Native Peoples Magazine - http://www.nativepeoples.com/article
2007 Nov/Dec On the Wind (News)
http://www.nativepeoples.com/article/articles/265/1/2007-NovDec-On-the-Wind-News/Page1.html
By Daniel Gibson
Published on 11/8/2007
 
Daniel Gibson

 
Native America is producing a new generation of scientists and engineers; an Ojibwe canoe lands in Russia; and plans are under way to designate a national holiday honoring Indians. Also, other important news in the arts, education, the environment, business, politics, sports, health and other realms of life in Indian Country.

2007 November/December On the Wind (News)
features

Growing Native Scientists
Recognized for their outstanding skills in the arts, Native Americans are now proving themselves adept in many science fields, as shown by the members of the American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES).

left: Water hydrologist Dr. Karletta Chief (Navajo). will be a featured speaker at the 2007 AISES conference. Photo courtesy AISES.

AISES, founded in 1977, has more than 160 chapters on university campuses across America nurturing Native science students. It funds an ambitious college scholarship program, produces Native science curricula and offers teacher training for grades K–12 in some 150 schools nationwide. Also, AISES organizes an annual science fair for more than 500 students in grades 5–12, arranges summer internships, supervises professional chapters for working scientists and offers numerous other programs.

The huge AISES annual conference is attended by hundreds of major corporations, federal agencies and universities reaching out to Native professionals and students in the sciences. The 2007 conference will be held in Phoenix, Nov. 1–3. Featured speakers will include astronaut John Herrington (Chickasaw), cultural preservationist Brian Patterson (Oneida) and former Miss Navajo and water hydrologist Dr. Karletta Chief (Navajo). The group’s Professional of the Year awards will be presented to civil engineer Lorena Hegdal (Inupiaq Eskimo), lead engineer on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System; aeronautical engineer Gary Bishop (White Earth Ojibwe), who leads the Boeing Company’s Apache helicopter program; electrical engineer Dr. Stanley Atcitty (Diné), who grew up in a hogan near Medicine Hat, Utah and now directs energy research at Sandia National Laboratories; and software engineer Tara Astigarraga (Choctaw) with IBM. Presenting the professional awards will be Rick Stephen (Pala Band of Mission Indians), senior vice president of Boeing. Details: aises.org


A Canoe Crosses the Big Water
This summer a traditional Chippewa canoe from Minnesota was flown across the Atlantic to the Russian community of Petrozavodsk as part of an international boat-building summit. Accompanying the canoe was a group of 10 youth from the Fond du Lac Band of Ojibwe, supervised by Jeff Savage (Ojibwe), who helped oversee the final assembly of the canoe.

The canoe was designed and created under the direction of Marvin Defoe (Red Cliff Band of Ojibwe) of Wisconsin, with financial support of the Fond du Lac tribe and the encouragement of the Duluth, Minn. Sister Cities Commission. “I took the kids out to the ‘Anishinaabe Wal-Mart’—the woods,” jokes the 49-year-old Defoe. “There I taught them how to gather everything we would need, from cedar roots and birch bark to the glue we use, which comes from sturgeons. I call these ‘ancient technologies.’ Making these canoes expresses a way of life, and the finished canoe is more than a physical object—it has spirit and values.”

Defoe has been building canoes since he was 14 years old; he once paddled one he made—at age 18—down much of the Mississippi River. “I’ve learned by trial and error and by talking with the old people, stirring up their memories,” he says. His latest creation will remain in Russia, where students will use it in water-monitoring projects. “It’s great. I’m thrilled,” he says. “After all, we’re all in the same canoe.”


Thanksgiving or Day of Mourning?
American Indians have a problem with Thanksgiving. For decades, a group of protestors organized by the United American Indians of New England have gathered on Thanksgiving at Cole’s Hill in Plymouth, Massachusetts to host a “National Day of Mourning.” The town of Plymouth acknowledged the group’s sentiments by placing a bronze plaque on a rock at Cole’s Hill in 1999, as part of a legal settlement following a physical confrontation in November 1997.
Photo by Nicole/courtesy UAINE

The plaque reads as follows: “Since 1970, Native Americans have gathered at noon on Cole’s Hill in Plymouth to commemorate a National Day of Mourning on the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday. Many Native Americans do not celebrate the arrival of the Pilgrims and other European settlers. To them, Thanksgiving Day is a reminder of the genocide of millions of their people, the theft of their lands, and the relentless assault on their culture. Participants in a National Day of Mourning honor Native ancestors and the struggles of Native peoples to survive today. It is a day of remembrance and spiritual connection, as well as a protest of the racism and oppression which Native Americans continue to experience.” Details: uaine.org


A National Holiday for American Indians?
Two powerful organizations, the National Indian Gaming Association (NIGA) and the National Congress of American Indians, have teamed up to push for creation of a national holiday, Native American Heritage Day. It would be observed annually on the Friday following Thanksgiving.

