Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

June 3, 2020

Police shot, blinded and beat news reporters and peaceful protesters at rallies demanding justice for George Floyd



Police shot, blinded and beat news reporters and peaceful protesters at rallies demanding justice for George Floyd

By Brenda Norrell
Censored News
June 3, 2020

News reporters and peaceful protesters were shot, blinded, beaten and gassed by militarized police across the United States, during the rallies for justice of Black Lives Matter, following the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

The media was targeted, shot with rubber bullets and punched, including an Australian news team outside the White House. This happened as peaceful protesters were fired on with projectiles and gassed so that Trump could walk across to a church and hold a Bible for a photo op.

June 2, 2020

Navajo Poet Laureate Laura Tohe receives Academy of American Poets Fellowship


Laura Tohe Photo by J Morgan Edwards

Navajo Poet Laureate Laura Tohe receives Academy of American Poets Fellowship

By Brenda Norrell
Censored News

Laura Tohe, Poet Laureate of the Navajo Nation, is the recipient of a major fellowship award from the Academy of American Poets. She is one of 23 Poets Laureate of states, cities, counties, and the Navajo Nation who will receive the Poets Laureate fellowship this year. And the funds will be used to lead civic poetry programs locally in the year ahead. These initiatives will take place between 2020-2021.

Tohe, who grew up in the Chuska Mountains, on the Navajo Nation in Crystal, New Mexico, shares the joy of life and the Female Rain in the sweet-scented pinyon high county. She also shares the reality of the abuse in boarding schools.

“Our language was beat out of us,” Tohe said. “Boarding school was taking away our voices.”

Tohe, however, struggled and maintained her “Navajo heart and Navajo mind.”

“I wrote in secret for a long time," Tohe said in Tucson in 2007.

June 1, 2020

Desecration of Ali Jegk, Tohono O'odham Nation, underway by U.S. Israeli spy towers


Photo by Greg Nez
Photo by Ofelia Rivas
Desecration of Veju'pan in Ali Jegk (Little Clearing) Community
on the Tohono O'odham Nation
Photos by Ofelia Rivas and Greg Nez, Tohono O'odham, copyright
.

We are all related, we will rebuild; Migizi Communication responds to loss of their home


Migizi Indian Youth Center in flames in Minneapolis. Funds now being donated to rebuild.
We are all related, we will rebuild; Migizi Communication responds to loss of their home

Last Real Indians

We at Migizi are devastated by the loss of our home. The building is just a block and a half away from the Minneapolis police precinct building that burned last night. Although our home was not specifically targeted, flames from another fire spread to us.

It is painful to lose a home. The youth we proudly serve deserve our best. We refer to children as wakanyeja, sacred ones. Our youth are wakan, sacred. This home is sacred.

Our youth primarily need two things - a positive identity based on their talents, dreams and American Indian cultural ways. The also need a sense of belonging - connections to others in a circle of support.

Migizi is that circle, an extended family of relatives who are trying to help youth be successful, contributing members of the American Indian and broader community - as students, storytellers, workers earning a living wage or better, and fiercely proud Indigenous people.

We are very, very sad today. It hurts to see hard work, dreams and spirit - yes, spirit - go up in flames. But the Migizi circle is string and we will rebuild. We will rebuild! We are grateful and moved by the outpouring of concern, love and financial support that we have seen in just a few hours.

We are working through many emotions, including disbelief and anger. We moved into this new home only last year, after raising more than $1.6 million to buy it and renovate it. But despite our sadness, we also have a deep understanding of why Minneapolis has resorted to destructive protest, in the face such overwhelming oppression faced by African Americans, American Indian peoples and others.

This is a struggle that is about much more than police brutality. Sure, that’s a huge problem. To understand this pain, you must read the statement by leaders of other Minneapolis American Indian organizations about the long history of abuse by police in our community, Our own youth face this kind of racism and discrimination nearly every day. As Minneapolis NAACP Leslie Redmond said today, “We’re all tired of being tired.”

This is about more than the police, It’s about nearly every system in Minnesota - institutional racism. Minnesota has among the worst disparities in education, health, housing, and incarcerations of any other state in the Nation. These problems go deep, as far back as the Minnesota state leaders who legalized taking the best Dakota farmland and Ojibwe timber.

But the struggle we all face today is a collective struggle, no matter your skin color. Our tribal culture is about collective well-being.

We are not an individualistic culture. We define our success in the context of the circle, how we can use our talents and resources to make the circle stronger. We lift up everyone in the circle, we share, we help, we support, we love. We are all related. Your well-being impacts my well-being.

If Minnesota would just follow these indigenous principals, then there would be no need for destructive protests. There would be no inequity, no poverty, no domination - in the collective circle.

In our Indian way, this home should feel like your home. You would see the destruction of Magizi’s home as you would the destruction of your own home. That’s how we see the world. We are all related and that’s how we will rebuild.

To support Magizi’s rebuilding efforts .https://www.facebook.com/donate/3006694379366840/

Dineh Loren Tapahe 'My sister is not a number'

Emily (on right) with her twin sister Imogene at Christmas.
My Sister is Not a Number

By Loren Tapahe, Dine'
Published with permission at Censored News

This story is for all the uncelebrated beautiful and kind Navajo sisters or daughters who have helped their families and friends whenever and wherever they could throughout their lives. Maybe they didn’t get a college degree or change the world with a new invention but were smart enough to live through difficult years of the 1940’s and 50’s and help their parents, grandparents, their siblings and nieces and nephews.

I also write story this to honor my sister Emily, who passed away May 24, 2020 due to the Coronavirus at the Little Sisters of the Poor Assisted Living Center in Gallup, NM. This story is to also help others to let them know they are not alone in their grieving.