me: *showing vacation pics* and this is from where we went t-Â
 guy who plays geoguessr for 14 hours a day: I know.
No offense, but who the FUCK is wilbur soot
thatâs wilbur soot
he terrifies me
almost home
dirt enthusiast

Discoholic đȘ©
RMH
AnasAbdin
hello vonnie
Claire Keane

Product Placement
Sade Olutola

Kaledo Art
One Nice Bug Per Day
will byers stan first human second
$LAYYYTER

Love Begins
ojovivo

Andulka

No title available

No title available

PR's Tumblrdome
noise dept.
seen from United States

seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Spain
seen from Jamaica

seen from United States
seen from Thailand
seen from Argentina
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
@native-issues
me: *showing vacation pics* and this is from where we went t-Â
 guy who plays geoguessr for 14 hours a day: I know.
No offense, but who the FUCK is wilbur soot
thatâs wilbur soot
he terrifies me
so can we start hunting down white liberals now or what
The full picture is even more heart breaking after you open the uncropped version. Just a heads-up, it's rough
âThe Roman Catholic Parish in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan was just grafitted.â
Nah letâs post it. Letâs feel it. Donât look away.
I notice alot of my followers on here skipping these posts just to mess with my lgbt ones, suspiciously the white popular ones.
Heres a not so friendly reminder, as an lgbt metis person, i dont give a single fuck what your blog is themed or if this is too painful for you to look at. Reblog this post. Reblog this post with the sources of the 751 children who were found.
Your compliance and silence as well as the compliance and silence of your ancestors is what allowed these schools to open and kill first nations children. The children of MY people.
Dont follow me if you cant reblog this post or the one with sources to your political blog or your most popular blog. Add trigger warnings if you must but if your political blog is only focused on the harms you personally face like being lgbt then you need to see some bigger pictures and stop being afraid of angering your racist mutural or actually saying some shit about racism. If you can reblog some antifa graphics or add blm to your bio to be a surface level ally, you can reblog some sources on the genocide first nations people faced and still face today.
They were CHILDREN.
They were murdered in cold blood.
Iâd like to add this photo I took last night in Victoria of the statue of Captain Cook. Though I myself am not indigenous, I 100% agree that these murderers, kidnappers and rapists shouldnât have huge statues and plaques that decorate them and say how âgreatâ they were.
Hereâs another photo of the legislative assembly from yesterday. Later on there were more items, candles and signs at the memorial, as well as a big poster with 1505 painted on it but I didnât get a picture
People need to see this. Not just quickly glance at the photos and keep on scrolling. They need to see this.
Reblog this or just stop following me
I had seen the first picture of the church, but not the second.
I went to a âCancel Canada Dayâ event and burst into tears - not because I was surprised to learn of the unmarked graves (survivors told us they were there. Our government pushed it aside, and we let them), but because seeing all the people gathered in mourning drove it home: They. Were. Children.
This is my countryâs legacy - and itâs not history. The last schools closed during my lifetime. My Father went to school with students who lived at the local residential school, after it was changed to a boarding house (read: holding centre) for indigenous youth who went to local schools.
They were all children, injured, abused, and killed in my countryâs attempt to erase them. I want the world to see this and hold the state accountable to *active* reconciliation> I mean we could at least truly adopt UNDRIP in action instead of words for godâs sake.
Originally posted by @the-aila-testâ (here), edited to add descriptions of each website and update the links.Â
Native-owned businesses to buy from. Taken from the North American Indian Association of Detroit.
For text searching, some of the major categories used are: Food, beverages, clothing, accessories, jewellery, home goods, hygiene, beauty, books, sporting goods â but there are also many items that didnât fit neatly into those categories, so try ctrl+F / cmd+F for whatever product you have in mind!Â
https://www.sweetgrasstradingco.com - Food, beverages (coffee & tea), skincare and grooming, beauty products from a wide variety of different Native-owned brands. The closest thing to a one-stop shop you will get.Â
https://nativeharvest.com - Food (maple syrup, jellies, coffee, cereal, soups), jewellery, books and stationery.
https://byellowtail.com - Clothing (stylish af hoodies, swimsuits, cardigans and jackets, tops, scarves, dresses), jewellery, candles, beauty and hygiene (soap, lotions, lip balms) from a variety of Native designers.
https://trickstercompany.com - Clothing (tees, sweatshirts, crop tops, leggings, dresses), accessories (sunglasses, keychains, zipper pulls, headbands, beanies, ties, umbrellas, tote bags, pins), paper goods (stationery, books, prints, stickers, home goods and decor, sporting goods (basketballs, longboards)
https://www.salishstyle.com - Clothing (tees, hoodies), accessories (beanies, some really cool backpacks), stickers, pins, blankets, thermoses
https://hutxh.com - Clothing (tops), accessories (necklaces, hats, bags)
