Language Is Culture (language)


Language is culture

 

If B.C. native languages are lost, important parts of culture are lost with them

 
By Shawn Conner, Special to The Sun June 20, 2013

Though she grew up around the language, Cynthia Jensen-Fisk never learned to speak Gitsenimx. She never even knew that learning it was an option.

“It wasn’t used very much around our house,” Jensen-Fisk said. “Probably because my dad was Swedish.”

Jensen-Fisk is now learning the language from her aunt, Barbara Harris, as part of the master-apprentice program through the First Peoples’ Cultural Council. A First Nations-run corporation, the council’s mandate is to support the revitalization of Aboriginal language, arts and culture in B.C. The council does this through documentation, cultural programming, curriculum development and programs like the master-apprentice program.



Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/life/Language+culture/8554969/story.html#ixzz2X3QpIA3o

California Tribal College (education)


California Tribal College Moves From Vision to Reality

January 11, 2012

Youth Advocate Mikela Jones, Pomo from Redwood Valley Rancheria, spoke at a reception in support of the new California tribal college at SNR Denton law firm in San Francisco on December 14. (Photo by Lisa Gale Garrigues)

When youth advocate Mikela Jones, Pomo of Little River Band, earned a bachelor’s degree in philosophy fromCalifornia State University at Sacramentoin 2004, he was the first man from his tribe to obtain a four-year college degree.

“How come I'm the first?” he asked himself.  OtherNative American studentshe talked to were also the first from their tribes to get college degrees.

“It really sends us a message that there needs to be more tribal people getting their college education,” he said, speaking at a fundraising reception at SNR Denton law firm in downtown San Francisco on December 14, 2011. The people listening to him were there because they share the same vision: a tribal college in California that will train future Native leaders of the state.

That vision is about to become a reality.

Since it began to take shape in 2009, the California Tribal College initiative has grown to include the backing of 25 of the 109 federally recognized California tribes, who hope to enroll their first students as early as fall 2012, with most classes starting in 2013.

The college doesn't have a permanent home yet, and its permanent name is yet to be determined.  But it does have momentum.

“We are looking at the Internet, and carrying on a virtual campus and getting things started right away,” said Marshall McKay, tribal chairman of the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation.


Della Warrior, special projects coordinator of the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, spoke at a reception in support of the new California tribal college at SNR Denton law firm in San Francisco on December 14. (Photo by Lisa Gale Garrigues)

Project Coordinator Della Warrior, also of the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, and a former president of the Institute of American Indian Arts, said the immediate goal is to find a main campus in California with housing for 150 students. Eventually, the plan will be to have satellite campuses throughout the state.

“The tribes now are beginning to take control of their own institutions. And now it's time for California,” she said.

Tribes who are currently participating in the formation of the college include the Hoopa, the Morongo, the Miwok, Pomo, and others, with a concentration of tribes around the northern California counties of Yolo Lake and Sonoma. But the founding members, who have been working with the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, are eager to collaborate with other California tribes to solidify their advisory and leadership council, and select a board of regents and instructional staff.

Tribal administration andlanguage revitalizationwill be core components of the curriculum, McKay said. “The traditional way of training was through the grandparents. We are lacking that component these days, so now we've got to have another way to train and teach our people the complicated and complex issues that they'll have to be dealing with.”

The college will also eventually offer bachelor’s degrees and advanced degrees in subjects like law, medicine and architecture, Mckay said.

There are currently no accredited tribal colleges in California, despite the fact that the state is home to 450,000 Native American people. Of those, “less than one percent are going to college, and less than half that are graduating,” said Warrior.

The only other Native-run college in California was the intertribal DQ University on the University of California, Davis campus, offered courses for 35 years before it lost its college accreditation in 2005 amidst declining student enrollment and alleged financial mismanagement. Though no longer offering college courses, it does continue to host workshops and pow-wows.

