Raven Redbone
Welcome! It is an honor to contribute and give another voice to the “The First Peoples” of our world.Make No Bones About It. * KAOS 89.3 FM
Sundays 4pm to 6 pm with your Host, Raven Redbone.Visit KAOS 89.3 FM @ www.kaosradio.org!Make No Bones About It
Make No Bones About It- Sound Cloud
World Peace and Prayer Day 2013
Encouraging Words from our Elders
"I appreciate your work in giving voice to our peoples. Blessings to you." Grandmother Mona PolaccaQuote of the Month
Yes, our life energy must be a gift for our future. Your life, my life, everybody’s life must follow your given path. So pray or meditate. Follow your inner path and learn just how powerful you are and learn that you are a leader for your people, your family, your children, and the Mother Earth. -Chief Arvol Looking Horse, LakotaRaven Redbone U-tubes
John Trudell
Bone Days
“Make No Bones About It”
-
Raven’s Recent Posts
Raven's Links
- "Make No Bones About It." Facebook Page
- Barbara Elk
- First Nations Repatriation Institute
- First Peoples New Direction Blog
- First Voices Indigenous Radio
- Four Worlds International Institute's (FWII)
- GOIA
- Good Thinking 4 All Our Relations
- Indian Country Today
- Indigenous Declaration on Water
- International Leonard Peltier Defense Committee
- KAOS RADIO 89.3 FM
- KSER, Public Radio 90.7 FM
- Mandyhands Community
- National Congress of American Indians
- Native American Cultural-based Community
- Native Cases Evergreen
- Native News Online
- Noho Hewa
- Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission
- NWIFC Videos
- Protect the Sacred
- Raven favorite U-Tubes
- Raven Redbone Placeblogger
- Raven Redbone’s playlists
- Raven's Podcasts
- Sacred Places, Sacred Names
- Salmon Defense | Protecting Salmon for Our Common Future
- Shield the People
- Squaxin Island Blog
- The Indigenous Environmental Network – Water Is Life
- The life and legacy of Billy Frank Jr.
- Treaties at Risk
- Tribal Journeys
- WoLakota
- World Peace and Prayer Day
“Make No Bones About It.”
Tribute to John Trudell
Follow the Raven
Tweets by ravenredboneRaven Redbone -Spinitron Weekly Playlist (If I play music that is)
- An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission
- Tribe’s steelhead monitoring could inform Skagit River fisheries
- Squaxin Island Tribe, partners look to revitalize kelp
- At tribes’ urging, fish passage to be developed at Skagit River dams
- Being Frank: Harvest management is not enough
- Test fishery data to protect stocks — now and in the future
- Treaty tree seedling planted on reservation
- Study examines potential seal predation of Stillaguamish salmon
- Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe to hold coho salmon fishery this fall
- Squaxin Island Tribe assumes greater water-quality authority
- Tribe takes steps to protect, restore local forests
Indian Country News
- An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
Censored News
- Paiute Shoshone Court Date is Friday for Defending Massacre Site from Lithium Americas
- Mohawk Nation News 'Come to Akwesasne Kanonsesne Press Conference Wednesday'
- Surveillance Continues by Civil Air Patrol Over Home of Tohono O'odham Murdered by U.S. Border Patrol
- Oglala Commemoration: Leonard Peltier Day
- Foreign Mining Giants Enter Legal Fight to Destroy Oak Flat
- Civil Air Patrol Surveilled Area of Border Patrol Protest -- Tohono O'odham Demand Justice for Raymond Mattia
- Paiute Massacre Site -- Urgent Need for Attorneys to Fight Restraining Orders
- Drugs and Weapons: Newspaper Spin Hides the United States Crimes at the Border
- Ajo and Tucson Protests -- Justice for Raymond Mattia Tohono O'odham Murdered by U.S. Border Patrol
- Statement from Mattia Family: Excessive and Deadly Force by U.S. Border Patrol
First Voices Indigenous Radio
- This Week's Program: Sunday, January 29, 2023
- This Week's Program: Sunday, January 22, 2023
- This Week's Program: Sunday, January 15, 2023
- This Week's Program: Sunday, January 1, 2023
- This Week's Program: Friday, December 23, 2022
- This Week's Program: Sunday, December 18, 2022
- This Week's Program: Sunday, December 11, 2022
- This Week's Program: Sunday, December 4, 2022
- This Week's Program: Sunday, November 20, 2022
- This Week's Program: Sunday, November 13, 2022
Lummi Nation Podcast Radio
- An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
Amber Alerts
- An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
KAOS RADIO 89.3 FM
Raven’s Comments
-
Join 7,712 other subscribers
Bone Days
\”Make No Bones About It.\”
DISCLAIMER
"Make No Bones About It" -Any views or opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of the author not "KAOS 89.3 FM".Log out -Bone Days
Monthly Archives: August 2012
Save Pe Sla
Will be talking to Chase Iron Eyes, and others about what is happening in Lakota Territory. Save Pe’Sla Sunday at 4pm pacific. There is 2 lines into the station. We also have 2 hrs to let the world know what is going on and what they need to do to make it right. The number is 360-867-5267 and its 4pm pacific let me know if you are willing to call in. Thank you all for what you do for the people. Please spread the word. Pe’ Sla, also called “Old Baldy,” is vital to Oceti Sakowin star knowledge and provid…