https://furandhide.com - VERY COOL leather and fur products! Drums, flutes, bells, rattles, shells. Also a selection of skulls, bones, claws, teeth, quills, feathers, and obsidian items.Â
Continued below the break.
Keep reading
so can we start hunting down white liberals now or what
The full picture is even more heart breaking after you open the uncropped version. Just a heads-up, it's rough
âThe Roman Catholic Parish in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan was just grafitted.â
Nah letâs post it. Letâs feel it. Donât look away.
I notice alot of my followers on here skipping these posts just to mess with my lgbt ones, suspiciously the white popular ones.
Heres a not so friendly reminder, as an lgbt metis person, i dont give a single fuck what your blog is themed or if this is too painful for you to look at. Reblog this post. Reblog this post with the sources of the 751 children who were found.
Your compliance and silence as well as the compliance and silence of your ancestors is what allowed these schools to open and kill first nations children. The children of MY people.
Dont follow me if you cant reblog this post or the one with sources to your political blog or your most popular blog. Add trigger warnings if you must but if your political blog is only focused on the harms you personally face like being lgbt then you need to see some bigger pictures and stop being afraid of angering your racist mutural or actually saying some shit about racism. If you can reblog some antifa graphics or add blm to your bio to be a surface level ally, you can reblog some sources on the genocide first nations people faced and still face today.
They were CHILDREN.
They were murdered in cold blood.
For anyone who doesn't know what's going on in Canada right now (which, let's be real, is probably everyone who's not in Canada):
This week, a mass grave was discovered at a former Indian Residential School, in Kamloops, BC. The grave contained the bodies of 215 Indigenous children.
For people outside of North America, residential schools were places that Indigenous children were sent to, to have their language and culture stripped away from them. They were literally stolen from their families, and scattered across Canada, to ensure that they would be surrounded by children who didn't speak their language. They were given Christian names and forced to speak English. They were horrendously abused, and the survivors have been traumatized.
Hundreds of children never returned. The assumption has always been that they died. This has now been confirmed.
The school in Kamloops closed in 1978. They are now trying to identify bodies to inform family members. The last residential school closed in the 1990s. There is growing demand to search all of them, but the government hasn't responded to that, as of yet. Ottawa JUST gave in to pressure to fly the Canada flag at half mast. They weren't even going to do that.
This is the reality if anti-Indigenous racism in Canada. The residential schools may be closed, but that hasn't stopped the abduction of Indigenous children, let alone the hundreds of missing and murdered Indigenous women.
yeah, its all fine and cool to say âfuck columbusâ or whatever, but like. dudeâs been dead for hundreds of years now. do things that actively help native lives in the present. learn about native lands and cultures. learn to appreciate but not appropriate. help us maintain what little we actually have when the government inevitably tries to take it from us.
hereâs a link to the pueblo relief fund which directly helps my people, and the people of the 19 pueblos of new mexico! a lot of people forget about us bc weâre a relatively small population but we need help too đ please donate today if you can
Indigenous people in the Arctic: *cause virtually no harm to the environment with their hunting practices / have been sustainably hunting animals forever / have to suffer the consequences of food deserts and sky-high prices no white vegan will ever have to deal with*Â
White vegans: you know whatâs really bothering meâŠseal huntingâŠletâs stop that somehowâŠ
According to the ministry of natural resources in Nunavut, the hunters in Nunavut could hunt a ringed seal for each person who lives in Canada every year and there would still be a net INCREASE in the seal population. Traditional Inuit methods of hunting help maintain the environment, because an overpopulation of seals would be a disaster for fish stocks in the territory.
Also, the shit about clubbing baby seals is a racist myth based on the assumption that the Inuit are âsavageâ, so we white folks could stop repeating that myth
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
People still use hakapiks in the seal hunt, what ayaciyiniw think of as a âclub,â thereâs codified regulations in their use.
What isnât true is the hunting of white coats (or blue coats, what baby ringed seals are called). That has been illegal since 1987. Nobody hunts baby seals at all anymore, and even when they did, it was to satisfy -foreign markets-
Thereâs nothing wrong with sustainable hunting of seals for your own consumption and use. The people up there use the meat, the bones, the skin⊠And need the seals to be there next year.
That kind of hunting is conservation.
want to make a post abt the pregnant 18yr old member of my tribe being found dead on Thanksgiving Eve but I dont feel like yall ignoring me while you repost generic links to Indigenous organizations you have no intention of donating to.
Her name was Jalajhia Finklee & she was a Mashpee Wampanoag. Tomorrow is going to be a different kind of pain for our tribe. Pray for us.
