#Repost @seedingsovereignty ・・・ In light of the second week of #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth we wanted to call attention to something that we’ve seen an embarrassing amount of lately: anti-blackness. If y’all believe Native American heritage isn’t intrinsically linked to the legacy of Blackness on Turtle Island, this is not the place for you. We are pained every time we see an ignorant remark made in one of our spaces, but are particularly hurt by the unabashed prejudice that comes from folks we know as fam. Race has consistently been used by colonizers as a legal marker to legally mark someone as “other” to justify the treatment they receive because of their “other” marking. Watching members of our community be anti-Black is retraumatizing because SOME OF Y’ALL ACT LIKE WE WEREN’T MARKED TOO! Behaving like we haven’t welcomed Black relations into our communities/tribes/families/ceremonies, etc., or forgetting that we have in turn been welcomed/housed/fed, or the history of our children being protected from instances of forced relocation — is shameful. Our communities are and desperately need to be in kinship and reciprocity with one another. This is a loving but firm reminder (*as shared by our sib/educator @lareenolastname) that Black relatives are not settlers. Having the agency to settle and being violently displaced are two different things. We encourage you to think about how you’re honoring not only Indigenous peoples this month, but also and especially — how you are honoring people of the African diaspora through your thoughts, speech, and actions. This month exists for us to educate, and in our opinion, be educated about the needs of our community and we implore you to see anti-Blackness as an issue that needs to be addressed in order for us all to be liberated. #seedingsovereignty #liberation #nativehistory #blackindigenous #liberation #community #kinship #decolonizeyourmind #decolonizing #antiblackness https://www.instagram.com/p/B467PvPAO1h/?igshid=8u71cdr2yknf









