of the American Revolution belongs to everyone,” Botstein said. “And we owe it to the people who lived through it to tell that story faithfully.”

The full series will be available to stream beginning Sunday, Nov. 16, at PBS.org and on the PBS App, available on iOS, Android, Roku streaming devices, Apple TV, Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, Samsung Smart TV, Chromecast and VIZIO. Additional production details are available here.

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Washington state is jailing Native children for non-violent crimes

 

Early court involvement is closely linked to broader social and health inequities, research shows.  Children drawn into the justice system often face poverty, unstable housing and limited access to mental health support, creating a cycle of disadvantage that persists into adulthood.

Investigation: https://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/native-american-children-more-likely-to-be-21154567.php

Confusion at the border for Canadian snowbirds (60s Scoop Adoptees) and I-94 form


Not a good time to travel to the USA?  Canadian snowbirds (people who travel and spend winter in warmer climates like Florida) could face additional measures when entering the United States. Lola Kalder tells us about the confusion Canadians are facing with the I-94 form.  Some Canadians are now selling their US homes.

I Am My Name

                    I have come from somewhere else, where
I am Cree and I have a big sister
and another name.


 LISTEN: https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-167-the-bridge/clip/16180636-one-emotional-episodes-yet-the-bridge

The Bridge podcast with Nantali Indongo

One of our most emotional episodes yet on The Bridge
54 mins \ Nov. 8, 2025

Montreal advocate for Indigenous women and children, Na’kuset, and children’s book author Judith Henderson, have co-written I Am My Name — the powerful true story of Na’kuset’s life as a Sixties Scoop survivor.

The autobiographical picture book is illustrated by Vancouver-based artist, Shenoa Gao aka Onedove. It traces Na’kuset’s journey — taken from her Cree family as a young girl, along with thousands of other Indigenous children during the 1960s, growing up far from her roots, and finding her way back to her name, her culture, and her strength. Love, however, is at the center of the story and it spills over into this one hour, tearful conversation.

BUY/PUBLISHER: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/721401/i-am-my-name-by-nakuset-and-judith-henderson-illustrated-by-onedove/ 


Nakuset shared her story in the anthology STOLEN GENERATIONS. 


 

Sixties Scoop survivor shares her healing story through new Manitoba-made web series


PREMIERS TODAY

A Manitoba-made web series has been created to shine a light on the Sixties Scoop, where thousands of Indigenous children were taken from their families and placed into non-Indigenous homes.

Now the stories that are about to be told by a Winnipeg survivor turned director, looks to give people a way to reconnect with their culture and identity. 

Colleen Rajotte, a Sixties Scoop survivor and longtime Manitoba journalist, has spent much of her life telling stories about loss and resilience. Now she’s sharing in a new way, through Amanda’s Choice, a six-part web series inspired by her experiences after finding her birth family.

“I had this idea of why not make a web series about the Sixties Scoop, incorporating things I’ve gone through, friends have gone through, so I sketched it out on a napkin and here we are,” explained Rajotte.

Colleen Rajotte, a Sixties Scoop survivor and longtime Manitoba journalist. (Photo Credit: Mitchell Ringos, CityNews)

The series follows three urban Indigenous women navigating identity, family, and everyday life after reconnection, blending humour and heartbreak through stories drawn from real moments.

“It was difficult at times because it brought up memories and past experiences, but knowing I could share these stories in a different was very healing.”

One episode, titled “The Interview,” was sparked by Rajotte’s own experience in her twenties, fielding painful questions during a documentary taping and feeling those emotions surge back.

“Some of the questions were very deep, involved, and emotional, and I ended up having an anxiety reaction,” said Rajotte.

Rajotte says Amanda’s Choice is about more than entertainment; it’s a reminder that the legacy of the Sixties Scoop continues to shape lives today.

“This is just a different way to entertain people, but remind them that the Sixties Scoop is something very real and needs attention,” she explained.

“The Sixties Scoop in general, has not received the same amount of public attention as residential school survivors had got, and we need to remind people that 30,000 of our children were removed.”