Missing pregnant teen from New Bedford believed to be found dead in Florida - The Boston Globe
kind of shocked at how many people are responding to this so Iâm adding a link to the gofundme made on her loved ones behalf. Please consider donating to a grieving Wampanoag family this Thanksgiving. đ€đđœ
My daughter Jalajhia Finklea was last seen on Tuesday October 20th a day before her 18th birt⊠Amanda Costa needs your support for Bring Jal
Rez Natives deserve basic amenities
Rez Natives deserve basic amenities
Rez Natives deserve basic amenities
REZ NATIVES DESERVE BASIC AMENITIES
REZ
NATIVES
DESERVE
BASIC
AMENITIES
and they honestly deserve it WITHOUT having to relocate themselves, their family, and their WHOLE community.Â
Or neglecting part of their identity or culture
Or being judged for taking money or resources they are already owed.
from a friend in northern ontario. $43 for shitty mass produced muffins that cost $6 down south/in the city
here, have some wilted asparagus at the cheapest low quality grocery story
THIS is why i get so angry when non-natives say, âjust go to the grocery store! you donât need to hunt such and such animal bc of _______ bullshit reason!â Like NO. itâs not as simple as that. going to the store ? this is what you see ^^^^ please educate yourself. I am so very tired of the ignorance and assumptions that all people in america have the same basic amenities. Also stop ridiculing NDN people who hunt their traditional way on THEIR traditional hunting grounds. whatever the âproblematicâ animal may be. Those animals were put here by the creator FOR indigenous peoples, to live belong side us in harmony and good health, and to feed the people when the time comes. ALL ndn people of the âamericasâ are hunter/fathered people traditionally. respect our ways of life or GTFO.
đđŸđđŸđđŸ
I feel like this article is relevant here, especially with that last comment:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4787000/Alaskan-boy-bullied-social-media-whale-killing.html
Be aware that price-gouging is enourmously prevalent in Alaskan Native villages too, so here comes this young adult who goes out and kills a whale the traditional way, all to feed his village!!! ONE SINGLE WHALE.
Which by the way isnât even endangered.
And you know what the animal rightsâ activists do?
They sent him death threats.
All over a fucking NON-ENDANGERED whale.
This man is a hero in his village, he fed everyone there for days. Below-working class Alsaskan Natives who otherwise wouldâve had to travel hours to get to the nearest grocery store.
Entitled vegans always say âwell why donât you just go to the store and buy fresh produce?â
Because there arenât stores where Rez Natives live.
And if youâre lucky, youâll find shit like the images above, you wanna pay $30 CA for some fucking asparagus???
Unless youâve seen the Rez life and how shit is, then you need to shut the fuck up and keep your entitled shit to yourself.
And not only food. Basic amenities like properly insulated/ventilated houses. Reliable water and electric. Postal addresses that donât require a P.O. box. And in this age Iâd say internet can be considered a basic amenity that a LOT of rez native houses donât have. Donât get me wrong, I love talking about food. But I feel like most posts like this get bombarded with food-based discussions and miss other equally important points.
@ the not-natives:
âNative Americanâ is not only a racial identity but also a cultural identity. We donât give a shit about blood percentages and you shouldnât either. Donât talk over natives about this, it isnât your place to determine whether or not a person is a native, itâs ours.
Learn About and Support Native American Communities on Indigenous Peoplesâ Day - and every day!
Local and National Events 12 October 2020
Dos and Dontâs
100 Ways to SupportâNot Appropriate FromâNative People (Donât even think about calling anyone/anything your spirit animal)Â
Essential Reading List
7 Books Everyone Should Read
Celebrate Indigenous Peoplesâ Day with 10 Excellent Books by Native American Authors
Interactive Map: The Invasion of America
Watch:Â Â The Columbus Controversy: Challenging How History Is Written
Watch:Â Â Columbus in America
Watch:Â Invisible Nation
Donate:Â Native American Heritage Association
Donate:Â First Nations Development Institute
Donate:Â Native American Rights FundÂ
Donate:Â Adopt-a-Native-Elder Program
10 places in the US where you can experience Native American culture responsibly
Buy Native List
Home Goods that Support Native-Owned Businesses
Bedré Fine Chocolate
Buy Native Coffee
The Native American Tea Company
indigenous terminology in north america
it's indigenous peoples' day in the usa! to celebrate i am here to help non-indigenous folks in north america to think about the terminology they use because i know not all of y'all know how the nuances of the many things we're called. in general, when talking about an indigenous person or character and referring to their indigeneity, referring to their specific culture is the best option. i am indigenous, but more specifically i am cree. that said, let's talk about terminology while recognizing that the following list is super simplified to give you a brief overview.
indigenous is an umbrella term that refers to the original inhabitants of a land. it is used to talk about indigenous people worldwide. we use it as a collective term because we share many interests, but we are all different peoples and nations. people who are mÄori or sĂĄmi or ainu are all indigenous, but they're all from very different places and cultures. indigenous as a term unites us, but shouldn't be used to erase our differences.
