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walksalone11

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Here we go again.
« on: January 05, 2010, 07:29:24 am »
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/group.php?gid=255394333108&ref=nf


A time for all Natives across the Americas to protest once and for all the ill-treatment and broken promises and treaties that the government has committed on our peoples of Turtle Island.

This group is to rally a call to wake all of us Natives up and rally against the governments of Americas and to speak up in a march towards the governments doorsteps with all of our Nations of Aboriginals in unity. If we are tired of the government abusing our people, the crimes, the stolen lands, the broken promises, taxations, genocide committed by both government and churches that have gone unpunished and ignored, assimilation and so forth, then it time to act.

2010 is the year of the Native. Let history be made here and see our people rise up from ashes and poverty and become the warriors within their spirits to protest once and for all the problems that we are having.

They have stolen our land long enough, they have left many of us poor and sick too long. Are we not going to act, are we to be ashamed of who we are.

Lets make a date in June, July or August to all across Canada, U.S., and South America to unite as one and march in Unity to the government offices and stay there protesting until our demands are met.

This will not be a one day protest. We have been beaten down for centuries, our children have paid the price, so we have to give it our best. We will protest until our demands have been met. We will seek media on TV and the Internet to cover our protest live to the world, so all can see what the governments here the crimes they have committed and how they will resolve them. Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators have more effect them a few, so the government will have their hands full in how they are going to deal with the Native problem.

Bring food, water and a tent when we protest. We will block their driveways and their doorway to their offices off. We will drown out their sessions with our drum beats and our songs. We will sleep on what they call their front yard which is our land. We will be a sea of native skin so that everyone will know we are there. We will be more then just an inconvience for them this time. We have no more to lose, so this is our stand.

Too many of our children have been killed and changed for the rest of their lives from residential schools and for just being Native. The look on their faces should mean something to us all when we hear that another one took his life for just being Native in this society. No more!!!!

Our Native Fund has been stolen across the borders and they have no intentions of returning what is not theirs, this by their laws means "Theft".

They steal our lands and tax us because they think they have a right, they do not. This is "extortion", trying to forcibly collect money that is not theirs to collect from land that is not theirs in the first place according to the treaties and the law. They are no different then how the mafia collects from businesses, by threats.

We must organize and this site will be the one to start a change if you are all wanting a better future for us and our children to come. This is our land and we cannot stand idlely by while they slowly take what we have left. They (the landed immigrants) strike when they are not paid enough money and are willing to do what it takes. Others have come here and protest for their way of life here, Blacks, Tamils, Muslims and other international groups and those rights were given to them by the government. Everyone gets something, but we who are from this land, recieve poverty, overcrowded houses, discrimination, crimes of genocide and the list goes on.

All those who become members, invite more and those natives invite more. We are looking for suggestions and help co-ordinate the biggest protest of our lives. Our Freedom and self government and our Treaty rights.

Let us organize our chiefs and our reserves, our members both on and off reserves. Let us round up buses and cars to take our people to these rallies so we can go in numbers and unity to build our strength. Let us go in strength and courage because if we don't succeed, there soon might not be anything left. Let us do it before it is too late.

So let us get it together, work out the date in unity and in a commity type way and lets hear from you when this date should be held for this massive protest. First, lets get everyone on here and starting moving this into action with as many natives as we can possibly get.

Dave Cada(Okeda)

walksalone11

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Re: Here we go again.
« Reply #1 on: January 05, 2010, 07:37:51 am »
http://www.pbs.org/itvs/alcatrazisnotanisland/activism.html



The takeover of Alcatraz was one of the most successful American Indian protest actions of the 20th century, fueling the rise of modern Native American activism. In fact, many of the 74 Indian occupations of federal facilities that followed Alcatraz were either planned by or included people who had been involved in seizing the island. The occupation also brought Indian rights issues to the attention of the federal government and American public, changing forever the way Native people viewed themselves, their culture and their inherent right to self-determination.