Amanda’s Choice premieres November 12, with one new episode daily on YouTube and Facebook

A historic first: Catholic institution returns tribal #LANDBACK to Lac duFlambeau...

NOTE:  This is where my birthmother's family (Thrall-Kilduff) lived... Trace

 

PRESS RELEASE: https://www.fspa.org/news/a-historic-act-of-restoration-fspa-returns-arbor-vitae-property-to-lac-du-flambeau-tribe 

 


Friday, November 7, 2025

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Circle of Life Farming | Treaty Obligations

 


 

How one Wisconsin tribe is using ‘circle of life’ farming techniques to feed its people.

At its farm Bodwéwadmi Ktëgan, Forest County Potawatomi Community is using advanced farming to grow food sovereignty.

READ MORE

https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/native-american-issues/2023/05/01/wisconsin-tribe-uses-advanced-farming-grow-food-sovereignty/70163548007/ 

 

Tribal officials assure members that services won't falter if shutdown lingers

The federal government is obligated by treaty to fund services, such as healthcare and education to tribal nations in exchange for the government taking tribal lands in the 1800s.Former President Donald Trump with vice presidential nominee JD Vance during the second day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum. The second day of the RNC focused on crime and border policies.



Challenges tribes face as the U.S. government shutdown continues into second month

NOT ON OUR WATCH!! READ MY OTHER BLOG https://laratracehentz.wordpress.com/2025/11/04/not-on-our-watch/

Tribes’ Ability to Feed Families, Provide Child Welfare Services Threatened Under Second-Longest Government Shutdown in History

Starting Nov. 1, millions of people — including large percentages of Native American populations — may not receive their food stamps benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as SNAP. Photo by Adobe Stock.

Frost and freezes are starting to set in across the northern swaths of Indian Country, but the heat may soon get shut off in family homes. 

Lines at food banks on reservations are longer than usual. 

Tribal social workers are going without pay.

These are just a few of the challenges tribes face as the U.S. government shutdown continues into its second month.

“Every day without funding stretches social workers and law enforcement thin, putting vulnerable children in danger,” said Marisa Cummings, a citizen of the Omaha Tribe of Nebraska and a tribal consultant with 20 years of experience in federal policy and advocacy. 

Starting Nov. 1, millions of people may not receive their food stamps benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as SNAP. Also frozen: the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program; Head Start preschool funding; and Women, Infants and Children subsidies as the federal government heads toward a “fiscal cliff.”

In addition to the federal safety-net programs that are particularly vital to rural tribal communities, the shutdown has also halted funding that tribes get from the Bureau of Indian Affairs for child welfare and law enforcement services. That has prevented tribes from paying social workers and other essential staff, making it difficult to respond to child protection concerns, conduct home visits, or provide foster care prevention.

Aaron Payment

The Sault Ste. Marie of Chippewa Indians, the largest tribe east of the Mississippi, is projecting a 30% to 40% increased burden on its tribal commodities program because many citizens rely on the SNAP benefits slated to be paused.

The outcome will be dire, predicts councilmember Aaron Payment.

“We’re going to run out of food,” he said. 

👇 

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Deb Haaland Calls on Republicans to End Shutdown as SNAP Benefits Lapse

Their cruelty is not uncommon... This whole mess is a test - to see how far they can go with digital ID, control, to capture us with digital surveillance and digital money, and no more cash. RESIST! Trace


Native Vote. New Mexico gubernatorial candidate Deb Haaland released a statement Monday as the federal government shutdown entered its 31st day, warning that thousands of New Mexicans are facing food insecurity and healthcare challenges.

“For the last 31 days, federal workers across the country have been furloughed, working without pay, missing paychecks, and facing the uncertainty of being fired,” Haaland said. “Today, millions of Americans face an added hardship as SNAP benefits lapse. That’s at least 460,000 New Mexicans who won’t know where their next meal will come from.”

Haaland said she appreciates state leaders who extended funding for food programs by 10 days and acknowledged that recent court intervention has offered temporary relief.

“In New Mexico, we are proud to have leaders who are funding the program for an additional ten days, and while the courts have stepped in for now, these are not long-term solutions,” she said. “I am grateful to all of the community groups, volunteers, churches, and others who are working to stock and expand food banks in their neighborhoods. The only real solution however is for Republicans to do their jobs and have the backbone to fight for what’s right.”

