Daily Archives: October 11, 2015

Free Leonard Peltier!

12122791_1628995517363418_7971023988576144332_n

A shout out to Olympia, WA: You’re invited to the unveiling of a new mural in honor of Leonard Peltier, Monday, 12 October, noon-3:00 p.m. 421 4th East. See you there!

Olympia’s first Indigenous Peoples’ Day celebration set for Oct. 12 -From Olympian Newspaper

Victory Song

Victory Song

BY ANDY HOBBS
Staff writer

Olympia’s first Indigenous Peoples’ Day will be celebrated Monday with a tribute to the area’s Native American heritage.

The family-friendly event will run from 4-8 p.m. at Sylvester Park, located at Capitol Way and Legion Way in downtown Olympia. Representatives from local tribes, including Lummi, Nisqually, Puyallup, Squaxin, Quileute and others, are scheduled to speak.

Olympia recently joined a short list of cities to declare the second Monday in October as Indigenous Peoples’ Day. This date is typically observed as Columbus Day, a legal holiday in some states that honors the arrival of European explorer Christopher Columbus in the Americas.

However, history often glosses over the atrocities associated with the arrival of Europeans: slavery, genocide and the brutal exploitation of Native Americans.

“Most Americans are in complete denial of what happened here in the Americas,” said Brian Frisina, also known as Raven Redbone, who hosts a weekly radio program about indigenous peoples on KAOS-89.3 FM. “It was a big step for the city of Olympia to make that move toward healing and reconciliation with the tribes.”

The seeds for the local Indigenous Peoples’ Day were planted in October 2014, when organizer Lucas Anderson and several supporters urged the Olympia City Council to rename Columbus Day.

One year later, Anderson is amazed at the way Olympia has embraced the concept. He hopes to see the movement spread across Washington.

“That shows a lot of people are more educated and aware of some of the things that are misportrayed in history,” he said. “Olympia is really smart to just go ahead and do this now.”

Monday’s event will start with a welcome from the Nisqually and Squaxin tribes along with songs from the Squaxin Island Drum Group, according to organizers. Other participants will include:

▪ Nancy Shippentower-Games, a tribal leader with the Puyallup Nation.

▪ State Sen. John McCoy, a Democrat from the Tulalip Nation who successfully pushed for teaching tribal history in the state’s public schools.

▪ Swil Kanim of the Lummi Nation, who is a violin virtuoso, native storyteller and actor.

▪ DouGlas Skarhoniatai of the Mohawk Nation, who will share songs and debut “Uncle Billy Says.”

▪ Olympia resident Ben Sittingbull of the Lakota Nation.

▪ The Native Student Alliance from The Evergreen State College.

▪ Olympia Mayor Stephen Buxbaum and Mayor Pro-tem Nathaniel Jones.

LOCAL
Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/news/local/article38575644.html#storylink=cpy

Eddie Little Crow, Lakota shares on Make No Bones About. October 11th, 2015 at 4pm

Eddie Little Crow

Eddie Little Crow

Ed Little Crow is Lakota, Dakota member of the Elders Council in S. Oregon, veteran of the Seige of Wounded Knee, 1973, father and poet. His years as a quiet, steady force in the Oregon communities within which he has lived, worked and prayed have etched themselves into the psyche of all he meets.

Ira Coyne, Chauncey Peltier share about the Mural dedicated to Leonard Peltier October 11th, 2015 at 5pm

peltier-web

A local sign painter and muralist in Olympia, Ira Coyne, heard Chauncey interviewed by Raven Redbone on his show Make No Bones About it on KAOS radio. When Ira learned Leonard was a painter, he looked up his work and was taken by the pink lion depicted in Stalking. He then reached out to Raven and Chauncey to turn this piece into a mural at our city’s artesian well. Chauncey is now in Olympia for the week to work on the mural with Ira and anyone else who shows up at the well to lend a hand. (The official ribbon cutting for the mural will coincide with Olympia’s Inaugural Indigenous Peoples Day, this Monday October 12, at 12:00 pm by Olympia’s Artesian Well.)

Mask Magazine Article

Who is Leonard Peltier?

Research is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods with Dr. Shawn Wislon on October 11th, 2015 from 5:30-6pm

Shawn-Wilson

Shawn Wilson, B.Sc. (U of Manitoba, Canada), M.A. (U of Alaska, USA), PhD. (Monash University, Australia). I am Opaskwayak Cree from northern Manitoba in Canada. My personal roles include being father to three boys, being a son, uncle, husband, teacher, student, world traveller, knowledge keeper and knowledge seeker.

In my professional roles as community psychologist, researcher and educated Cree, I’ve spent much of my life straddling the Indigenous and mainstream worlds. Most of my time these days is spent teaching other Indigenous knowledge seekers (and my kids) how to accomplish this balancing act while still keeping both feet on the ground. In addition to being a full-time dad, I also work part-time for the Northern Rivers University Department of Rural Health in Lismore, NSW Australia, building research capacity with primary health care workers. Travelling and meeting people from other nations and cultures has been a big part of my life, as has my work with traditional Healers, Elders and Knowledge Keepers. In my previous book Gwitch’in Native Elders: Not just knowledge but a way of looking at the world, I began to document some ideas about just what an Elder is and how they can be supported. My newly released book Research is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods examines some of the similarities in philosophy underlying Indigenous peoples’ research methodologies in Canada and Australia. In addition to further articulating Indigenous philosophies and research paradigms, my research focuses on the inter-related concepts of identity, health and healing, culture and wellbeing.

Area(s) of Expertise International Indigenous research methodologies and epistemologies; Counselling and Counsellor Education, Indigenous mental health and identity; Indigenous health and wellbeing Current Research Activities I am currently working on documenting my parents’ life stories, as they provide living examples of Indigenist philosophy in action.

Two Key Publications Wilson, S. Research is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods. (2008) Fernwood Publishing: Halifax, NS Canada. ISBN: 9781552662816 Wilson, S.

“What is an Indigenist Research Paradigm?” (2007) Editorial in Canadian Journal of Native Education, 30(2), 193-196