The occupation also succeeded in getting the federal government to end its policy of termination and adopt an official policy of Indian self-determination. From 1970 to 1971, Congress passed 52 legislative proposals on behalf of American Indians to support tribal self-rule. President Nixon increased the BIA budget by 225 percent, doubled funds for Indian health care and established the Office of Indian Water Rights. Also during Nixon's presidency, scholarship funds were increased by $848,000 for college students. The Office of Equal Opportunity provided more funds for economic development and drug and alcohol recovery programs and expanded housing, health care and other programs.

After visiting the occupiers on Alcatraz Island, the American Indian Movement (AIM) began a series of national protest actions by seizing federal facilities. Comprised of mostly younger, more progressive and better educated urban Indians, AIM was initially formed to protect urban Indians from civil rights abuses. Inspired by the Alcatraz occupation, AIM became an important multi-tribal protest organization during the '70s. Its first protest action was on Thanksgiving Day 1970, when AIM members painted Plymouth Rock red and seized the Mayflower II replica in Plymouth, Massachusetts to challenge a celebration of colonial expansion.

From the takeover of Alcatraz Island in 1969 to the Longest Walk in 1978, the Alcatraz-Red Power Movement (ARPM) used social protest to demand that the government honor treaty obligations by providing resources, education, housing and healthcare to alleviate poverty. The ARPM aimed to build Indian colleges and create Indian studies programs, museums and cultural centers with federal funds to redress centuries of cultural repression.

   
Although Native Americans had participated in social movements throughout the 20th century, the ARPM differed from past movements in that they demanded inclusion in U.S. institutions while retaining their cultural identity. As Indian activism progressed, the Red Power movement became more serious and sometimes violent. In November 1972, several Native rights organizations staged the Trail of Broken Treaties caravan on the eve of the 1972 presidential election with the intention of presenting President Nixon with a 20-point program redefining U.S.-Indian relations. Angered by the lack of logistical support promised by Interior Department officials, Native American activists took over BIA headquarters in Washington, D.C., taking vast numbers of confidential files concerning the BIA and Indian Health Service (IHS) and inflicting $2.2 million in damage to the building. Embarrassed by the media coverage, the Nixon Administration promised to respond to their demands within a month and gave them $66,000 in transportation money immediately in exchange for a peaceful end to the occupation.

After 1972, the expanding protests of urban Indian groups spread to the reservations and revealed increasing tensions within Indian communities, often characterized as "traditional" versus "assimilated" Indians. These conflicts came to a head at "Wounded Knee II," a ten-week siege on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. The conflict at Wounded Knee involved the impeachment of Oglala Lakota (Sioux)'s tribal chairman, Richard Wilson, who was considered corrupt by many elders and traditional members of the tribe, including those associated with AIM. Other tribe members, many of whom were family members and friends who had received the few jobs and resources the tribal government had to offer, supported Wilson. The two opposing factions armed themselves and a standoff ensued, involving tribal police, AIM, people living on the reservation, federal law enforcement officials, the BIA, celebrities, philanthropic, religious and legal organizations, the U.S. military and the news media. The siege ended May 9 after negotiations between President Nixon's representative Leonard Garment and AIM leaders Dennis Banks and Carter Camp. During the standoff, two Native Americans and one FBI agent were killed. Wilson remained in office. In the next few years, numerous occupations occurred on reservations involving tribal factions associated with AIM or urban tribal members.



The last major event of the Alcatraz-Red Power Movement was The Longest Walk from February to July 1978. Several hundred Native Americans marched from San Francisco to Washington, D.C. to symbolize the forced removal of American Indians from their homelands and to draw attention to the continuing problems plaguing the Indian community. The march also attempted to call attention to backlash against Indian treaty rights that was gaining momentum in Congress. Unlike many protest events of the mid-'70s, the walk was a peaceful event.

The Alcatraz-Red Power Movement declined in the late '70s, due in large part to the FBI's suppression and infiltration through its then secret operation COINTELPRO, which sought to "neutralize" any activist organization with strong dissenting views against the federal government. Within three years of the Wounded Knee II siege, 69 members and supporters of AIM died violently on the reservation. Nearly 350 others were physically assaulted. None of their killers were convicted, and many of the cases were never investigated. Many AIM leaders were imprisoned. Divisions within AIM revealed a split in the movement between those who fought for the rights of the urban Indian community and others who favored a national activist agenda. After 1978, the tactic of property seizures fell out of favor, signaling the end of Red Power activism.