She also criticized Republican lawmakers for contributing to rising healthcare costs, noting the start of open enrollment amid the shutdown.

“Today also marks the first day of open enrollment. Republicans passed a law that forced healthcare premiums to skyrocket, and New Mexicans will pay the price,” Haaland said. “This means in a state that is already facing a shortage of healthcare workers, New Mexicans won’t get the coverage they need, won’t be able to see a doctor when they need to, and will have even longer wait times between appointments.”

Haaland warned that the shutdown’s effects extend beyond food and healthcare.

“That’s just the tip of the iceberg,” she said. “The wellbeing of New Mexicans and Americans across the country is on the brink. Republicans in Washington, D.C. need to do their job. In the meantime, it’s more clear than ever that state governments are the front lines and as governor, I will always fight for solutions to make sure that New Mexicans are fed, healthy, and safe.”

SOURCE:  https://nativenewsonline.net/currents/deb-haaland-calls-on-republicans-to-end-shutdown-as-snap-benefits-lapse 

IN ALL THE TREATIES, tribes are promised food (as in health, education, welfare.)

WHAT ABOUT COMMODITIES:

The Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR) provides USDA Foods to income-eligible households living on Indian reservations, and to American Indian households residing in approved areas near reservations and in Oklahoma. Many households participate in FDPIR as an alternative to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

FNS, an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), oversees FDPIR at the federal level. The program is administered by FDPIR administering agencies, which are either Indian Tribal Organizations (ITOs) or state governmental agencies. As of fiscal year (FY) 2024, 110 agencies administer FDPIR, including 107 ITOs and 3 state agencies.

USDA purchases and ships USDA Foods to administering agencies, which then store and distribute the foods, determine applicant eligibility, and provide nutrition education to recipients. USDA also provides administering agencies with funds for program administrative costs.

FDPIR is authorized under Section 4(b) of the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 and Section 4(a) of the Agriculture and Consumer Protection Act of 1973. Federal regulations governing the program can be found at 7 CFR Parts 250, 253, and 254.

For a complete list of available foods, see the USDA Foods Available List for FDPIR.

 

Funding

navy paintbrush circle with image of fdpir food package being delivered to a woman using a walker on her front porch

In FY 2024, $170 million was appropriated for FDPIR – approximately $68.6 million for the federal share of administrative costs, and the remainder for food purchases.

Participation

Average FDPIR monthly participation for FY 2023 was 49,339 individuals. For more information visit the interactive FNS Program Participation Dashboard.

https://www.fns.usda.gov/fdpir/food-distribution-program-indian-reservations 

 

Timmins nonprofit ‘Quilts for Survivors’ reaches new milestone with 8,000th quilt shipped

 ‘We’re more than reconciliation, we’re reconcili-action,’ says founder Vanessa Genier

Quilts for Survivors, the nonprofit in Timmins whose mission is to ship a handmade quilt to every survivor of Indian residential and day schools, the sixties scoop, and intergenerational trauma, shipped its 8,000th quilt on Thursday, Oct. 23.

The occasion was marked by an invitation-only gathering featuring remarks and a boxing of the blue and yellow quilt which will be shipped to Angeline in Siksika, Alberta.

Founder Vanessa Genier does not share the recipients of her quilts last names, though was careful to point out the success of her nonprofit is all due to them.

“What started as a way to bring comfort to one survivor— in our case, we were going to make 18 quilts, that was our goal—has grown into a nationwide circle of love, care and healing,” she told a small invited crowd of dignitaries and supporters.

In her comments, Genier spoke of quilting as a metaphor for healing. Just like a survivor must pick up the pieces of their lives, Genier and her army of volunteer quilters sew the pieces back together. 

👇Keep reading

Monday, November 3, 2025

Grief Memoir: Mothers at the Catholic Infant Home

reblog from 2013
Linda Back McKay also went to the same Catholic Infant Home as my mother Helen and Kay.
 
