They Took Us Away

They Took Us Away
click image to see more and read more

it's free

click

How to Use this Blog

BOOZHOO! We've amassed tons of information and important history on this blog since 2010. If you have a keyword, use the search box below. Also check out the reference section above. If you have a question or need help searching, use the contact form at the bottom of the blog.



We want you to use BOOKSHOP to buy books! (the editor will earn a small amount of money or commission. (we thank you) (that is our disclaimer statement)

This is a blog. It is not a peer-reviewed journal, not a sponsored publication... WE DO NOT HAVE ADS or earn MONEY from this website. The ideas, news and thoughts posted are sourced… or written by the editor or contributors.

EMAIL ME: tracelara@pm.me (outlook email is gone) WOW!!! THREE MILLION VISITORS!

SEARCH

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Pati Jinich Explores Panamericana

There is an episode with adoptee in Juneau who is REALLY WONDERFUL! It made me cry!


 

Pati Jinich's life's work has been focused on building bridges between her two beloved countries - her homeland of Mexico and her new home the United States. In this docuseries, the acclaimed chef and James Beard Award winner expands her lifelong mission to uncover cultural connections throughout the Americas and how they enrich each other. Pati embarks on a journey inspired by the Pan-American Highway, a series of roads and a symbol of connection and collaboration extending from Alaska to Argentina.  Pati begins her epic adventure at the top of Alaska and then travels along the Western Hemisphere to southern Alberta.   She delves into migratory evolution, history, and identity as citizens of the Americas. 

Throughout the series, Pati engages in heartfelt conversations that celebrate our differences, cherishes traditions, and explores the myriad ways in which people form the basis of their identities. She explores the origins of dog sledding and groundbreaking science in the Arctic, and salmon fishing in Halibut Cove. She examines Alaskan Native modern art and Filipino food in Juneau, and forages in the outskirts of Anchorage. She takes to glass blowing in Whitehorse, and experiences cowboy life in the Alberta heartlands, showcasing its connections to Montana and Texas. Along the way, she discovers that much like the roads that weave through our landscapes to connect us, we share more similarities than differences. 

At our core, we are all longing for home and craving to belong.

 

PLEASE WATCH ALL HER SHOWS!  Happy Mother's Day... xox Trace

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

May 6, 2025—Red Dress Day events held across Canada; new MMIWG data project

May 6, 2025 APTN News Brief

Our lead story: a look at some of the MMIWG events across the country for Monday's National Red Dress Day, when communities gathered to honour and remember the lives of missing or murdered Indigenous women and girls.

 

MONTANA, USA:  https://youtu.be/bbuOPWniKTI?si=8WH0PW5hbJ7iH4x7


 

 

Starved into Submission

Herb shot this photo in the Badlands. He was so happy.

Now is the time, we are the ones we have been waiting for... —Hopi Prophecy

By Trace Hentz, blog editor

My entire childhood I had plenty of food.  This is not true for all humans, I know.  Look at the news across the world, like in Gaza.   When it comes to writing about adoption or world events, I know I’m doing something right if I am afraid.

I spent most of my life afraid of upsetting people, avoiding that.  Some might say that is low self-esteem but I think being afraid, fear itself, is a call to action.  If you are afraid, then you know you are doing something right.  You are challenging yourself and breaking down your thoughts into something you can fix or not.

I could not change what happened in my childhood but I could change how I looked at being adopted.  I could drop judgment.  I could stop blaming my adoptive parents and my natural parents.  I could turn “being adopted” into something good—or try to make my life and other lives better.

Years ago, I heard Noam Chomsky on Democracy Now describe how the occupiers of Palestine are using food insecurity to keep Palestine children alive but not enough to thrive!  Too little food and starvation can be used as a weapon of war—with long-term consequences.  Brains and bodies are affected long-term.

That is exactly what has happened here on American soil. YES!  The American government only feeds American Indians junk with commodities (boxed or canned food and very little vegetables).  The diabetes epidemic is living proof it’s working.  Plus there are not enough jobs to feed ourselves.  That way we Indians will be too weak to protest reservation living conditions. That way we’ll stay depressed or immobile.  That way we’ll self-medicate with alcohol or drugs. That way many of our men will be imprisoned.  That way we won’t be in the way when the government and industry wants to take more resources like copper, coal, uranium and shale gas.  Reservations were purposefully isolated so American (and Canadian) governments could totally control what we received—especially food, blankets, housing, medical care, etc.

Governments still keep Indians poor.  The occupiers claimed they wanted Indians to be farmers, settle in one place, but not exactly on “farm-able land.”  Think of the Badlands, a dry arid remote place, not exactly farmland.

Most of us Lost Birds who were adopted out didn’t have food insecurity or starvation growing up.  It was not something we had to worry about.  Lost Birds/Adoptees need to realize the WAR is still being waged on Indians in many subtle ways.  And if we use our minds in a good way, and come together, maybe WE can tackle food insecurity on reservations that still exists!

Maybe just maybe being adopted out was destined to give us the mind and ideas and courage necessary to feed our tribal families who have been occupied and starved into submission.

