Yep this pretty much covers how history is taught here

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Today's Document
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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Product Placement
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todays bird
we're not kids anymore.
hello vonnie
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Peter Solarz
NASA
will byers stan first human second

roma★
Sweet Seals For You, Always

izzy's playlists!
Keni
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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@origamipanda
Yep this pretty much covers how history is taught here
Native Americans dancing around a dethroned Columbus statue was the content I didn’t know I needed today
Inuit Knowledge - Climate Change the Movie
WHY EATING SEASONALLY IS IMPORTANT
•save money - food is at it’s highest supply
•food is better - it is grown closer to home so less likely to rot
•support local, sustainable farmers
•more environmentally friendly
Liked on YouTube: ‘Indian’ or 'Native American’? [Reservations, Part 0] https://youtu.be/kh88fVP2FWQ
Carlotta Cardana The Red Road: Picturing Modern Native American Indigenous Identity
*signal boost for indigenous solidarity #nodapl see more details on how to help here
support an Indigenous photographer here, working hard to document the Great Sioux Nation’s protests in North Dakota.
Photo #2: Ula and Tim Tyler. This Eastern Shoshone couple have been married for 54 years and experienced reservation life before there was electricity or running water.
Photo #4: Ishkoten Dougi. Ishkoten is an artist from the Isleta Pueblo Indian Reservation in New Mexico. He is portrayed in his studio, surrounded by his artwork that represents some of the atrocities inflicted on Native Americans.
Photo #5: Evereta and her Mustang. When Evereta Thinn, 30, entered college as the only Native American in her English 101 class, it was at that moment she realized that she needed to speak up and not be that stereotypical “shy” Indian who keeps to herself. She works as an administrator at the school district on the Navajo Nation and aspires to start a language and cultural immersion school for the Diné (Navajo) people.
Photo #8: Fast Eddie (left), a pow wow dancer, is pictured with social media celebrity, Two Braids.
Photo #10: Jarrod after the rodeo. Jarrod Ferris, Eastern Shoshone and Arapaho from the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming, has been bull riding since age 6. He hopes to one day win the title as world champion so that he can buy his mom a new house.
*Photo #13: Crisosto Apache, from the Mescalero Apache tribe of New Mexico, is an activist for LGBT rights in the Native community. He explains that there is no word for “gay” in any Native American language, but is referred to as being “two spirited.”
Photo #14: Maka in his classroom. After traveling the world and teaching English in Japan, Maka Clifford, from Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, realized his calling was going back to the Reservation to teach his own people and inspire young kids to explore life off the reservation.
100 Years of Beauty
↳ Diné
birchbark fishtail earrings, Daja Design Co (Athabascan)
Es-ta-yeshi (”Old Nell” or Nelly), Sister of Mariano, Navajo chief, with her revolver and Winchester
Photographer: Ben Wittick Date: circa 1885-1887? Negative Number 015952
Interior view of a kiva at Walpi Pueblo, First Mesa, Arizona; two unidentified Native American (Hopi) men sit in the kiva; - Poley - 1899
Wife of Pablo Silva, (Tewa) Ralph and Brijida (i.e. Brigida) - Poley - 1910
Stock Id: 20899 General Rug Type:American Specific Rug Type:Navajo Rugs Circa: 1940 Color: Camel Origin: USA Width: 4’ 0’’ ( 121.9 cm ) Length: 5’ 4’’ ( 162.6 cm )
Navajo weaver working at loom
Date: 1920? Negative Number 035805