Oglala Sioux Tribal President Frank Star Comes Out with SD Congressman Dusty Johnson and Cheyenne River Sioux Tribal Chairman Ryman LeBeau at the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre Grave-site. (Photo courtesy Congressman Dusty Johnson) Cheyenne River Lakota Tribal Chairman Ryman LeBeau, said, “I can’t remember the last time we had a
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Shared by Native Sun News Today July 13, 2023
AUGUSTA, MAINE—Despite having a Democrat in the governor’s chair, Maine tribes were dealt a blow last week when Governor Janet Mills vetoed a bill designed to ensure federal law applied to Maine tribes when it came to sovereignty. The nature and focus of tribal sovereignty has long been misunderstood by
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Shared by Native Sun News Today July 13, 2023
WINDOW ROCK, NAVAJO NATION – Last week’s Supreme Court decision in Arizona et al. v. Navajo Nation did not give the relief the Nation sought, which was a modest request for the United States to assess the Nation’s water needs and develop a plan to meet them. The decision does
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Shared by Native Sun News Today July 13, 2023
On June 24th, the Montana AFL-CIO annual conference made history. By unanimous consent, Jason Small, Northern Cheyenne and standing Republican Montana State Senator was chosen to be the new head of the Montana AFL-CIO chapter. Jason Small is in the center of photograph. (Photo courtesy AFL-CIO) HELENA, MONT. – On
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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 29, 2023
Rural America Initiatives staff and visitors gathered outside RAI on South Valley Drive where the portraits of Wilmer Mesteth and Calvin Jumping Bull were displayed in front of two chairs artfully draped in handcrafted star quilts. L to R: Dakota Mesteth, Ivas Long Standing and Danielle Smith. (Photo courtesy Rural
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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 29, 2023
The Navajo Nation had argued that their water rights were protected under an 1868 treaty. (Photo courtesy Earth.Org) WASHINGTON, DC—In Arizona v Navajo Nation, the Navajo tribe sought, according to the dissenting opinion of Justice Neil Gorsuch, for the government to develop a plan for how to address water rights.
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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 29, 2023
CRST Chairman Ryman LeBeau (left) speaks to a gathering of Wounded Knee Descendants and film makers who came from Connecticut to develop a documentary film about the Remove the Stain Act. Stephen Curran (right) is founder and Executive Director of Filmcreek Productions and wears a beaded bolo tie gifted to
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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 29, 2023
Cloud Horse Arts Institution, with a grant from the National Endowment of the Arts is teaming up with Dan Snethen (center) for the dramatic production of Charlotte’s Web. (Photo courtesy Cloud Horse Media) The Cloud Horse Art Institute, a Lakota 501c3, with its campus located in Kyle SD, is offering
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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 29, 2023
(EAGAN, Minn., June 24, 2023) – MMIR Intersects with Human Trafficking “We recognize that the crisis of our Missing and Murdered Indigenous Relatives (MMIR) intersects with human trafficking and that eradicating violence against Native people hinges upon our ability to educate the public,” said CEO Lori Jump, StrongHearts Native Helpline.
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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 29, 2023
On May 4, 1970, members of the Ohio National Guard fired into a crowd of Kent State University demonstrators, killing four and wounding nine Kent State students. The impact of the shootings was dramatic. The event triggered a nationwide student strike that forced hundreds of colleges and universities to close.
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Shared by Native Sun News Today June 23, 2023