Weaving History (culture)

CHICO — In conjunction with the 26th Annual California Indian Conference, the Chico Museum is hosting a special display of Native American Baskets now through Oct. 30.

The baskets, from Northern California tribe weavers, primarily from the different branches of the Maidu, were the collection of Hester Patrick of Patrick Ranch and donated to the museum upon her death.

The exhibit includes 20 baskets including examples made by master weavers Amanda Wilson, Mechoopda of Chico Rancheria; Mary Azbill, Koyonkawi (Concow) of Chico Rancheria; and Ann Barber, Mechoopda of Chico Rancheria.

Among the materials used to create these baskets were Sedge root, willow, red bud, big leaf maple, bracken fern root, maiden hair fern, pine root and bear grass.

Full Story At: http://www.chicoer.com/fromthenewspaper/ci_19075316

Native Heritage Month Books (education)

Good morning,

Though I find it problematic to "observe" November as "Native American month",  I also recognize that many of you are working with teachers who are doing studies of American Indians this month. To help you help those teachers find books that accurately portray American Indians, I'm writing to point you to five book/resource lists available at my site.

To get to the lists, go to http://americanindiansinchildrensliterature.blogspot.com/ and look at the far right column under the IF YOU'RE STARTING A LIBRARY... section. There, you'll see:

Top Board Books for Babies
Top Ten Books for Elem School
Top Ten Books for Middle School
Top Ten Books for High School
Top Books/Resource about Boarding Schools

Please share this email and the lists with your patrons, friends, colleagues, and parents. 

Thanks!
Debbie
_____________________________________

Debbie Reese, Ph.D.
Tribally enrolled: Nambe Pueblo

Publisher of American Indians in Children's Literature 
Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/debreese 
Email: dreese.nambe@gmail.com

Native Foster Care: Lost Children, Shattered Families

Janice Howe fought the state of South Dakota for a year and a half to bring her grandchildren back home after they were placed in foster care.

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October 25, 2011

Part 1 of a three-part investigation

The dirt roads on the Crow Creek Indian reservation in South Dakota blow dust on the window frames of simple houses.

The people who live here are poor — in a way few Americans are poor. There are no grocery stores or restaurants. There's only electricity when it's possible to pay the bill.

This is where Janice Howe grew up, on a barren stretch of land that has belonged to the Dakota people for more than 100 years.

"I'm the eldest of nine kids," she explains, settling into a chair in the kitchen. "I went to college and I got my bachelor's degree in nursing."

Her sister lives across the street. Her parents live across the road. Her daughter lives two doors down with her four grandchildren — two young granddaughters and two twin babies.

2012 California Conference on American Indian Education (event)

We invite you to attend the 35th Annual California Conference on American Indian
Education, March 15-17, 2012, at Humboldt State University in Arcata, CA. The conference
theme is “Turning Vision into Action.” The conference will showcase 35 years of success
and growth of American Indian education in California and the impact the American Indian
Education Centers have had in American Indian communities.

2011 Elders Dinner & ITG

The 2011 Intertribal Gathering will be held on November 12, 2011 at Redwood Acres, Eureka CA

30th ANNUAL NORTHWEST INTER-TRIBAL GATHERING & ELDERS DINNER SCHEDULED FOR November 12th 2011

Eureka, November 12, 2011: In keeping with the spirit of Thanksgiving and National American Indian Heritage Month, the Public is cordially invited to attend the 30th Annual Northwest Intertribal Gathering & Elders Dinner on Saturday, November 12, 2011 at Redwood Acres Fairgrounds, 3750 Harris Street, Eureka, California.

The Gathering is a community event that provides us all with an opportunity to honor all Elders and Veterans. Elders are served a free traditional dinner beginning at 12 noon followed by an Elders’ Gifting Ceremony at 3:00 pm.

The dinner, which includes roast turkey and open-pit baked salmon, is provided at no cost to all Elders over 55, regardless of ethnicity, with a nominal charge to other age groups. Throughout the day there will be American Indian arts and crafts available for sale, native singers, a drum group and dance demonstrations, which include: Brush, Tolowa Honoring, Aztec, Shake Head, and Hoop dancers. Last year over 4,500 people attended the Gathering and over 2,000 dinners were served.

The gates open at 10:00 a.m. Admission to the grounds is free. A PDF of the lineup schedule will be available.

NIEAs Remarks About Our Sister Elouise Cobell

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Cobell
 
Dear Andre; 

As you have probably heard, we lost a very important relative.

Elouise Cobell, Little Bird Woman, was a member of the Blackfeet Indian Tribe of Montana and a great-granddaughter of Mountain Chief, one of the legendary Blackfeet leaders of the West. Elouise Cobell was a graduate of Great Falls Business College and attended Montana State University.

As Treasurer of the Blackfeet Tribe of Montana, she established the Blackfeet National Bank, the first national bank to be located on an Indian reservation and to be owned by a Native American tribe. She served on the Board of the Native American Bank and First Interstate Bank.

 

She was a warrior for the Cobell v. Salazar case. This was a class-action lawsuit led by Elouise Cobell
and others against two departments of the United States government, and in 2010 the current administration offered a settlement of $3.4 billion of the longstanding class action suit.  