aboriginal is, like indigenous, an umbrella term that refers to the original inhabitants of a land. aboriginal was a favoured term in canada for many years and is still used by some multi-nation organizations. canada's indigenous peoples' day (âȘjune 21âŹ) is also sometimes called aboriginal peoples' day.
native american is a term that refers specifically to indigenous people living in what is currently the contiguous united states of america. people living in alaska or hawaii may prefer the term native hawaiian or native alaskan. if you call someone in canada native american they'll know what you mean, but it's not the preferred term. like indigenous, it is an umbrella term and covers many different tribes/nations. it is a term assigned to indigenous people and adopted by us, but not one we came up with ourselves.
native alaskan is an umbrella term that refers to indigenous people living in what is currently alaska. they are culturally distinct peoples from native american cultures. you may be used to calling native alaskans "esk*mos" and if you are you should stop that right fucking now because esk*mo is a derrogatory term that comes from cree slang. some native alaskan people are inuit (see below), but not all are.
native hawaiian is a term for indigenous hawaiians. this is another umbrella term. native hawaiians were not included in federal programs for native americans until the 70s and some programs still exclude them, as do many discussions about native american issues even though they are also an indigenous group colonized by the usa.
native is an umbrella term used by indigenous people to refer to themselves. in north america, it may be socially acceptable to refer to indigenous people as being native, but ymmv and elsewhere in the world, it carries more racist, colonial baggage than it does here, where it is generally understood as a shortened form of native american.
american indian is a dated term that is still used in some official spaces in the united states. older indigenous people may use this (or the term indian) because they're used to saying it. if you're not indigenous, you should probably say native american or indigenous. amerindian is a portmanteau of this term and similarly isn't really favoured anymore.
indian is a dated term for indigenous people in canada and the united states. it stems from the time of christopher columbus when columbus decided to call us "indian". if you are non-indigenous, do not refer to indigenous people as indian. in canada, it is also a legal designation tied to the indian act that means some indigenous people hold "indian status," which grants them certain rights. some indigenous people in north america have reclaimed the term indian to refer to themselves.
ndn is a slang term we use to refer to ourselves online. if you're non-indigenous then bro. do not. it just stands for indian, you can't!
first nations is a term analogous to native american. it is used in canada to refer to the many indigenous nations south of the arctic circle. as someone who is cree, i'm first nations. it is an umbrella term, but not every indigenous person in canada is first nations. unlike "indian", it is not a legal term.
inuit is the term for indigenous peoples that live in what is currently canada's north. some indigenous people in alaska (and elsewhere) may also identify as inuit because the american/canadian border is a new addition in the grand scope of their histories. inuit are culturally distinct from first nations/native americans. also inuit means "the people" and y'all my inuk friend is so fucking amused every time someone says "the inuit people" because y'all are out here saying "the the people people." not all indigenous people in the north are inuit.
métis is a term for people who are descended from specific communities where indigenous people and non-indigenous settlers intermarried and created their own culture. they are specific, cultural communities within canada with their own culture and language. not everyone with mixed indigenous and settler ancestry is métis. for example, my dad is white and my mom is cree. i am not métis because i don't have any connection to a historic métis community. again, this is not a legal term the way indian is.
redsk*n is a derogatory term for native american/first nations people. the term originates from the genocide of our peoples, tied with the practice of collecting bounties for the scalps (the "red skins" in question) or other body parts of indigenous people in the west. do not use the term. even if you're talking about the football team that recently changed its name, say "the washington team" or something similar. it's a slur. (source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-brief-history-of-the-word-redskin-and-how-it-became-a-source-of-controversy/2016/05/19/062cd618-187f-11e6-9e16-2e5a123aac62_story.html)
esk*mo is another slur. it's an anglicized version of askipiw, a cree word which is more or less saying that inuit eat raw meat (i.e. that is implying they're more akin to animals than people). again, even when you're referring to sports teams that use the term in their name, don't say it. it doesn't matter what some white dude on QI told you, it's not a "more acceptable" umbrella term for northern indigenous peoples. some people might use it to refer to themselves still, but, as with other terminology on this list, if you're not indigenous, don't say it!
Happy Indigenous People's Day! Remember we are still here!
And remember, F*ck C*lumbus. He sucks
Yma Sumac, descendant of Atahualpa, the last Inca Emperor, 1950s.
