Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

April 15, 2024

Apache Stronghold: Rare Request Gives Federal Court One More Chance to Protect Sacred Site


Photo by Robin Silver


Rare request gives Ninth Circuit one more chance to protect sacred site before Supreme Court appeal

By Becket Law, Apache Stronghold, Censored News, April 15, 2024

WASHINGTON – A coalition of Western Apaches and allies today asked all 29 judges on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to protect their sacred site at Oak Flat from destruction by a mining project. In Apache Stronghold v. United States, a special “en banc” panel of eleven judges split 6-5 earlier this year, refusing to stop the federal government from transferring Oak Flat to Resolution Copper, a foreign-owned mining company that plans to turn Oak Flat into a massive mining crater, ending Apache religious practices forever. (Watch this short video to learn more).

Interior Sec Haaland, Praising Biden, Cut Off Like Everyone Else, at UN Indigenous Forum


Interior Sec Haaland, Praising Biden, Cut Off Like Everyone Else, at Indigenous Forum

By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, April 15, 2024

Interior Sec. Deb Haaland, Laguna Pueblo, used her time at the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues to cheerlead for President Biden, but like everyone else she was cut off at the three minute mark. 

Mohawk Nation News 'Suspect Seeks But Doesn't See'


 Read the article at Mohawk Nation News 

https://mohawknationnews.com/blog/2024/04/15/suspect-seeks-but-doesnt-see/

April 12, 2024

Homelands -- Going Home to Unalaska, Reflecting on Palestine


 Photo by Make Access Iqyax Apprenticeships

It is one of the most important stories we've ever shared at Censored News. Thank you Mike Ferguson for sharing your journey home with us. During WWII, Mike's ancestors, Unangax (Aleuts) in the village of Attu were taken as prisoners of war to Japan. Aleuts that remained in their villages were forcibly removed by the US government and placed in internment camps in southeast Alaska, where many died of starvation and disease. Today, Mike is learning to build the iqyax̂, traditional seagoing vessel, and the youths are bringing back their dance that almost disappeared.


Mike Ferguson, Qawalangin, showing photo of his grandpa Alec McGlashan Jr (left) and his brother Tommy (right) courtesy Mike Ferguson.

Homelands, Going Home to Unalaska, Reflecting on Palestine

By Mike Ferguson
Unalaska, Aleutian Islands
Censored News
April 12, 2024

After the work day building iqyan (kayaks) for the Qawalangin tribe here in Unalaska, I joined a poetry reading at the library. I chose to read a short segment from Journal of an Ordinary Grief written by the Palestinian National Poet, Mahmoud Darwish.

I hadn’t previously read the chapter titled, ‘The Homeland: Between Memory and History,' which asks (through a conversation) what it means to lose a homeland.

San Carlos Apache Protest Congressman and Dilution of Environmental Laws: Censored by Indian Country Today in 2004




San Carlos Apache Protest Congressman and Dilution of Environmental Laws: Censored by Indian Country Today in 2004

Twenty years ago, San Carlos Apache elders were censored by Indian Country Today, after the newspaper was sold to new owners. Today, their words are as important as ever, on the land and water stolen. 

Representatives of the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation had a different take on Renzi and the ESA. They held signs with slogans like "Make Renzi an endangered species," "Clear cut Renzi, not squirrels," and "Renzi insults Apache beliefs."

By Brenda Norrell

(September 20, 2004) SAFFORD, Arizona – San Carlos Apache protested outside a Congressional field hearing and accused Congressman Rick Renzi, R-Ariz., of attempting to water down environmental protection laws aimed at protecting the red squirrel and other species in the fragile environment of sacred Mount Graham.

Ola Cassadore Davis, chair of the Apache Survival Coalition, said Renzi was promoting unprincipled developers like the University of Arizona astronomers, at the expense of Apache religious life and Apache family values.