On July 23, Senator Daniel Inouye (D-HI) introduced Senate Bill 1852 to create such a national holiday, and a companion bill was introduced in the House of Representatives. A national survey commissioned by NIGA and conducted by a respected polling company recently found that 85 percent of Americans support the designation of a day honoring American Indians.

“This day will help our effort to educate the public about the true story of the contributions of tribal governments and individual Indian people to the United States,” notes Ernie Stevens (Oneida), NIGA chairman. “The Friday after Thanksgiving is a natural fit for this day of recognition. It will require the nation to focus on the many contributions of Indian people and help to promote an accurate story of our history, as well as help this great nation grow away from the common stereotypes and misinformation that plague a very proud, productive and patriotic people.”

Adds Joe Garcia (Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo), NCAI president, “The establishment of Native American Heritage Day will encourage public elementary and secondary schools in the United States to enhance understanding of Native Americans by providing classroom instruction focusing on their achievements and contributions to the United States. It is imperative that we educate the youth of today—Native and non-Native—about the inner workings of tribal governance and the influence Native people have on society.”

Calls for such a day of recognition have been heard over the years. Early in the 20th century, Arthur C. Parker (Seneca) persuaded the Boy Scouts of America to set aside a day for honoring Indians, and in 1915 the Congress of the American Indian and its director, Rev. Sherman Coolidge (Arapaho), adopted a resolution calling for an Indian holiday. Also in 1915, Red Fox James (Blackfeet) presented to the White House endorsements he gathered from 24 state governments while riding across the nation on horseback.

In May 1916, New York was the first state to establish an American Indian Day, and several states now host similar observances. In 1990, President George H.W. Bush approved a joint resolution designating November as “National American Indian Heritage Month,” and similar proclamations have been issued each year since 1994. But still, America’s first peoples largely go unrecognized in their own homelands.


shards
A 15-minute documentary film about Po’pay, the man who led the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 in New Mexico, which succeeded in driving the Spanish out of the region for a dozen years and significantly improving conditions between the Spanish and the Pueblo people afterward, was recently completed by a team led by Derek Stokes and Catherine Angeles. The film, Po’pay: A True American Hero, is expected to be screened at the January 2008 Sundance Film Festival and will subsequently travel to film festivals worldwide as part of a project to honor other Indigenous leaders globally.

left: Statue of Po’pay by sculptor Cliff Fragua (Jemez Pueblo). Photo by Seth Roffman.

The Web site myspace.com/inthespiritofpopay contains a wealth of additional information about the man, that tumultuous period and related topics.
Priceless artifacts and other cultural materials created by the Tohono O’odham people of southern Arizona are returning home to the new $15.2 million, state-of-the-art Tohono O’odham Nation and Cultural Center & Museum in Topawa. The facility includes exhibition and display galleries, artists’ studios for a residency program, archives and repositories, and an outdoor amphitheater.

Indigenous playwrights and producers from the United States, New Zealand, Australia and Norway gathered in London in September to attend a series of talks and workshops and to lay plans for a major Native drama festival titled Origins: Festival of First Nations Theatre. Playwrights from the U.S. and Canada included David Velarde (Jicarilla Apache), Drew Hayden Taylor (Ojibwe) and William Yellow Robe (Assiniboine). Details: e-mail g.bronitsky@att.net

Tribes in Virginia have banded together to produce an 80-page booklet of information on places of Native interest and Native history in the state. The Virginia Council on Indians and partners produced the Virginia Indian Heritage Trail project. Copies ($7) are available through the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities at 434/924-3296 or virginiafoundation.org.

The Democratic National Convention Committee recently deposited $2 million in the Native American Bank in Denver in support of its plans to host the DNC convention in Denver in summer 2008. The deposit will allow NAB to expand its business loan program to worthy Native projects, tribes and individuals.