   But the Red Power movement accomplished many of its goals. By the early 1980s, over 100 Indian studies programs had been created in the United States. Tribal museums opened, and the United Nations recognized an international indigenous rights movement. AIM continued fighting for Indian rights in land and grazing rights battles; protesting athletic team Indian mascots; and working for the repatriation of sacred objects taken from Indian land.

Every November since 1975, Indian people have gathered on Alcatraz Island on what is called "Un-Thanksgiving Day" to honor the occupation and those who continue to fight for Native American rights today.

walksalone11

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Re: Here we go again.
« Reply #2 on: January 05, 2010, 07:40:18 am »
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wounded_Knee_incident


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Not to be confused with Wounded Knee Massacre.
For other uses, see Wounded Knee.
Wounded Knee Incident
Date    February 27-May 5, 1973
Location    Wounded Knee, South Dakota
Result    Siege ended; Wounded Knee back to government control
Belligerents
Flag of the American Indian Movement.svg American Indian Movement    Flag of the United States.svg United States Marshals
Casualties and losses
2 killed    1 wounded

The Wounded Knee incident began February 27, 1973 when the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota was seized by followers of the American Indian Movement (AIM). The occupiers controlled the town for 71 days while the United States Marshals Service and other law enforcement agencies cordoned off the town.
Contents
[hide]

 

On February 27 the AIM and local Oglala Lakota (Oglala Sioux) of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, who opposed Oglala tribal chairman Richard A. "*bleep*" Wilson, seized the town of Wounded Knee. The U.S. military and government officers, including the FBI, surrounded Wounded Knee the same day.[1]
[edit] Disputed facts

It is disputed whether the government forces cordoned the town before, as AIM claims, or after the takeover. According to former South Dakota Senator James Abourezk,[2][3] "on 25 February 1973 the U.S. Department of Justice sent out 50 U.S. Marshals to the Pine Ridge Reservation to be available in the case of a civil disturbance".[2] AIM, on the other hand, argues that their organization came to the town for an open meeting and "within hours police had set up roadblocks, cordoned off the area and began arresting people leaving town… the people prepared to defend themselves against the government’s aggressions".[4] Regardless, by the morning of February 28, both sides were firmly entrenched.
[edit] Background

The sides had been drawn over the previous months in response to the near intolerable conditions on the Pine Ridge reservation, consistently one of the poorest counties in the USA. What little employment and opportunity that existed on the reservation was controlled by the elected tribal chairman, Wilson, seen by the government as the rightful (and generally obedient) authority.

Acting traditional chiefs, operating in the background had quietly ministered to the Oglalas who held onto their language and customs in the face of modern times and the best efforts of "assimilation" programs administered by the government. The local economy revolved around the few jobs and programs tribal chairman Wilson was able to steer towards his friends and family, who were like him mostly of mixed-blood heritage.

Grazing rights on tribal lands, held communally were sold to local ranchers at cheap rates, which helped to align the whites with Wilson, as did intermarriage between the two groups. Full blood Lakotas had been marginalized and shunted aside consistently since the start of the reservation system, and most didn't bother to participate in elections either, which led to tensions on all sides.

So called "border towns" just off the reservation were rife with violence in saloons and bars, and recent incidents had hardened both sides in the wake of a race-based murder that led to a riot at the Custer, South Dakota courthouse. Civil rights struggles in the west were hardly non-violent.

Wilson and the Marshalls had been expecting conflict, and had made the Tribal headquarters in Pine Ridge into an armed encampment, complete with machine gun emplacements on top of the administration building. Three weeks previous Wilson had survived an impeachment hearing organized by a coalition of locals grouped loosely around the "traditionals, " and organized by both a local civil rights organization and the urban radical AIM members.