 
By Trace Hentz,  January 24, 2013 |  Over a week ago, I had a conversation with Kay (not her real name) who resided and relinquished her baby at the Catholic Infant Home in Minnesota, about 10 years after my own mother was there. Her story revealed details I had only guessed. I've had conversations with other first mothers, but nothing enlightened me as much as this call with Kay.

Unmarried young women like Kay and my mother Helen were taken to 933 Carroll Street, the address of the Catholic Infant Home (an unwed mother's home that shut its doors in 1969). The girls were dropped off with their suitcase and were expected to leave the same way. 
At check in, each were given fake names. (I call this classic Catholic shaming.)
Each day the girls/women were expected to scrub and clean the home and do chores while they waited out their pregnancies; a few went to work for wealthy Catholic families as day workers and nannies. On a few weekends, Kay was happy to leave there to visit with her family during this difficult time. The women were expected to attend daily mass and "act Catholic," in Kay's words. She admits she cannot even remember details of the rooms since she blocked out those memories.
(Her family expected her to give up the baby, as if this was her only option. Nobody talked about it, not before or after.)
When it was time for Kay to deliver her baby, the infant home called her a cab that delivered her to St. Joseph's, the same hospital where I was born in St. Paul, MN.  At the hospital she begged them to call her mother but they refused. It was a long labor since it was her first delivery and at 19, she was very frightened but noone was interested in helping her or guiding her through the contractions. Eventually they drugged her and when she woke up, they wouldn't tell her the sex of her baby and wouldn't bring the baby to her.  As soon as she could, Kay walked to the nursery and put up a sign with her name so a nurse could point to her child.
She finally saw her beautiful son.
Kay wasn't allowed to hold him.  It was all head games, Kay told me, all to make her feel unworthy of him, and of being a mother. She was told to forget about him, he was gone.
Then a day later, a nurse walks into her room with her newborn and tells her to dress him and get ready to leave. The brief contact she had with her baby was the cab ride back to the Catholic Infant Home.
For years, Kay would not go back to St. Paul. She said it held too many bad memories for her.
She handed over her son and he was whisked away to some deserving family, she was told.  Kay signed the paperwork to relinquish him and signed a payment plan to pay for the hospital bill, which she was expected to pay monthly. (She paid for one year then stopped. It horrified her she was expected to pay when they took her baby.)
Kay never had another child. The trauma of losing him, she believes, hurt her so deeply - she was never able to have another baby.
It took many years but Kay found her son in 1986 when he was 19. (He told her he was raised in an alcoholic home in a wealthy Minneapolis suburb and shown no affection by his adoptive mother.)

I was so sad to hear this story but I thanked Kay for her courage in sharing it with me, and for helping me to understand the pain of the mothers at the Catholic Infant Home.

Next week, Kay and her son plan to have another reunion.



Chris Brown was part of the Sixties Scoop

Two approaches to addiction aim to help as many homeless drinkers as possible

   
Alcohol

Chris Brown speaks to the 2025 National Conference on Ending Homelessness about his experience quitting drinking and leaving the street for Projets Autochtones du Québec's long-term sober residence. Photo: Jesse Staniforth/APTN News


Chris Brown has been sober for two years.

Born Christopher Lee Roy in Moose Jaw, Sask., Brown was part of the Sixties Scoop.

He was adopted into a non-Indigenous home and struggled with his life and family until 1992, when a friend told him he should consider running away to Montreal.

There, he became a street kid.  He recalls discovering even at 16 he could walk into one of the city’s many dépanneur corner stores and buy a beer and a cigarette for under two dollars, no questions asked.

“That really kept me moving forward through my addictions,” he said.

Until two years ago, when he felt he was approaching the end of his time as a drinker.

“My body wasn’t holding on to it,” he recalls. “My mind was going. And you know, those things that they say to you, like ‘jail, insanity, death, those are the only options.’ I believe that.  And I really thought about the insanity part of it.  My mind was only thinking about my next drink when I woke up.”

Today, Brown lives in one of the 14 rooms at the Annagiarvik House in downtown Montreal, a long-term transitional residence for sober Indigenous people leaving the street.