es evidence of our historical ties to the Black Hills as well. The Black Hills are a terrestrial mirror of the heavens above. Pe’ Sla, an open, rather bare expanse of land compared to its surroundings, corresponds to the Crab Nebula, a gaseous cloud remnant of a supernova explosion that happened in 1054 AD. It is no longer visible with the naked eye- but my people remember it. Like many other Indigenous groups, our ceremonies are tied directly to the Universe and the natural cycles of Ina Maka (Mother Earth). Therefore, it only serves that Pe’ Sla, a location in the heart of the Black Hills that serves as a basis for our star maps, is also a sacred site where ceremonies must be observed each year. According to our beliefs, these rituals must be performed to keep the Universe in harmony and preserve the well being of all, Native and non-Native alike. You see, to the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota, Pe’ Sla is not merely prairie. Its grounds are holy. It is our Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It is our Mecca. Pe’ Sla is our wailing wall, where we are meant to pray. The danger of the Oceti Sakowin losing Pe’ Sla is real, and imminent. Should Pe’ Sla pass into the hands of someone other than us, it’s highly likely that it will be developed. The State of South Dakota has expressed that it wants to use eminent domain to build a road right through the heart of Pe’ Sla. Development of Pe’ Sla would effectively cut off our access to it, and spell its destruction as a sacred site. Worse yet, we only have 9 days left before auction day. After analyzing our legal options, it was understood that due to time constraints and the fact that Pe’ Sla is currently owned by a private party (the Reynolds family), our only viable option to ensure Pe’ Sla remains a sacred site for future generations of Oceti Sakowin, as well as other Tribes like the Cheyenne and Kiowa who hold similar beliefs and ceremonies, was to buy it. The cost for Pe’ Sla at auction, also called “Reynold’s Prairie,” is estimated to run anywhere from $6 to $10 million. Chase Iron Eyes, founder of Lastrealindians.com, Inc., spearheaded the effort to save Pe’ Sla. Rodney Bordeaux, President of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, took the initiative to bring his concerns about Pe’ Sla to the Rosebud council, who voted to act as a conduit to unite all Oceti Sakowin Tribes. Within days, the collaborative effort to save Pe’ Sla spread far and wide across the Dakotas, and now, the nation. Grassroots efforts have mobilized Oceti Sakowin Tribal members who are working hard to find solutions, and raise awareness. Right now, in council chambers across The Sioux Empire of old, Tribal leaders are working, against all odds, to raise enough money to buy back land that was stolen from them by the U.S. government. Remember, the Sioux never accepted the Black Hills Settlement as proposed by the United States Supreme Court- who held that the Black Hills were wrongfully taken from us. This effort, by the united Oceti Sakowin to save one of our sacred sites, is unprecedented. Unlike stereotypical portrayals, the majority of Sioux Tribes still struggle financially. Unemployment is high, and many Tribal members live in poverty. Yet there are traditional Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota who are prepared to give till it hurts to save Pe’ Sla. Pe’ Sla is rightfully ours. It was passed down to us from our ancestors, who were here many millennia before European invaders arrived. Now we implore you; stand with us. We need your help. Pray for us and our efforts to save Pe’ Sla. Share this story. Contact your congressman and voice your concerns for Pe’ Sla, the Oceti Sakowin sacred site that’s on the auction block. Contribute to our cause to buy back Pe’ Sla. Donations may be made online with LastRealIndians here or through the Rosebud Sioux Tribe/Pe Sla, 11 Legion Ave., P.O. Box 430, Rosebud, SD 57570. All donations to the Tribe are tax-deductible and will only be used toward the purchase of Pe Sla. We’ve drawn a line in the sand. This effort may take all we’ve got, but we won’t lose Pe’ Sla without a fight. We are doing it for our children, and yours. Ruth Hopkins (Sisseton-Wahpeton/Mdewakanton/Hunkpapa) is a writer, speaker,former science professor and tribal attorney. She is a columnist for Indian Country Today Media Network and LastRealIndians.com. Read more:http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/ict_sbc/black-hills-auction-saving-pe-sla http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/ict_sbc/black-hills-auction-saving-pe-sla#ixzz24F7Wex00
Posted in Make No Bones Shows
Tagged Black Hills, Connecting with Spirit, First Peoples, Human Rights, Indigenous, KAOS 89.3 FM, Lakota, Pe Sla, Raven Redbone
Billy Frank Jr. on habitat decline and treaty rights
Billy Frank Jr., chairman of the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, talks about how the decline of salmon and salmon habitat are putting the tribes’ treaty rights at risk.
Posted in Raven views
Tagged Billy Frank Jr., First Nation, First Nations, Honoring, Human Rights, Indigenous, Native American Indian, Salish Sea