Wilson manipulated the results of the investigation, the vote and the governing body in charge of the impeachment and after the struggle both sides were fully expecting the next phase would be open combat in the streets, a fight the traditionals and AIM knew it couldn't win.
[edit] The Event

In desperation, a decision was reached to make a stand at the tiny hamlet of Wounded Knee, the site of the last massacre of the Indian Wars in hopes that public sympathy would stay the hand of Wilson's and the government's forces. What might have been a vigilante war quickly became a media circus and guerilla theater instead, albeit violent theater.

Both AIM and government documents show that the two sides traded fire for most of the three months.[1][4] John Sayer, a Wounded Knee chronicler claims that:[5]

    "The equipment maintained by the military while in use during the siege included fifteen armored personal carriers, clothing, rifles, grenade launchers, flares, and 133,000 rounds of ammunition, for a total cost, including the use of maintenance personnel from the national guard of five states and pilot and planes for aerial photographs, of over half a million dollars"

The statistics gathered by Record and Hocker largely concur:[6]

    "...barricades of paramilitary personnel armed with automatic weapons, snipers, helicopters, armored personnel carriers equipped with .50-caliber machine guns, and more than 130,000 rounds of ammunition".

The precise statistics of U.S. government force at Wounded Knee vary, but all accounts agree that it was certainly a significant military force including "federal marshals, FBI agents, and armored vehicles." One eyewitness and journalist chronicled, "sniper fire from…federal helicopters," "bullets dancing around in the dirt" and "sounds of shooting all over town" [from both sides].[7]

AIM claims in its chronology of the occupation that "the government tried starving out the [occupants]" and that they, the occupiers, smuggled food and medical supplies in past roadblocks "set up by *bleep* Wilson and tacitly supported by the government."[4] Some reports indicate that Wilson and his men, situated between the AIM and U.S. Government lines, fired towards both in the hopes of provoking government forces to retake the town.[8]

In the course of the conflict, Frank Clearwater, a Wounded Knee occupier of either Cherokee or Apache background, was shot in the head while asleep on April 17 and died on April 25.[2] Lawrence Lamont, also an occupier, and a local Oglala Lakota, received a fatal gunshot wound to the heart from a sniper on April 26, and U.S. Marshal Lloyd Grimm was paralyzed from the waist down, again by a gunshot wound.[2]

On March 13, assistant attorney general for the Civil Division of the US Justice Department Harlington Wood Jr. became the first government official to enter Wounded Knee without a military escort. Determined to resolve the deadlock without further bloodshed, he met with AIM leaders for days and, while exhaustion made him too ill to conclude the negotiation, he is credited as the "icebreaker"[9][10] between the government and AIM. Both sides reached an agreement on May 5 to disarm,[2][4] and three days later the siege had ended and the town was evacuated after 71 days of occupation; the government then took control of the village.[2][4]
[edit] Support for the AIM movement

During the stand-off Marlon Brando asked a Native American woman, Sacheen Littlefeather to speak at the Oscars on his behalf, refusing the the Oscar for his performance in The Godfather. She appeared in full Apache clothing. She stated that owing to the "poor treatment of Native Americans in the film industry" Mr. Brando would not accept the award. The event grabbed the attention of the US and the world media. This was considered a major event and victory for the movement by its supporters and participants.

walksalone11

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Re: Here we go again.
« Reply #3 on: January 05, 2010, 07:41:46 am »
http://nativeunity.blogspot.com/2007/03/72-aim-takover-of-bia-in-washington.html


 '72 AIM Takover Of BIA In Washington - 2nd of 4 Articles
‘On Native American Rights.’
Submitted by Kathy Helms

By Kathy Helms – khelms@frontiernet.net
Dine Bureau – March 3rd, ‘07
Gallup Independent – editorialgallup@yahoo.net
WINDOW ROCK -- American Indian Movement co-founder Dennis Banks and the Sacred Run caravan are on the road, maping the route for next year's 30th anniversary of the Longest Walk.

