AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
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A blog by and about American Indian Adoptees, Split Feathers, Lost Children of the Indian Adoption Projects. To teach the history of the Indian Adoption Projects, and the creation of the Indian Child Welfare Act and the effects of adoption on adoptees. A blog for and by American Indian and First Nations adoptees who are called a STOLEN GENERATION.
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
4d ago
Nominated for Best Documentary at The Native American Film Festival in San Francisco in 2017.
Who Will Bury the Dead? explores the experiences of the last Lakota Christian Clergy with 150 years of historical perspective. A powerful contemporary story of spiritual decolonization. Available on Amazon Prime.
CloudHorse Media
I asked my relative Ellowyn many years ago why there were churches in Pine Ridge, and she said they provided food and money. But not many people went to church. - TLH
Questions? EMAIL: laratrace@outlook.com ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
4d ago
StrongHearts Native Helpline encourages wearing the color red in honor of the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) on May 5, 2024.
“An annual awareness day for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls calls attention to epidemic levels of violence against Native Americans and Alaska Natives,” said CEO Lori Jump, StrongHearts Native Helpline. “We support raising awareness to ensure that our missing and murdered relatives are not forgotten and the future of our young ones can be spared this crisis.”
Red Calls To The Ancestors
I ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
4d ago
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APRIL 29, 2024
Hundreds of Sixties Scoop survivors who attended a Winnipeg conference on Sunday to share their stories, reconnect with their communities and access support. The event, hosted by the Southern Chiefs' Organization and the Anish Corporation — which promotes health, wellness and emotional support for Indigenous peoples — is welcoming survivors from across Canada and from the U.S.
?FROM 2019:
Questions? EMAIL: laratrace@outlook.com ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
6d ago
Remembering Native Kinship in and beyond Institutions By Susan Burch
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Critical Indigeneities Awards & distinctions
2021 Alison Piepmeier Book Prize, National Women's Studies Association
2022 Outstanding Book Award, Disability History Association
Finalist, 2024 ACLS Open Access Book Prize (History Category), American Council of Learned Societies
Between 1902 and 1934, the United States confined hundreds of adults and children from dozens of Native nations at the Canton Asylum for Insane Indians, a federal psychiatric hospital in South Dakota. But detention at the Indi ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
6d ago
A GoFundMe set up for the family had raised more than $3,000 by Tuesday morning.
SULPHUR, OKLAHOMA, Chickasaw Territory
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Questions? EMAIL: laratrace@outlook.com ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
1w ago
'We just want to know,' says father of missing Algonquin woman
Rachel Watts · CBC News · April 27 2024
Sindy Ruperthouse was last seen on April 23, 2014, in the Val-d’Or hospital in northwestern Quebec. (Submitted by Johnny Wylde)
In 10 years, Johnny Wylde has never changed his phone number.
He says he never will.
It's the same one he had on April 23, 2014, the day his daughter, Sindy Ruperthouse, went missing.
Even though a decade has passed, he still keeps the ringer on, the phone glued to his hip.
"She knows what my number is if she's still alive," said Wylde, taking a pause. "I don't kn ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
1w ago
THE BOY WITH TWO NAMES
Three Indigenous children separated during the Sixties Scoop struggle to find their own identities, their other siblings and each other. They finally reconnect with their brother, whose two names reflect the family’s divide and his own fragile role as a bridge between two sides, only to lose him to the opioid crisis and the justice system. READ IT HERE
In a photo of Mary Ellen and three children, she looks like a girl herself. Her eyes don’t quite catch the lens. Apparently lost in thought, her tough guard is down. Or maybe she’s just exhausted.
Mary Ellen Bisso ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
1w ago
(WILL BE UPDATED)
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) National Day of Recognition May 5th- Raising Awareness
Event: Red Sand Project. (ARKANSAS)
The Red Sand Project Earthworks | Red Sand Project pouring red sand into sidewalk cracks highlights things we often overlook. May 5th is recognized as the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) throughout the nation (North America).
Walk With Our Sisters to continue to raise awareness surrounding MMIWG
24 April 2024 | FORT FRANCIS ONTARIO
By Ken Kellar kke ..read more
AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES
1w ago
?PLEASE READ: In a previous story for Windspeaker titled Reincarnation and the interconnectedness of past lives, Giihlgiigaa (60s Scoop adoptee) explained that after death we return to ‘that village back there.’
Dream teachings: Connecting with Spirit
By Odette Auger, Windspeaker Buffalo Spirit Reporter
Haida storyteller and cedar weaver Giihlgiigaa, Todd DeVries, is Tsiij Git'anne (Eagle) clan, Old Massett. Along with cedar weaving, he teaches how people can use dreams as a powerful tool, both sleeping dreams and waking dreams.
In a previous story for Windspeaker titled ..read more