The new college will be geared towards the uniqueness of the California Native experience, said Warrior. Historically, Native people in California hid and tried to become invisible after the ravages of the 1849 Gold Rush. But California not only has the largest number of tribes of any state, it has the largest and most diverse Native population, which includes members of other tribes who moved to California from other parts of the U.S. during the Urban Indian Relocation program of the 1950s.

With 66 California tribes currently involved in gaming, the state has recently become the single largestIndian gamingmarket in the country, bringing in new funds that could help make the tribal college a reality. Warrior said the college would be looking to gaming tribes, foundations, and government grants as well as corporations and individuals to help get the program off the ground.

“We welcome anyone who might want to join us and help us because it's going to take a lot of people to make this happen, and a lot of resources, people and dollars,” she said.


Marshall Mckay, tribal chairman of the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, spoke at a reception in support of the new California tribal college at SNR Denton law firm in San Francisco on December 14. (Photo by Lisa Gale Garrigues)

The ultimate goal, said McKay, is a tribally controlled and tribally funded university system that will benefit not only the tribes but all of California.

“If you have educated a group, whatever that group is, it's going to flow out to the community, and it's going to make a difference to the community,” he said. “It's going to make sure that people start to look at Native tribes as leaders again.”

Jones, who now has his master’s in school counseling and works as vice principal of a tribal school, is looking forward to the day when Native students will be receiving degrees from the California tribal college.

“They're not going to be the first ones, they're going to be the third ones, the fourth ones; they're going to be the ones that continue a new cycle for our people.”

To find out more about the California Tribal College initiative, contact Cathy Wright at cwright@yochadehe-nsn.gov.

The Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation supports the establishment of a tribal college in California:


Read more athttp://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/article/california-tribal-college-moves-from-vision-to-reality-71116

Arrest in Whiteclay (idle no more)



Oglala Sioux Tribe President Arrested in White Clay

Taken to Jail in Rushville, Nebraska

Levi Rickert, editor-in-chief in Native Challenges. Discussion »

WHITE CLAY, NEBRASKA – Oglala Sioux Tribe President Bryan Brewer was arrested today in White Clay, Nebraska.

It was not immediately known what he is charged with at press time. He was reportedly taken to Rushville, Nebraska for booking, according to Toni Red Cloud, public relations director of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, who talked to the Native News Network just after the arrest.

President Brewer arrest in WhiteclayOglala Sioux Nation President Brewer being harassed before arrest

Several dozen Oglala Sioux tribal members were in the border town of White Clay to protest the sale of alcohol. The protest began as a walk into White Clay. A sheriff deputy asked the crowd to allow a beer truck through the road.

When the protesters did not move fast enough, security and police officers moved. One deputy began shouting at President Brewer and pointing his finger in the president's face prior to President Brewer being arrested.

White Clay, Nebraska, is just over border from the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. It is a small town of 14 people, but sells almost five million cans of 12 oz. beer annually.

Last week, the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council on Tuesday, June 11, passed a resolution that allows for a referendum to have tribal citizens living on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to decide if sales of alcohol should be legal.

President Brewer was threatened with arrest when he led some 100 tribal members in a protest at White Clay in March, 2013.

Only President Brewer was arrested today out all the protesters.

Tips From Former Smokers (health)

In March 2012, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) launched the first-ever paid national tobacco education campaign — Tips From Former Smokers (Tips). Tips encouraged people to quit smoking by highlighting the toll that smoking-related illnesses take on smokers and their loved ones. The hard-hitting ads showed people living with the real and painful consequences of smoking. Many of the people featured in the ads started smoking in their early teens, and some were diagnosed with life-changing diseases before they were age 40. The ads featured suggestions or "tips" from former smokers on how to get dressed when you have a stoma or artificial limbs, what scars from heart surgery look like, and reasons why people have quit smoking.


Read more, and view photo and videos here: http://www.powwows.com/2013/04/08/tips-from-former-smokers-videos/#ixzz2VxjGhqQw

Graduation Walk Out (education)

Timeline Photos

GRADUATION ADDRESS LEADS TO WALKOUT AT HIGH SCHOOL
JUNE 6 2013

"she had also been influenced by the Canadian First Nations “Idle No More” movement"

DULUTH, MINNESOTA- A valedictory address delivered by a member of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa at Sunday’s graduation exercises at Bayfield High School led to a protest walkout by about 15 Native American students Monday.