I believe this only works if you live in Arizona (correct me if Iâm wrong) but please spread so people can email the senator to stop this
i live in texas and put in my actual address, it worked just fine for me!
This is a US senate bill, it works for anyone in the US (I put my Utah address and it sent to the Utah senators.)
Illustration about Native American boys who have to cut off their braids to follow school dress codes.
And black people have the same issue when it comes to finding jobs/careers.
^^^^ yes but it ainât about us right now
this is actually really important and pardon me for doing the cliche reblogging with a caption thing but i want to talk about braids and just how significant they are
to native people (and of course i canât talk about every native tribe as there are very specific sects and i only really am coming from the perspective of seneca) hair is extremely important as it represents the walking of the Sacred Path as the physical extension of thought and self, and holy men, women and two-spirits are identified through specific styles of dress and even if not holy, the hair shows what a person has participated in, their feelings, their age, whether they are married or not, whether they are in mourning and their tribe
my grandfather is seneca and he had to remove his braids at a very young age and it was an act of assimilation because his mother knew they had to try to be white in order to proceed and itâs a tool of oppression and humiliation to cut (or force to cut) a native american personâs hair for both religious and cultural preservationist reasons
my mom is half-seneca and her choice for me to not cut my hair until i was 13 and for it to be worn in traditional manner was because of this and when i cut my hair then, i cut it off at the base of my head for also this reason; i was diagnosed with depression and was going through therapy, i wanted my hair and my treatment to signify that i was becoming a new, better personâ eventually i started dying my hair but that is for separate reasons of colour symbolism and itâs still an important thing to me
please do not invalidate the struggles of other POC, i understand that this happens and itâs horrific to not be able to wear your natural hair, these are also children whose culture and religion is being stripped away from them and they canât even participate in something so important within their culture simply because of white patriarchal ideas of masculinity
^^THIS
American Indian children (especially plains ndns) were forced to attend boarding schools where they were forbidden to speak their own language and had to cut off their hair and choose a âwhiteâ name from the bible. If you refused, the teacher would often ridicule you by ignoring you anytime you attempted to speak or participate in class, to the point of saying offensive, false things about your people to rile you up enough that you gave in and picked a white name so the teacher would let you speak and tell the truth. (This is shown in bury my heart at wounded knee). In fact, it is hard to trace records before the turn of the 19th to 20th centuries bc the govt considered the way native peoples often have several different names that they go by in different context and by different people to be too annoying to record them in a census, another reason they were forced to choose white names.
Being oppressed for your natural hair and the names you choose is a real thing other poc face and itâs wrong and itâs racist, but this specific post is about what it means to American Indians, and for them it was not only racist stereotyping, but forced assimilation and genocide of their cultures.
dude holy shit being ridiculed for not assimilating was the least of your worries in a residential school. i know people who were forced to kneel on sharp rocks in a corner for speaking a single word in their native language
some fun facts abt residential schools:
âą people who went to residential schools were abused physically, sexually, verbally, and emotionally. my mushum went through all of these until he turned 18 and was allowed to leave
âą boys were not allowed to wear their braids. period. the point of the residential schools was to âkill the indian in the childâ and you can google literal before-and-after images of students that the schools would distribute as a source of PRIDE
âą the government would experiment on the students, starving them to see how long they could go without food before it seriously affected them. officially, over 6,000 native children died in residential schools. our government admits the number was likely much higher
âą residential schools were literally hitlerâs source of inspiration for concentration camps during world war II
âą where im working right now, there are people in their 30s who were forced to attend residential schools
âą the last residential school closed in 1996, one year after i was born, two hours away from where i live, twenty minutes from my familyâs reserve
native assimilation has been the goal from the very start
La importancia del cabello largo en las culturas indĂgenas americanas
The last residential school closed in 1996
Read that again. Residential schools arent something that happened in the history books 200 years ago. They happened yesturday
HUGE NEWS!! THE SUPREME COURT JUST HAD A MASSIVELY IMPORTANT RULING THAT RESULTED IN NEARLY HALF OF OKLAHOMA BEING RETURNED TO THE NATIVES!
HERES AN ARTICLE ABOUT IT
Why does this not have more notes??
Cause I posted it an hour ago donât put note bait on my posts especially cause I made this just for my native followers