Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

July 16, 2021

Mohawk Nation News 'Residential School Mass Murders in Canada'

 

RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL MASS MURDERS IN CANADA Audio

 Mohawk Nation News

https://mohawknationnews.com/blog/2021/07/16/residential-school-mass-murders-in-canada-audio/

Please post and circulate.

WATCH THIS FILM “ST. ANNE’S INDIAN RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL: FORT ALBANY, BRUTAL & NOTORIOUS, GOVERNMENT & CHURCH RUN” [James Bay Ontario].  THEN READ THE COMMENTS: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcgLDvR32p0

AUDIO https://mohawknationnews.com/blog/2021/07/16/residential-school-mass-murders-in-canada-audio/

ST, ANNE’S RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL, FORT ALBANY ONT.

Canada. This is your legacy. Churches in native communities are burning.  “Almost everything we call ‘higher culture’ is based on the spiritualization of cruelty, on it’s becoming more profound”, said Nietzsche.

The film is based on information from those still alive about their horror. The children were made to harm each other. Guilt of the children on top of the horror they lived. The church hierarchy, politicians, priests, nuns and staff threatened that the devil will kill them if they did not allow the rape or told anyone about the torture. Three boys ran away, were caught, brought back and beaten to death to scare the other children. We survivors have to free our children.


New Mexico: Reckless U.S. Government's Nuclear Industry Left Trail of Cancer for Navajos and Hispanics


Shattered remains

The fight to right the injustices of Trinity

Hidden Genocide -- Genocide in Canada is now confirmed with the location of widespread hidden graves of children who were kidnapped and incarcerated in residential schools. Survivors describe the murder of children.
In the U.S., the widespread deaths resulting from the U.S. government's reckless nuclear industry is genocide often hidden from history.
Nuclear energy left a trail of cancer deaths with the detonation of the first atomic bomb at Trinity in south-central New Mexico. The largest radioactive spill was at Church Rock, New Mexico, leaving a trail of death for Dine' (Navajos.) This radiation now flows west in the Rio Puerco wash toward Flagstaff, Arizona.
The targeting of Native communities went further in New Mexico and Arizona, as Navajo and Pueblo were sent to their deaths in the uranium mines without protective clothing. The radioactive dust covered their food, and the grass for livestock; miners brought the death dust home to their families on their clothing.
This reckless genocide was repeated at uranium mines in Native communities in Cove and elsewhere on the Navajo Nation, in Acoma and Laguna Pueblos, and throughout the west.
As far away as Canada, uranium mining left behind a trail of cancer deaths for Dene.
The recklessness of the U.S. government left behind a trail of cancer for Western Shoshone in Nevada from atomic bomb detonations. The U.S. continues this nuclear recklessness by pursuing Yucca Mountain for nuclear waste dumping. There is no safe way to store nuclear waste.
John Redhouse, Dine', was among the first Dine' to rise up in the defense of land and water rights in modern times.

July 15, 2021

Red Road to DC: For Generations to Come


July 14, 2021

Native activists begin cross-country tour to highlight at-risk sacred sites


Group says Biden must address crisis posed by development in Indian Country


Schedule July 14 -- 29, 2021

 

BELLINGHAM, Washington — Native American activists and allies from across the country today began a cross-country tour called the Red Road to DC to highlight the threats to Indigenous sacred sites. They will transport a totem pole carved by the House of Tears Carvers from Lummi Nation to each sacred site to highlight the importance of President Biden taking immediate action to protect the areas. 

 

"It is our Xa xalh Xechnging, our sacred obligation, as Lummi people, to care for our lands, waters, and all living things on Earth," said Jewell James (Lummi), master carver at House of Tears Carvers. "Each person who comes to the events at the sacred sites who lays their hands on it, is instilling it with a message and a prayer that the places Indian people pray, and collect foods and medicines, will be protected." 

 

July 13, 2021

Indigenous Rights Defenders Battle to Their Deaths in Mexico


Simon Perez, David Valdez, Tomas Rojo, Luis Urbano

Indigenous Rights Defenders Battle to Their Deaths in Mexico

By Brenda Norrell
Censored News

MEXICO CITY —  Indigenous Rights Defender Simón Pedro Pérez López, Tzeltal, was murdered by a gunman on a motorcycle in southern Mexico. Simon was the fourth well-known Indigenous rights defender to be assassinated in Mexico since May.

Simon was gunned down outside a market in Simojovel, a town in Chiapas state, on July 5. He was known better as Simón Pedro and had been active in a social justice organization born out of the 1998 massacre of 45 Indigenous people in the nearby town of Acteal.

Simon, shown on the screen, was honored in Paris, as the Zapatistas delegation arrived in Paris this week. Simon was assassinated in Chiapas on July 5, 2021.

Mohawk Nation News 'Native Women to Sign Administrative Death Warrants'