Victoria Gokee-Rindal, a member of the Class of 2013, departed from the text of her remarks on Sunday, charging that racial insensitivity and disrespect for students who are tribal members are ongoing issues at the school, and part of a larger problem.

“Why is it that Native students of the Bayfield School District are made to feel like they have to check their Indian-ness at the door?” she asked in her address, also asserting that teachers who stood up for Native American students were treated with disrespect for that support.

On Wednesday, Gokee-Rindal said she felt compelled to make the remarks to call attention to what she said was a pervasive issue at the school.

“I felt like I had the opportunity to really address my community and the school, and I wanted to take full advantage of that,” she said.

Gokee-Rindal said she had been encouraged to take the stand by a number of women in the Red Cliff community.

“I was given an eagle feather and tobacco to bring up certain issues at graduation, to get the word out,” she said.

Gokee-Rindal said her main concerns were about “basic human rights.”

She said she had also been influenced by the Canadian First Nations “Idle No More” movement in support of indigenous rights...

CONTINUE READING: http://www.ashlandwi.com/news/article_d3e2f97e-ce69-11e2-8e8e-0019bb2963f4.html

*************
RELATED NEWS:
Poarch Creek Student Fined for Wearing Eagle Feather at Graduation
http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/05/31/poarch-creek-student-fined-wearing-eagle-feather-graduation-149646

By: Native Voices United - USA/Canada online radio

 

 

 

High School Phone Number: (530) 493-2697

 

Mike Matheson Superintendant:http://www.sisuhsd.net/misc/cms_contact?d=x&id=1271057783841&return_url=1370732034436

 

The Principal is Angelika Brown: http://www.happycamp-highschool.com/misc/cms_contact?d=x&id=1312697178419&return_url=1370731749848

 

By Trish Glose/KTVL.comHAPPY CAMP, Cal. -- A high school student, getting ready to graduate from Happy Camp High school, wanted to celebrate her heritage by wearing a basket cap with her gown. Her principal told her no.Now, Cheyenne Moore's mother is upset her daughter isn't allowed to wear it. Leslie Moore says her daughter is part Karuk. Along with necklaces and beads, females traditionally wear basket caps.My daughter is very in to her culture and the principal said she was not allowed to because the traditional caps were part of the ceremony, said Moore.Mike Matheson, with the Siskiyou Union High School district says students are only allowed to wear the traditional caps and gowns at all the high schools in the district. He says in Happy Camp, seniors are encouraged to wear traditional beads and necklaces to represent their heritage.Any other head gear other than a traditional cap is not allowed, Matheson said.Moore says her daughter is upset, her culture is very important to her and it's a big part of the community here in Happy Camp and people in the past have worn their caps.She says her daughter wanted to use the traditional cap in the ceremony, too when it was time to move the tassle and when the other students threw the caps into the air. Moore says her daughter plans on wearing the basket cap anyway, even though she was asked not to and said, I'll back her up 100 percent.Matheson says any student wearing anything other than the standard cap and gown will not be allowed to proceed.

Native Veteran At All-Star Game

Gil Calac has been nominated as one of the 30 military veteran finalists to attend the All Star Game.  To Vote for him click the logo of SF Giants at : http://mlb.mlb.com/tribute/2013/index.jsp


Gil Calac of White Swan, Wash., has done much for veterans since he served in Vietnam and received the Bronze Star for meritorious service. Gil, a member of the Paiute/Mission tribe of Susanville, Calif., and his wife, Valerie, a member of the Yakama Nation, live on the Yakama Indian Reservation. Before retiring, Gil worked as the Center director of Fort Simcoe Job Corps Center. He is also a member and cultural leader of the Yakama Warriors Association, a veterans organization. As an honor guard member, he participates in flag ceremonies and burials of deceased veterans. Gil was instrumental in getting a Vietnam Veterans Day proclaimed in Washington state, working for months with Representative Norm Johnson. Now each year, March 30 is Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day.