Our President Mary Jane Oatman-Wak Wak said this of our NIEA 2010 Lifetime Achievement Award Recipient:

"Our nation has lost an incredible leader with the passing of Eloise Cobell.  She stood for accountability, doing what is just and fair, and honoring the trust responsibility of the federal government to American Indians. She was also a longtime supporter of education for American Indians and the chance at a better life that a quality education would bring.  We will miss her and we honor all the good that she accomplished during her life. " 

 

As we look to our leaders for strength, please remember to take a few moments for our sister Elouise. She was victorious in her battle, because she chose to fight and stand up for her rights.  

 

 

Respectfully,
National Indian Education Association 

Elouise Cobell Passes

Elouise Cobell

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HELENA, Montana (AP) - Elouise Cobell, whose 15-year fight to force the U.S. to account for more than a century of mismanaged Indian land royalties led to the largest government class-action settlement in the country's history, died Sunday. She was 65.

Cobell, a member of the Blackfeet tribe who was born with the name Little Bird Woman, died at a Great Falls hospital of complications from cancer, spokesman Bill McAllister said.

Cobell was the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit filed in 1996 claiming the government had misspent, lost or stolen billions of dollars meant for Native American land trust account holders dating back to the 1880s.

After years of legal wrangling, the two sides in 2009 agreed to settle for $3.4 billion. The beneficiaries are estimated to be about 500,000 people.

Asked what she wanted her legacy to be, she said she hoped she would inspire a new generation of Native Americans to fight for the rights of others and lift t heir community out of poverty.

"Maybe one of these days, they won't even think about me. They'll just keep going and say, 'This is because I did it,'" Cobell said. "I never started this case with any intentions of being a hero. I just wanted this case to give justice to people that didn't have it."

Cobell said she had heard stories since she was a child of how the government had shortchanged Native Americans with accounts for royalties from their land that was leased for resource development or farming.

Cobell said she became outraged when she actually started digging into how much money the government had squandered that belonged people who were living in dire poverty on the Blackfeet reservation in northwestern Montana.

She realized the amount mismanaged since the 1880s could be hundreds of billions of dollars. She said she tried for years working with two U.S. government administrations to resolve the dispute, then decided to sue with four other Nat ive Americans as plaintiffs when no progress was made.

The government dug in. Over the next 14 years, there were more than 3,600 court filings, 220 days of trial, 80 published court decisions and 10 appeals until the 2009 breakthrough.

Under the settlement, $1.4 billion would go to individual Indian account holders. Some $2 billion would be used by the government to buy up fractionated Indian lands from individual owners willing to sell, and then turn those lands over to tribes. Another $60 million would be used for a scholarship fund for young Indians.

Cobell spent the next year shuttling back and forth between her home to Washington, D.C., to lobby individual congressmen to approve the deal. She also logged thousands of miles traveling across Indian country to explain the deal to the potential beneficiaries.

She found unexpected resistance among some Native Americans. They questioned why it was so little, how much would be going to her and they attor neys or why it didn't include a more complete accounting of what happened to the money.

Congress approved the deal and President Barack Obama signed it in December of 2010, a year after it was first proposed. A federal judge approved the settlement in June, though there are still appeals of the settlement pending.

Cobell discovered she had cancer just a few weeks before the judge's approval in June. She traveled to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, for surgery.

Cobell was the great granddaughter of the famous leader Mountain Chief. She grew up with seven brothers and sisters on the Blackfeet reservation.

She was the Blackfeet nation's treasurer for 13 years, and in 1987 helped found the first U.S. bank to be owned by a tribe, the Blackfeet National Bank, which is now the Native American Bank.

Cobell was the executive director of the nonprofit Native American Community Development Corp., which promotes sustainable economic development in Indian Country.

She won a $300,000 "genius grant" from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation in 1997 and used most of the money to help fund the lawsuit.

Cobell lived on a ranch with her husband Alvin. Her only son, Turk, lives in Las Vegas with his wife Bobbie and their children Olivia and Gabriella. 

Education Act

Calls Needed Today

To Ensure Inclusion and Parity for
Tribal Schools in the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act

 

The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions is taking the first step in passing an overhaul to the Nation’s education bill – the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA).

 

This is our first opportunity to impact policy for the education of our Native children since No Child Left Behind was enacted in 2001.  Indian Country has spoken loudly and clearly about its priorities for Indian education through numerous resolutions passed at NCAI. So far, none of Indian Country’s priorities have been included in the bill, and we need your support to make this happen.

 

Action Item:
Please call your Senator and Committee leadership today and urge them to include Indian Country’s amendments in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. 

 

Message:

·        This is the first time in ten years that Indian Country has had an opportunity to positively effect change in our school systems.

·        To do so we must have parity and be able to fully participate in all the programs and services being offered to the general population.

·        Please support Indian Country’s amendments to the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.

 

Call Information:

·        To locate your Senator, visit: www.senate.gov

·        Call the Congressional Switchboard: 1.866.220.0044

·        Call Senator Harkin, Committee Chair at 202.224.3254

·        Call Senator Enzi, Ranking Member of the Committee at 202.224.3424

 

For additional information, please contact Ahniwake Rose at 202.466.7767 or arose@ncai.org.