honoring
Among the major award winners at the August 2007 Santa Fe Indian Market were the following: Dallin Maybee (Seneca/Northern Arapaho), Best of Show, for a beaded and illustrated pair of ledger-style children’s books; Philander Begay (Navajo), Artists’ Choice Award for a concho belt; Ric Charlie (Navajo), jewelry; Rainy Naha (Hopi), pottery; W.B. Franklin (Navajo), painting/drawing/ photography; Kevin Sekakuku (Hopi), wooden Pueblo figurative carvings; Anthony Begay (Navajo), sculpture; Melissa Darden (Chitimacha), textiles/basketry; Jamie Okuma (Shoshone Bannock/Luiseño), diverse art forms; Chris Youngblood Cutler (Santa Clara Pueblo), youth award, for a work of pottery; Gloria Kahe (Navajo), Helen Naha Memorial Award, for a work of pottery; and America Meredith (Cherokee), IAIA Distinguished Alumni Award, for a portrait.

above: Santa Fe Indian Market Best of Show winner Dallin Maybee (Seneca/Northern Arapaho). Photo by Tony Bonanno/Courtesy SWAIA. below: Potter Tammy Garcia (Santa Clara Pueblo). Photo courtesy Blue Rain Gallery.

Work by the talented and prolific Tammy Garcia (Santa Clara Pueblo) will be featured in a fall 2008 exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Garcia will be one of the youngest artists, and it’s believed the only Native artist, ever so honored. She and glass phenom Preston Singletary (Tlingit) will present their second collaborative show at Blue Rain Gallery, Santa Fe, in spring 2008.

The premier museum in Oceania, the Bishop Museum of Honolulu, has selected Timothy E. Johns as its new president, director and CEO. Founded in 1889, the museum has embarked on a $21 million renovation of its famed Hawaiian Hall complex and other ambitious projects.

For the first time in 131 years, the prestigious American Library Association has elected a Native American as its president: Loriene Roy (Minnesota Chippewa Tribe). The 64,000-member ALA has a huge influence on what books get read in America, and supports literacy programs across the country.

Throat singers Lois Suluk Locke and Maria Illungiayok from Arviat, Nunavut, Canada performed in August at the Festival of World Cultures in Dublin, Ireland.

The National Museum of the American Indian teamed up with the U.S. Department of Education/Office of Indian Education to host its second annual Native American Student Art Competition, “Education: A Gift Without Boundaries.” Nearly 1,400 works were entered into judging, with winning art displayed at NMAI. Taking first place in grades 6–8 was Deidra Lee (Diné) from New Mexico; in grades 9–10, the winner was Dalton Fazekas (Choctaw) from Oklahoma; and in grades 11–12, Michael Curley (Zuni Pueblo) from New Mexico took the honors. Winning work can be seen at indianeducation.org.

Joey Garcia (Santa Clara Pueblo) was selected as one of 40 high school players for the annual All-American Baseball Game last summer, which was broadcast live on FOX Sports.

Mary Beth Jiron (Isleta Pueblo) has designed a blanket woven by Pendleton Woolen Mills as a fund-raising item for the American Indian College Fund’s scholarship program. A student at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, Jiron hopes to open a gallery in her own pueblo in the future. Details: pendleton-usa.com

Pro golfer Notah Begay III (Navajo) was named by the magazine Golf Inc. as one of its Developmental Newsmakers of the Year. His firm, NB3 Consulting, was selected last fall to build an 18-hole golf course for the Eastern Band of Cherokees in North Carolina. He is also launching a program to teach golf to young Cherokees.

Julio Cusurichi Palacios, a Peruvian Indian, has been awarded the highly regarded Goldman Environmental Prize for his persistence in fighting for creation and protection of a reserve for Peruvian Indian peoples. Oil drilling and timber cutters harvesting big-leaf mahogany are ravaging his homelands.


passages
Ramon Roubideaux (Rosebud Sioux), the first Native attorney to practice law in South Dakota, passed away on July 10 in Tucson. Roubideaux defended American Indian Movement activists Dennis Banks and Russell Means following the Wounded Knee occupation in 1973. After serving in World War II in northern Italy, he obtained his law degree from George Washington University in 1950, becoming the first Indian to reach this pinnacle.

Shelleigh Poorbear-Blackelk (Lakota) was murdered in Muskogee, Oklahoma in late August. The oldest adopted daughter of Lisa Tiger, a well-known AIDS activist, and Diego Romero, a respected potter, left behind a 10-month-old daughter. To help care for the baby, the family has established  the Shelleigh Poorbear-Blackelk Memorial Fund at Wells Fargo Bank (account number 9967798118).

Clifford Patrick Many Guns (Siksika Blackfeet) passed away on Aug. 12 in the Canadian province of Alberta. A rodeo star, 1960 Golden Glove boxing champion and a hockey player, Many Guns went on to coach several generations of Siksika youth in these sports, and organized tribal rodeos for some 43 years. He served with the Siksika Nation Tribal Police Service, on the tribal council for 18 years and on the housing board. He was well known for his warm and outgoing personality.