Code Talker At All-Star Game

LOS ANGELES – Navajo Code Talker David E. Patterson, Sr., USMC, wants to go this year's Major League Baseball All-Star Game on July 16 in New York and your vote can help him. Patterson has been nominated as one of the 30 military veteran finalists to attend the game.

He is the Los Angeles Dodgers nominee.

Navajo Code Talker David E Patterson Sr USMCNavajo Code Talker David E. Patterson, Sr., USMC

David E. Patterson, Sr. 90, lives in Rio Rancho, New Mexico. He is among an elite group of marines who helped create the only unbroken code in modern military history. As one of the Navajo Code Talkers, David and other Navajos coded and decoded classified military dispatches during World War II using a code derived from their Navajo language. He served in the US Marine Corps from 1943-1945.

After Patterson was discharged, he went to college in Oklahoma and New Mexico, becoming a social worker. He married and raised his family on the Navajo Indian Reservation in Shiprock, New Mexico. He worked for the Navajo Nation's Division of Social Services until retiring in 1987.

In 2001 he was awarded the Silver Congressional Medal of Honor and up until last year volunteered in a Shiprock school on the Navajo Indian Reservation as a foster grandparent.

The voting event is sponsored by MLB and People magazine, of these 90 participants only 30 will be nominated, one to represent each major league baseball team. So, if you would like to send him to the All Star game, please follow this link to cast your vote ».

Just click the icon for the LA Dodgers , vote now and vote often. Also, one of the Veterans will be honored by People magazine.

Voting began yesterday and continues until June 30. You need not be a major league baseball fan to vote, just a fan of Navajo Code Talkers.

posted June 10, 2013 7:40 am edt

Christian Student Cheered for Prayer, Native Student Snubbed for Feather


Christian Student Cheered for Prayer, Native Student Snubbed for Feather

June 07, 2013

While a Native American student from Alabama could still face a copy,000 fine and has yet to receive her diploma for wearing a single eagle feather on her graduation cap May 23, the Christian Valedictorian of a South Carolina school was cheered for reciting the Lord’s Prayer during his graduation speech.

When Roy Costner IV took the stage June 1 to recite his speech to the graduating class of Liberty High School in Liberty, South Carolina, he ripped up his speech and instead recited the Lord’s Prayer.

As soon as he begins, the crowd erupts in cheers because the Pickens County School District had recently decided to no longer include prayer in graduation ceremonies. In the video you can see no visible reaction from the teachers seated behind him. According to reports onMSNandYahoo Newshe was not disciplined for breaking the new rules.

“The bottom line is: We’re not going to punish students for expressing their religious faiths,” John Eby, a spokesperson for the Pickens County School District, told Yahoo News.

Chelsey Ramer Poarch Creek Band of Indians wore an eagle feather to her May 23 graduation from Escambia Academy in Alabama Chelsey Ramer
Chelsey Ramer, Poarch Creek Band of Indians, wore an eagle feather to her May 23 graduation from Escambia Academy in Alabama. (Chelsey Ramer)

Chelsey Ramer, a member of the Poarch Creek Band of Indians, wore an eagle feather in her cap at her May 23 graduation from Escambia Academy in Atmore, Alabama. Before the ceremony the school board wanted all the students to sign a contract forbidding any “extraneous items during graduation exercises.”

Ramer never signed the contract but still faces disciplinary action for expressing her Native heritage during the ceremony. (Related story: “Poarch Creek Student Fined for Wearing Eagle Feather at Graduation)

So a white student decides to stand up and demonstrate his religious beliefs and gets cheered. A Native student does the same and can’t get her diploma and gets fined? A juxtaposition that hasn’t gone unnoticed by the online community.

Auser-generated posttitled “So a Native American girl gets no diploma and a $1000 fine for putting a feather in her cap, while a Christian valedictorian disobeys rules by reciting prayer and gets standing ovation” on Reddit has been pushed to the front page of the site by other users with more than 15,000 upvotes and 1,630 comments. And those numbers are steadily increasing.

