Category Archives: Make No Bones Shows

Tara Trudell on “Make No Bones About It.” Jan 24th, 2016 at 4pm

trudellIt is through my artistic endeavor, combined with my passion for poetry that I am able to express fearlessness of spirit on behalf of my family, people, community, commitment to social justice awareness, and most importantly my love of earth.  Incorporating the visuals with the power of words, it is my goal to create work with a poetic sense of thought and action to produce art that encourages dialogue and strengthens community.

http://taratrudell.tumblr.com/

 

 

Cheyenne Randall shares about his artwork on Make No Bones About It, Jan. 3rd, 2016 at 4pm

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“Coyotes Lair” mixed media on panel piece of art that Cheyenne made for John and his family “Celebrate Love. Celebrate Life” damn what an amazing dude.
-Cheyenne Randall

(art created by Cheyenne Randall)

The 36-year-old Seattle artist, who has been practicing Native American artwork for years, brings a special brand of creativity to classic images by Photoshopping uniquely American tattoos onto whatever skin is visible on the subjects. A Tumblr page called Shopped Tattoos showcases the artwork, as does an Instagram feed that includes more of Randall’s work and photographs. Cheyenne Randall, has created a bundle of iconic personalities from a parallel universe. One of his lates is Coyotes Lair in honor of the John Trudell.

Other sites to learn more about Seattle based artist, Cheyenne Randall.

http://shoppedtattoos.tumblr.com

http://cheyennerandall.tumblr.com/

http://lakotascribbler.tumblr.com/

 

This Sunday, at 5 pm we will be tuning into Radio Free Alcatraz, cira 1970 with John Trudell.

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Would like to express my deepest thanks to Pacifica Radio Archives for providing both December 15, 197o and December 19th, 1970 segments for our listening. So tune in this Sunday at 5pm and listening to Free Radio Alcatraz with John Trudell.

Tune in to KAOS Radio

 

Jimbo Simmons and Chauncey Peltier on Make No Bones About It. Dec 27th, 2015 at 5pm

Jimbo Simmons

Jimbo Simmons

WILLIAM “JIMBO” SIMMONS
Human Rights Leader, American Indian Movement

Jimbo Simmons is a member of the Choctaw nation and of the Leadership Council of the American Indian Movement West (AIM-WEST), which resists colonization, respects traditional knowledge and self-determination, and raises awareness on issues that concern Indians of the Americas, from racism to protection of sacred sites, the rights of the child, treaties, political prisoners, police brutality, immigration and militarization, climate change and the United Nations General Assembly “Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. He is in solidarity with Palestinians and all indigenous peoples that are subjected to expulsion and ethnic cleansing.

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Chauncey Peltier

Chauncey Peltier, son of Leonard Peltier, the Native American who was convicted of killing two FBI agents in 1975 and sentenced to two consecutive terms of life imprisonment, is now taking care of all the paintings his dad makes in prison. Benjamin Brink/Staff

Alex White Plume on Make No Bones About It. Dec 27th, 2015 at 4pm

Alex White Plume

Alex White Plume

Lakota Activist Alex White Plume lives with his family and extended family on a 2,000-acre ranch near Wounded Knee Creek, SD. We will be visiting with Alex about the morning of December 29, 1890, Wound Knee Massacre and Big Foot Ride.  “The whole Sioux Nation was wounded at that last terrible massacre, and we’ve been suffering ever since. It’s true we have our own ways of healing ourselves from the genocidal wound, but there is just so much historical trauma, so much pain, so much death,” White Plume said, and he would know. It is time for us to just listen, thank you Alex White Plume for your willingness to share with us on KAOS Radio, this Sunday, Dec 27th, 2015 at 4pm. Tune in http://www.kaosradio.org

Eddie Little Crow on Make No Bones About It. Dec 6th, 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.

Tom Goldtooth on “Make No Bones About It”. October 25th, 2015 at 4pm

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Tom Goldtooth (Dine’ and Dakota), Executive Director – Tom is Dine’ and Dakota and lives in Minnesota. Since the late 1980’s, Tom has been involved with environmental related issues and programs working within tribal governments in developing indigenous-based environmental protection infrastructures. Tom works with indigenous peoples worldwide. Tom is known as one of the environmental justice movement grassroots leaders in North America addressing toxics and health, mining, energy, climate, water, globalization, sustainable development and indigenous rights issues. Tom is one of the founders of the Durban Group for Climate Justice; co-founder of Climate Justice NOW!; a co-founder of the U.S. based Environmental Justice Climate Change initiative and a member of the International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change that operates as the indigenous caucus within the United Nation Framework Convention on Climate Change. Tom is a policy adviser to indigenous communities on environmental protection and more recently on climate policy focusing on mitigation, adaptation and concerns of false solutions.
Email: ien@igc.org
Bemidji, MN 56619

Tom Goldtooth will be at the 1st annual Indigenous Climate Justice Symposium will be held at The Evergreen State College Longhouse on November 5-6, 2015. It will bring together speakers from Native communities that are working to keep fossil fuels in the ground, by stopping coal terminals, oil trains and fracking, and protecting treaty resources from the threat of climate change. Its major goal would be to get students and youth, particularly tribal youth, involved in community-based climate justice efforts. All events are free and open to Evergreen students and the public (please inform the organizers about any classes that may attend).

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5:
KEYNOTE BY TOM GOLDTOOTH
(7:00 – 9:30 pm)
Indigenous Environmental Network Executive Director:
“The Paris Climate Accord: Will it be a Crime Against Humanity and Mother Earth?”
http://www.ienearth.org

The Symposium is an outgrowth of the Climate Change and Pacific Rim Indigenous Nations Project at Evergreen, started by the Northwest Indian Applied Research Institute. The Project published a 2006 report for Indigenous leadership, a 2010 community organizing booklet, and the 2012 Oregon State University Press anthology “Asserting Native Resilience: Pacific Rim Indigenous Nations Face the Climate Crisis.” For these publications, see http://academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossmaz/climate.html

The Symposium is sponsored by the Climate Change and Pacific Rim Indigenous Nations Project, and hosted by the Resource Rebels program, with support from the Graduate Program on the Environment, Master of Public Administration – Tribal Governance, Native Programs and Sustainability & Justice planning units, President’s Diversity Fund, Clean Energy Committee, Academic Deans’ Office, and Evergreen programs Engaging with Endangered Northwest, Shipping Out & Writing Home, Caliban & the Witch, Even When Erased We Exist, and Introduction to Environmental Studies.

For more information, contact Shangrila Joshi Wynn:
wynns@evergreen.edu.

Invite friends on the Facebook event page at
https://www.facebook.com/events/1740884809472858/

You can download an 8.5″x 11″ poster for the Indigenous Climate Justice Symposium
(Nov. 5-6, at the Evergreen Longhouse):
http://academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossmaz/ICJSPoster.pdf

Indigenous Peoples Day 2015

Citizens urge Olympia to recognize Indigenous People’s Day in 2015

Olympia’s first Indigenous Peoples’ Day celebration set for Oct. 12

Olympia to honor Indigenous Peoples’ Day

Indigenous Peoples Day pays respect to Olympia’s tribal past, present and future

Downtown Olympia mural honors Native American activist Leonard Peltier

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

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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?