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Featured Art - Cankpe Opi

Featured Art - Cankpe Opi
Frank Howell

Featured Video - Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

Monday, December 31, 2007

Featured Website: Four Directions Solidarity Network

Our Mission: Four Directions Solidarity Network unites a grassroots movement of both native and non-native people from the four directions to support the sovereignty of indigenous nations, the preservation and restoration of traditional culture, and return to a sustainable relationship with our relations, and our Mother, the Earth.

A Unique History: Preparation for the Four Directions Solidarity Network (originally Four Directions Relief Project) began in early August 2005, when traditional signs appeared fortelling of the three powerful hurricanes that would come to be known a Katrina, Rita and Wilma.

Originally, the Four Directions Relief Project was formed to provide culturally appropriate, grassroots disaster relief to the indigenous communities of coastal Louisiana, now facing damage from Katrina and Rita. In collaboration with tribal leaders, Four Directions immediately began facilitating relief supplies to the native communities south of Houma, Louisiana.

Working to redirect a small portion of the volunteer and material supplies from New Orleans and Mississippi to native communities, Four Directions was able to create tremendous success with a growing network of volunteers and collaborating organizations. This became known as our Coastal Tribes Project.

In January 2006, Four Directions was honored to assist members of the White Mountain Apache nation who were being exploited by unscrupulous contractors in New Orleans. Also in January, we changed our name to Four Directions Solidarity Project and finalized fiscal sponsorship with the Cloud Forest Institute to support the emerging long term vision of the organization. In February we participated in the International Indian Treaty Council meeting at Traditional Seminole Nation land in Central Florida.

In the spring of 2006, Four Directions began the Strongheart Project in support of the Strongheart Civil Rights Movement based out of the Oglala Lakota Nation. Offering mutual assistance, noted activist Duane Martin Sr. of the Stronghearts and the Teton Lodge Singers, traveled to coastal Louisiana to support the preservation and reclaiming of traditional culture.

This link will take you straight to their site: http://www.eswn.org/

Record gift: $5 million matching grant announced

CRAZY HORSE – “As we approach 60 years of carving the mountain, this is an absolutely wonderful way to celebrate and to help continue our progress,” exclaimed Ruth Ziolkowski, President/CEO of the Crazy Horse Memorial Foundation, at the Thursday, Dec. 20, press conference announcing a $5 million dollar matching gift.

“This very generous challenge grant will help advance the dream started by Korczak and Henry Standing Bear.” The gift is being given by the T. Denny Sanford Foundation. Sanford is a well-known philanthropist whose generosity has left imprints all across South Dakota. (See a brief profile of Mr. Sanford here.)

The $5 million Sanford Challenge Grant matches 100% of every dollar donated, effectively doubling a donor’s gift. The net result of this matching gift will be $10 million dollars for work on the mountain to accelerate the progress. “Crazy Horse remains committed to Korczak’s founding principle of creating this Memorial without any government tax dollars and the generosity of Mr. Sanford is right in line with that philosophy,” Mrs. Ziolkowski said.
“South Dakota has been good to me and it’s time to give back – and I’m doing that through Crazy Horse. I have long admired the years of dedication and hard, hard work by the family and their passion for Crazy Horse,” Sanford said.

Check out this website for more information: http://www.crazyhorse.org/

Mascots insulting to most Indians

By: Tim Giago

The mainstream media and common ignorance has convinced some Native Americans that being a mascot for American sporting teams is OK; that it is all right to be ridiculed, mimicked and degraded for the sake of satisfying white and black sports fans.

Mascots usually consist of lions, tigers and bears, oh my. They are bison, bulldogs, and horses either led out on the field on leashes or ridden by outrageously painted Indians or Trojans. Or they are Vikings, figments of history, with no connection to today’s reality. Or they are Fighting Irish with a fictitious leprechaun mascot dancing around the sidelines.

They are cowboys, steelers, packers, or boilermakers that some nincompoops mistake for an ethnic minority. If the fans of these teams choose to honor these symbols for their sports teams, so be it. But when they take real life American Indians and turn them into cartoon caricatures and then mimic them by painting their faces, donning feathers, and doing the tomahawk chop, they cross that thin line called racism.

Click here to read more: http://www.indianz.com/News/2007/006481.asp

South Dakota governor moves to protect Bear Butte

By: Chet Brokaw

PIERRE, S.D. (AP) - For centuries, members of the Lakota, Cheyenne and other American Indian tribes have been climbing Bear Butte to fast and hold religious ceremonies.

Colorful prayer cloths hanging from trees line the path to the top of the mountain, which rises about 1,300 feet above the surrounding plain.

But often, and especially in August, the serenity of the site is disturbed by a deafening roar, caused by thousands of motorcycles.

Indians have sought for years to block development of land around the butte into campgrounds, bars and other sites that could interfere with their religious use of the mountain. Now they have an ally in the governor.

Gov. Mike Rounds wants to spend more than $1 million to prevent developers from putting biker bars and other noisy businesses on ranch land near the mountain on the northern edge of the Black Hills. Saying he wants to protect the beauty and peace of the religious site, Rounds has proposed using state, federal and private money to buy a perpetual easement that would prevent commercial and residential development of some land on the western side of Bear Butte.

Indians working to protect Bear Butte praise the Republican governor's plan. ''Any kind of assistance from anybody in preserving the butte is welcome,'' said Gene Blue Arm, a Cheyenne River Sioux tribal member who has sought to limit development near the religious site.

Get the whole story here: http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096416379