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Indigenous Stewardship and the Legacy of National Parks on Tribal Lands (www.aicago.org for full article)

National parks are often celebrated as “America’s best idea,” but for Indigenous peoples, they represent a complex history of displacement, cultural erasure, and, more recently, a movement toward restoring Native stewardship. This article explores the historical context of national parks on tribal lands, the Indigenous love for these sacred places,

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SPRING EQUINOX

( View the article at https://www.aicago.org/?p=788) Thursday, March 20, 2025 at 4:00 AM. E.S.T. marks the beginning of spring in the Northern Hemisphere, and fall in the South. Even though our clocks are set to different time zones, this moment happens at the same time across the globe. The sun

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RECOGONIZING NOTABLE WOMEN FOR WOMENS MONTH (View whole article at WWW.AICAGO.ORG)

https://www.csmonitor.com/The-Culture/Arts/2020/0925/Native-American-women-shape-how-museums-frame-Indigenous-culture                                        Lily Gladstone (Piegan Blackfeet and Nez Perce) Lily Gladstone is an actor who rose to fame for her performance in Scorsese’s crime drama Killers of the Flower Moon. She portrayed an Osage woman who survived a series of murders after oil was found on Osage land. She

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Chief Joseph, an Extraordinary Indian Chief

Born: March 3, 1840 in the Wallowa Valley, Oregon Died: September 21, 1904 at the Colville Indian Reservation, Washington Chief Joseph himself is represented in Joseph Oregon with a larger-than-life bronze sculpture by Georgia Bunn in front of the Joseph Chamber of Commerce Visitor Center on Main Street. Chief Joseph

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  Makita Wilbur Photographer and Educator & Project 562

Matika Wilbur: A modern world doesn’t erase Indigenous intelligence I’m Dreaming About a Modern World That Doesn’t Erase Its Indigenous Intelligence In over 80 nations, oppressive domination has been dismantled. By Matika Wilbur YES! Magazine yesmagazine.org It is important to understand that decolonization is a physical action and that since

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National Missing Persons Day – February 3, 2025

U.S. National Missing Persons Day is observed on February 3 every year. This day is important because it draws attention to the thousands of missing persons throughout the country. The day is also a valuable opportunity to bring awareness to the general public about the people who are missing and increases the

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Eight Native American New Year Traditions

As we enter a new year, we reflect on the significance of this time in indigenous communities. For Native Americans, the New Year is a profound celebration of nature, the spiritual world, the sun, the rain, and our ancestors. It’s about honoring the past while embracing the future. For them,

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Traditional New Year Celebrations

Considered one of the best festivals of the year, New Year is an exciting time for many Native American tribes! With celebrations in honor of nature, the spiritual world, the sun, the rain, or ancestors, New Year is a celebration of remembering the old while welcoming the new. Below is

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Winter Solstice Traditions

Winter solstice: It’s the shortest day of the year, beginning of winter and the storytelling season. Sep 13, 2018 Original: Dec 21, 2014 On December 21, just as the evening news is beginning, winter will be upon us. It’s the shortest day of the year, and at 6:03 p.m. Eastern

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A History of National Native American Heritage Month

A History of National Native American Heritage Month For almost one hundred years, Americans, both Indian and non-Indian, have urged that there be a permanently designated place on the calendar to honor the contributions, achievements, sacrifices, and cultural and historical legacy of the original inhabitants of what is now the

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