The Annagiarvik House is operated by Projets Autochtones du Québec (PAQ), an organization providing shelter to members of the Montreal urban Indigenous community struggling with housing.

Brown discussed his experiences as part of a panel on Indigenous approaches to harm reduction and cultural safety during the 2025 National Conference on Ending Homelessness in Montreal.

KEEP READING👇 

Saturday, November 1, 2025

‘Unimaginable Hardship’ Ahead for Children and Families if Shutdown Continues

Among the most immediate impacts is loss of food stamps for more than 40 million Americans currently enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, referred to as SNAP.

“These vital benefits, that average around $6 a day, are for many families the difference between going hungry and getting by. They’re not an extra benefit. They are incredibly essential to the lives of many, many Minnesotans,” said Tikki Brown, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families.

Brown warned of widespread impact when this vital food assistance comes to a halt for more than 440,000 SNAP recipients in her state — 40% of whom are children. 

 

READ:  https://imprintnews.org/law-policy/hardship-ahead-for-children-and-families-if-shutdown-continues/268292

MMIWG researcher speaks out after two bodies found in Fredericton

 

READ: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/mmiwg-researcher-speaks-two-bodies-found-in-fredericton-9.6955322

Native American Heritage Month 2025

 


 
and 

WHAT TO WATCH?

https://www.wttw.com/playlist/2025/10/29/native-american-heritage-month-2025-programming 

 

WHAT TO READ:

https://attheu.utah.edu/events/6-reads-for-native-american-heritage-month/ 

National Native American HALL OF FAME 2025

For more information about the National Native American Hall of Fame induction ceremony visit nativehalloffame.org  

https://www.cherokeephoenix.org/news/national-native-american-hall-of-fame-to-honor-2025-inductees-on-nov-1/article_a5dc8f18-c12b-4b82-ad88-788d8298adaa.html 

NĀTIFS, an Indigenous-led organization working to strengthen Native foodways nationally

 

CLICK HERE👉: https://natifs.org/

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Eagle Butte Group Highlights MMIP Crisis | Memories are in our blood

In South Dakota, advocates with the social services organization Sacred Heart Center held an event to raise awareness about the high rates of missing and murdered Indigenous people. The event was inspired by The REDress Project, by artist Jamie Black in Canada, where red dresses and t-shirts representing MMIP are displayed in the community.

AND MORE NEWS: 


 READ:  https://ictnews.org/news/the-memories-are-in-our-blood-annual-walk-remembers-boarding-school-survivors-victims/

The memorial is not yet open to the public, as Sazue and other Remembering the Children team members are working to secure an emergency management agreement with Rapid City, Pennington County and the three tribes that are seeking to reclaim the land: the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, Oglala Sioux Tribe and Rosebud Sioux Tribe. 

When the memorial and walk are open, it will be the only large-scale boarding school memorial in the United States and will feature a walking path, statue, murals and eventually a healing facility and space for prayer. 

 

The Healing Game Takes Root


LINK:
 https://www.npr.org/2025/10/22/nx-s1-5547180/a-native-american-game-the-forerunner-to-modern-day-lacrosse-makes-a-comeback

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Tommy Orange | 2025 MacArthur Fellow

The Alliance of Indigenous Nations rules mRNA meets the criteria to be classified as a biological weapon

 


BREAKING: Indigenous Tribunal's Bioweapon Declaration by Brett Hawes

The Alliance of Indigenous Nations rules that mRNA meets the criteria to be classified as a biological weapon — a conversation with Dr Joseph Sansone

Read on Substack 

 

LISTEN: https://open.substack.com/pub/onwardpod/p/breaking-indigenous-tribunals-bioweapon?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email
 
Read on Substack
 
On October 5th, 2025, the AIN released a declaration stating “This Tribunal finds and hereby declares that the COVID-19 injections, mRNA injections, or mRNA nanoparticle injections, are in fact biological and technological weapons of mass destruction”. 
 
 

 

Additional Resources:


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Your History Class Was a F*cking Lie | #NOMOAR

  Your History Class Was a F*cking Lie by Sean Sherman (Or: How the American Educational System Has Always Been a Racist Propaganda Program...


Native Circles

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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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