Dr. Yekuhsiyo Rosa King (Oneida) is a member of the Turtle clan. Her ukwehuwe (Oneida) name means “she has a nice face”. She was born and raised on the reservation and has been learning the language for ten years and has been teaching for nine years. She is a licensed American Indian Language teacher by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction (DPI). Dr. King is currently a lead instructor in the TehatiwʌnákhwaɁ Language Nest Immersion Program that serves students 3-7 years old. In this podcast, Dr. King tells us all about the Language Nest Immersion Program.
Voices:
Kandi “EagleWoman” White (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara) is a leading voice in the fight to bring visibility to the impacts that climate change and environmental injustice are having on Indigenous communities across North America. Kandi began her work with the Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN) as the Tribal Campus Climate Challenge Coordinator, engaging with more than 30 Tribal colleges to instate community based environmental programs and connect Indigenous youth with green jobs.
Every single case deserves justice’: Non-profit seeks data
sovereignty and justice for Alaska’s missing and murdered.
Report from 90.3fm KNBA, Alaska.
Produced by Tripp Crouse.
Image: KNBA Logo
The Wampanoag Peoples have lived in the region of what is now southeastern Massachusetts for more than 12,000 years. The year 2020 represents 400 years since colonizers voyaged on the Mayflower and founded Plymouth Colony as settlers on Native land. This anniversary is a time of reckoning with that history of violence, dispossession, removal. The story of Plymouth Colony cannot be told without the perspectives of Indigenous Peoples who were here as that ship arrived and who still remain.
En el marco del Día Internacional de la mujer conmemoramos la lucha de las ancestras que han procurado el bienestar e igualdad para las mujeres rompiendo con barreras machistas y patriarcales.
Reconocemos en este programa la lucha de distintas mujeres Indígenas que han sobresalido y generado cambios en favor de las mujeres Indígenas en los últimos años. !Escuche, descargue y comparta!
Musicalización:
Música de Introducción:
“Burn Your Village to the Ground” por A Tribe Called Red. Usado con permiso.
Los pueblos Indígenas tienen derecho a estar informados de lo que sucede en distintas partes del mundo. En este material podrá escuchar, descargar y compartir noticias destacadas de Colombia, Estados Unidos, México, Guatemala y Ecuador.
Música de Introducción:
“Burn Your Village to the Ground” por A Tribe Called Red. Usado con permiso.
En 1999, la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura (UNESCO) proclamó el 21 de febrero Día Internacional de la Lengua Materna como un día propicio para: Promover la reflexión y movilización a favor de la diversidad lingüística y de las lenguas del mundo.
States should work with indigenous women and their communities to enable programmes around capacity building and strengthening of leadership. Indigenous women need to be included in decision making processes, at each level and in all areas.