 

2004:

When I got married in 2004, my husband Herb flew out to Rapid City, South Dakota (where I was visiting my relatives) and I drove us through the Badlands to Porcupine (Oglala Lakota Reservation) to see my relative Ellowyn Locke.  (Herb had never been to South Dakota and I also drove him to see the town of Deadwood.)

One of the chores we needed to do was to go pick up commodities.

We drove my Chevy Tracker to the distribution center and Herb had many boxes of canned food on his lap.  My small SUV was stacked and packed and Ellowyn was holding a box of cans as I drove us to her house.

Mostly this food was canned, but there were some cans of peanuts, powdered milk, lard, flour, boxed cereal, etc.  None of this food is good for you... long-term. Ellowyn was on dialysis for her diabetes, and it's true the food sent from the federal government is not healthy and meant to harm their health.  (Porcupine and Wounded Knee is a food desert, with no grocery stories close by, but Sharp's Corner had a gas station filled with junk food, snack foods, and sugary drinks.)

Herb told Ellowyn that he grew up in Harlem (New York City) and his family had the same commodities - boxed cheese, powdered milk, and cans of fruit and vegetables. Nothing was fresh.

It was not the first time I noticed that Ellowyn had one head of cabbage to last one month, along with a few carrots and a few potatoes.  That was all the fresh food she had until the next distribution.  We usually drove south to Chadron, Nebraska to buy meat, when I was there every summer.

Ellowyn tried to grow fresh vegetables on her land, and had a small patch down by a creek that was totally hidden from the road and her brother's roaming horses could not get to it, or they'd eat it all.

Since the 1990s, if I drove to Pine Ridge, I'd stop at a grocery store first to buy fresh lemons, oranges, veggies and fresh meat, before I got to her house.  And I'd buy the biggest bag of dog food I could carry, since Ellowyn usually had at least one big dog guarding her house in Porcupine.

I also brought her supplies, like beads and fabric, since she sewed quilts, to sell to tourists.  I never went there without a carload of gifts and supplies.  And I never left without a carload of gifts she made me!  (She made my wedding dress!)

Please be generous with your relatives, and send money, or bring gifts and supplies if you go to visit.  Many of us do not live on the rez, and we don't learn generosity growing up.  

If you do go home, bring them seeds and fresh ideas on ways to grow fresh food.

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

MMIP: This American Life

 

Episode 858: How to Tell a Dumb American Story

Note: This American Life is produced for the ear and designed to be heard. If you are able, we strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which includes emotion and emphasis that's not on the page. Transcripts are generated using a combination of speech recognition software and human transcribers, and may contain errors. Please check the corresponding audio before quoting in print.

Prologue: Prologue

Ira Glass

Sierra Crane Murdoch has been on our show before. She reports on Indigenous communities out west. Back in 2023, she got a call from a man in Montana, Kevin Howard. He said his daughter Mika had been killed in a hit-and-run. Local police were dragging their feet. He thought the driver might get away with it. The driver was white. Mika was Native, a citizen of the Blackfeet Nation.

Lots of Native people are killed in hit-and-runs, and the drivers are rarely brought to justice. And Sierra thought she might be able to document why by diving into Mika's case, because Mika's parents had recordings of nearly all their interactions with law enforcement. Mika's parents did some other things, too. They were very strategic and did some extraordinary things other families had not tried to make sure Mika's case was one that the authorities could not ignore.

That story and how it unfolded, and what it's like to be a couple making that happen, that's going to be our whole show today. From WBEZ Chicago, it's This American Life. I'm Ira Glass. And with that, I hand it over to Sierra.

LISTEN:   https://www.thisamericanlife.org/858/transcript

 

Native America Calling MMIWG May 5th 

Friday, May 2, 2025

How can you settle the First Nations and leave the Métis and non-status out?

 

Court gives green light to part of '60s Scoop' class action

OTTAWA — The Federal Court has rejected the federal government's motion to dismiss a claim for monetary relief in a class-action lawsuit brought by non-status individuals and Métis who were involved in the so-called "'60s Scoop.
0b99a39231c465158c24fe26fe7e07b592bb4c5672a8ec4d8c916e771d886bcf
The Canadian flag catches the morning light on the Peace Tower on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

OTTAWA — The Federal Court has rejected the federal government's motion to dismiss a claim for monetary relief in a class-action lawsuit brought by non-status individuals and Métis who were involved in the so-called "'60s Scoop."

It's also granting the plaintiffs' request for a motion declaring that the Crown had a duty of care to these kids — but only the ones placed or adopted through Saskatchewan’s Adopt Indian Métis [AIM] program.

The '60s Scoop refers to a period when governments in Canada oversaw the large-scale removal of Indigenous children from their homes to live outside of their communities, mostly with non-Indigenous caregivers.

A class-action settlement for survivors saw the federal government pay about $750 million in compensation — but Métis were largely excluded from that because child welfare services for them were run by the provinces.

Métis and non-status individuals who were apprehended as children from their families filed a class-action lawsuit arguing Canada should compensate them as well — but the Federal Court says Ottawa is not liable.

The Federal Court says that only those who were placed or adopted through Saskatchewan's AIM program fall under Canada's duty of care because that program received federal funding.

