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Featured Art - Cankpe Opi

Featured Art - Cankpe Opi
Frank Howell

Featured Video - Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

American Indian Proverb

When you were born, you cried and the world rejoiced. Live your life so that when you die, the world cries and you rejoice. - Cherokee

Do you know...

Oren Lyons (b.1930) Oren R. Lyons is a traditional Faithkeeper and chief of the Wolf Clan and a proud and accomplished Native American who works tirelessly towards the issues concerning Indigenous peoples in the United States and the world. He is a member of the Onondaga Nation Council of Chiefs of the Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy, (Haudenosaunee) consisting of Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and the Tuscarora Indian reservations in northern New York state. Among his accolades he has received the Ellis Island Congressional Medal of Honor, the National Audubon Award, the First Annual Earth Day International Award of the United Nations, and the Elder and Wiser Award of the Rosa Parks Institute for Human Rights.

He is deeply involved with national and international issues that affect native peoples and has represented them in many forums throughout the world, including several at the UN focusing on the rights and status of indigenous peoples, the environment and sustainable development.

Oren Lyons was born in 1930 and raised in the traditional culture and practices of the Iroquois on the Seneca and Onondaga reservations in northern New York State.

After serving in the Army, he graduated in 1958 from the Syracuse University College of Fine Arts. He then pursued a career in commercial art after he moved to New York City, becoming the art and planning director of Norcross Greeting Cards with 200 artists under his supervision. He has exhibited his own paintings widely and is well noted in certain circles as a talented American Indian artist. He has since been awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the Syracuse University.

Drawn by a yearning for his culture Lyons returned to Onondaga in 1970. He is recognized not only in the United States and Canada but internationally as an eloquent and respected spokesperson on behalf of Native peoples. He is a sought-after lecturer or participant in forums in a variety of areas, including not only American Indian traditions, but Indian law and history, human rights, environment and interfaith dialogue.

Bald Eagle Trial

By: Ben Neary

DENVER (AP) — The future of a Northern Arapaho man who shot a bald eagle for use in his tribe's Sun Dance two years ago now rides on the eventual decision of a federal appeals court.
Winslow Friday, 23 of Ethete, Wyo., listened Monday as lawyers representing him and his tribe sparred with a lawyer from the U.S. Department of Justice before a panel of judges at 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver.

The U.S. Department of Justice wants the appeals court to reinstate a criminal charge against Friday. If he's convicted of illegally killing the bald eagle, he could be sentenced to up to a year in jail and fined $100,000.

The appeals court did not immediately issue a ruling on the case after Monday's arguments, leaving Friday to wait.

"Getting older, I understand what stress does to you now," Friday said after the court hearing.

Friday acknowledges killing the eagle with a rifle on the Wind River Indian Reservation in central Wyoming, home to both the Northern Arapaho and Eastern Shoshone tribes.

Friday says he didn't know about a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service program that allows American Indians to apply for permits to kill eagles for religious purposes. Attorneys representing him and his tribe claim the federal agency did its best to keep the program secret and only grudgingly issued the permits.

Late last year, U.S. District Judge William F. Downes agreed, dismissing the criminal charge against Friday.

"Although the government professes respect and accommodation of the religious practices of Native Americans, its actions show callous indifference to such practices," Downes wrote in his ruling. "It is clear to this court that the government has no intention of accommodating the religious beliefs of Native Americans except on its own terms and in its own good time."

Read more here: http://www.reznetnews.org/article/news/bald-eagle-trial

Osages to the Rescue

By: Shannon Shaw

PAWHUSKA, Okla.—The Osage Nation came to the aid of hundreds of families without power Dec. 9, after an ice storm hit Oklahoma, making national headlines.

The ice storm started the night of Dec. 8 and continued for two days, hitting the southern part of Osage County with an estimated inch to an inch and a half of ice and the northern part of the county with a half-inch of ice, said Craig Sullivan, meteorologist for the National Weather Service.

Osage tribal officials held an emergency relief meeting the next day as calls from friends and relatives of those who lost power poured in to the tribe's offices, said Paula Stabler, Osage Nation communications officer.

Hardest hit were the Osage County communities of Skiatook, Avant, Osage and Prue.

"This was the worst power outage in Oklahoma's history, but we consider ourselves lucky with this storm," said Osage Nation Principal Chief Jim Gray. "The power lines and trees were down over most of the reservation, but the roads were clear and Pawhuska city limits kept its power.
"Our people are tired, but they responded immediately and were glad to help."

The Palace of the Osage Grocery Store, Women, Infants and Children program, Osage Nation Food Distribution and Osage Nation Home Health donated food for the relief effort, Stabler said. Tribal members also contributed money for the effort.

Want the whole story? Click here: http://www.reznetnews.org/article/feature-article/osages-rescue