The original poster on Reddit says, “It’s just frustrating to me that when reading these two stories side by side, it comes across as ‘Hey you Indian, stop expressing your culture! This is no place for your savagery. No diploma for you, and now you owe me money for some reason! Oh, hey Christian kid, you weren’t supposed to be inciting prayer at this event. Ahh well, whattya gonna do? You little skamp, hehehe.’”

User Azbug on Reddit says, “What kills me is she worked for four years to get those grades and walk with her class. Somehow, showing one small bit of honor and pride in her ancestry automatically erases her four years of achievement... The other sad commentary is that young man had the opportunity to speak directly to his class, faculty, and the families of the graduates. Instead of saying something interesting or profound, he chose to cough up something that shows no introspection on growing up... On the other hand, the native girl merely whispers deep personal convictions, and is mercilessly stepped on.”

Ramer’s family is currently not commenting on the events and Escambia Academy is closed until Monday. Maybe next week we will find out if and when Ramer will get her diploma and if the school board will in fact make her family pay the fine. At least she won’t have to pay the fine out of her college fund.

Anindiegogo fundstarted by Dan Morrison, communications director at First Peoples Worldwide, raised the full amount to pay the fine in just five days. As of today, the fund has $1,070 in it. If the family does not have to pay the fine, the money will go toward her education. (Related story: “Poarch Creek Student’s Fine Raised by Online Donations)

Watch the video of Costner’s speech: 

Read more athttp://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/06/07/christian-student-cheered-prayer-native-student-snubbed-feather-149772

Native Student Not Allowed To Graduate (education/news)

High School Phone Number: (530) 493-2697

Mike Matheson Superintendant: http://www.sisuhsd.net/misc/cms_contact?d=x&id=1271057783841&return_url=1370732034436

The Principal is Angelika Brown: http://www.happycamp-highschool.com/misc/cms_contact?d=x&id=1312697178419&return_url=1370731749848



By Trish Glose/KTVL.comHAPPY CAMP, Cal. -- A high school student, getting ready to graduate from Happy Camp High school, wanted to celebrate her heritage by wearing a basket cap with her gown. Her principal told her no.Now, Cheyenne Moore's mother is upset her daughter isn't allowed to wear it. Leslie Moore says her daughter is part Karuk. Along with necklaces and beads, females traditionally wear basket caps.My daughter is very in to her culture and the principal said she was not allowed to because the traditional caps were part of the ceremony, said Moore.Mike Matheson, with the Siskiyou Union High School district says students are only allowed to wear the traditional caps and gowns at all the high schools in the district. He says in Happy Camp, seniors are encouraged to wear traditional beads and necklaces to represent their heritage.Any other head gear other than a traditional cap is not allowed, Matheson said.Moore says her daughter is upset, her culture is very important to her and it's a big part of the community here in Happy Camp and people in the past have worn their caps.She says her daughter wanted to use the traditional cap in the ceremony, too when it was time to move the tassle and when the other students threw the caps into the air. Moore says her daughter plans on wearing the basket cap anyway, even though she was asked not to and said, I'll back her up 100 percent.Matheson says any student wearing anything other than the standard cap and gown will not be allowed to proceed.


In Our Own Words (language)

Please join us for the In Our Own Words: Sustaining Native American Languages webinar. To register for this event, please visithttp://www.regonline.com/anajunewebinar and start your registration.

 

The goal of this webinar is to provide examples of ANA language grantee success stories.

Learning objectives:

  • Define and describe ANA preservation and maintenance of Native American languages.
  • Discuss successful community-based stories designed to promote the preservation and maintenance of Native American languages.
  • Summarize the successful elements of language preservation and maintenance.
  • 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Hawaii-Aleutian standard time
  • 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Alaska daylight time
  • 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. Pacific daylight/Mountain standard time
  • 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. Mountain daylight time
  • 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Central daylight time
  • 3:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern daylight time