"This is because the federal government directly funded AIM, which, in the context of the historical relationship, creates the proximity necessary to establish a duty of care," wrote Justice Sébastien Grammond in the decision released April 29. "The harm was foreseeable and there are no countervailing policy considerations negating such a duty."

The AIM program ran newspaper campaigns that advertised Métis children available for adoption.

Grammond wrote that when the federal government funded that program, it would have known the outcome would be the permanent separation of Indigenous children from their families and communities.

"This was obvious from the grant application, and even from the name of the program itself, as adoption severs the relationship between a child and their biological parents," he wrote.

"What matters is that funding the program enabled the harm it allegedly caused to class members."

Manitoba Métis Federation president David Chartrand, whose organization was an intervener in the case, said he was disappointed by the decision.

"But I think at the end of the day, the question really has to (be) to the federal government of Canada," he said.

"How can you settle the First Nations and leave the Métis and non-status out? The federal government will definitely have to look in a mirror and ask themselves that question."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 1, 2025.

NABS 2025


 PLEASE SUPPORT THEIR WORK, thank you and megwetch... Trace

Searching for a Loved One’s Boarding School History? Explore the National Indian Boarding School Digital Archive (NIBSDA) to Uncover Their Story.

The NABS Digital Archives team has made significant strides to expand the National Indian Boarding School Digital Archive by preserving and providing access to vital boarding school records. As a national digital platform and repository, NIBSDA is committed to truth-telling and ensuring survivors and descendants have the resources they need to understand this history and its lasting impact on Tribal Nations. 

What Does NIBSDA Do?

Key Accomplishments in Quarter 1: 

  • 5 week-long site visits conducted in Q1 of 2025 to the National Archives at Seattle, Riverside, Fort Worth, and Chicago. Materials digitized include Albuquerque Indian School, Fort Bidwell Indian Training School, Pawnee Boarding and Training School, Seneca Indian Boarding School, and many others.
  • Digitized 80,000 pages of records, which are now in the process of being cataloged for inclusion in NIBSDA.
  • Created approximately 900 catalog records in Q1.
  • Enhanced access to records for survivors and descendants by assisting with community requests for support in locating relatives boarding school records.
  • Revised archival practices to honor our commitment to data sovereignty and strengthen partnerships with Tribal communities. This includes updating our collections management policy and cataloging conventions guidelines. 

By exploring the NIBSDA, individuals and communities can engage with historical records that shed light on the past while fostering healing and cultural sovereignty. 

As we continue this important work, we invite you to explore the archive, share our mission, and join us in advocating for truth, justice, and healing for Indian boarding school survivors.

ARCHIVE: https://nibsda.elevator.umn.edu/

 
Explore the Archive
For any inquiries about the digital archives, please don’t hesitate to contact us at history@nabshc.org.
Call to action: You can make a difference today. Join us in preserving the true history of U.S. Indian boarding schools for truth, justice, and healing. We are racing to safeguard records before access is blocked. 
DONATE TODAY
Thank you for your invaluable support in preserving history and amplifying Indigenous voices.


The Digital Archives Team,
Fallon Carey (Cherokee Nation), Digital Archives Manager
Tsinni Russel (Diné), Digital Archives Specialist
River Freemont (Umoⁿhoⁿ/Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Descendant), Digital Archives Specialist

MMIP San Diego

 


In southern California, a coalition of Native American tribes, community advocates, and law enforcement are holding their first-ever summit to address Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP).

Danielle Bush is the program director for MMIP San Diego, which will host the summit this Saturday at the Viejas Casino and Resort. She says one of the breakout sessions will be on human trafficking.

“What are the warning signs, red flags of that? And what to do if you or a loved one, or you just see someone who might be in that situation what steps you can take, because we’re trying to end that heinous crime in the community.”

Another breakout session will be with regional law enforcement.

“The goal of that is to educate people about the Savannah Act and about the Feather Alert, and what are your rights, and how to proceed if you have a missing relative or anything that law enforcement can provide support on and building those relationships.”

The final breakout session will be on healing and support services, specifically for the tribal community.

Bush says the San Diego area is close to the U.S-Mexican border, which poses challenges.

“With our proximity to the border and for other reasons, San Diego is a hotspot for human trafficking. I believe third in the country, it’s up there. It’s definitely an issue in the community that we’ve been trying a multi-pronged approach to attacking.”

Bush says MMIP San Diego hopes to grow its resources, so invites anyone in the southern California region to reach out and connect with the organization.

National Native News:  https://www.nativenews.net/


Happy Visitors!

WRITTEN BY HUMANS!

WRITTEN BY HUMANS!

Blog Archive

Featured Post

Brutal HIS-STORY: A vehicle of warfare, genocide, SCALP BOUNTIES in Massachusetts

These Mass. towns were founded on the killing of Native Americans ...



Most READ Posts

Bookshop

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

Wilfred Buck Tells The Story Of Mista Muskwa


click photo

60s Scoop Survivors Legal Support

GO HERE: https://www.gluckstein.com/sixties-scoop-survivors

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
click image

IMPORTANT MEMOIR

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

Google Followers


back up blog (click)