The 2008 Longest Walk II goal is to walk across the United States from Alcatraz in San Francisco, to Washington D.C., arriving there on April 22, Earth Day, still in an attempt to call attention to the abuses of Native Americans and failure of the federal government to live up to its trust responsibility. It's one of many campaigns initiated by Banks. In 1972, AIM organized and led the Trail of Broken Treaties' caravan across the United States to Washington, D.C., calling attention to the plight of Native Americans.

He and other members of AIM anticipated meeting with congressional leaders about Native American issues; however, government officials refused to meet with them, resulting in the seizure and occupation of the Bureau ofIndian Affairs Office.

Former Navajo Nation Chairman Peter MacDonald recalls those times, which were at the height of the Navajo-Hopi land dispute. "During those years, Navajo was considered to lead the entire Native American initiatives to implement self-determination. In any of these efforts, whether it was organized by AIM or Wounded Knee folks, we would be there to give support.

"I think that went a long way toward bringing forth to the nation the needs and the problems of Native Americans, all with the idea of recognizing the treaty that tribes have and also to be self-determining rather than continuing to be a ward of the federal government, particularly the BIA,"MacDonald said.

In addition, Navajo had its own problems with the Navajo-Hopi land dispute. "There were a lot of actions during those years," he said."Obviously, it makes matters most difficult when you have your own state congressional representatives being against you.

"Congressman Sam Steiger, Goldwater and Sen. Fannon-- those were the people in the beginning who were very much opposed to having the land dispute settled between the Navajos and Hopis on our own," MacDonald said. "Everyone was lined up against Navajo in favor of Hopi," he said. The Republicans had the White House and Congress, which made matters difficult for Navajo.

"We didn't have too much maneuvering, although I had direct access to the Nixon White House, and that helped quite a bit. But the rest of the time it was really an uphill battle," he said. Despite the odds, they got a couple"bad legislations" changed.

Big Bullies
"All this time, there was a great deal of public relations efforts on the part of the Hopis from Salt Lake City to make it appear that Navajos were oppressing the Hopis," MacDonald said. We were the big bullies and they were a poor religious group trying to save their culture and save their people, and they wanted a little more room to breathe instead of being choked by Navajo being all around them. This was the kind of publicity that was being generated and a lot of the uninformed environmental-type groups were taking up for Hopis because they were the underdogs," MacDonald said.

"The Navajos were, at that time, considered like the way people look on big corporations these days, so we had to fight that as well. There was a concerted effort to make us look bad so they could get additional land from the nation," he said.

In the meantime, Navajo was trying to hold them back and get some sense of how the dispute could be settled. "One of the big things we were shooting for was we didn't want Congress or anyone to help us settle our land issues with the Hopis. We wanted the Navajos and Hopis to sit down, without any backup anywhere," he said. Alot of time was devoted to trying to resolve the dispute in a sensible way, rather than dividing up the land and relocating 10,000 Navajos.

"Of course, the Hopis said, 'We're being relocated too,' but they were only talking about, at the most, 100 of their people to be moved. We were looking at the relocation of over 10,000 Navajo people just because over 100 years ago the land settlement wasn't put together correctly by Congress,"MacDonald said.

My position was that, 'OK, if it is determined that somebody else then had a claim on the land and it was settled by somebody else more recently, the land should be given back to the person that originally had it.

"I said why don't we do the same thing with the white settlers. We were in the Gallup, Farmington, Cortez, Flagstaff, Page areas long before you folks came, and now you don't want to give it back to us. "I said, 'Let's look at the Hopis the same way. Let's just say the Hopis were there before Navajos and we settle on that by whatever way, whether it's by war, or using the land, or whatever it is

"I said, 'If that's the way you operate, why don't we do the same thing for Navajos. The Navajos were within the Four Sacred Mountains" in Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona. MacDonald told them Navajo didn't mind giving some land to the Hopis providing the feds gave back the original Navajo territory. "Well, they didn't want to listen to that. It's a double standard. It's one standard for them, one standard for us and the Hopis," he said.

Eventually, in 1972, all of the anger culminated in the Trail of Broken Treaties Caravan and the BIA building takeover in Washington, D.C.

Exposing Corruption
Lenny Foster, now program supervisor with the Corrections Project at Navajo Department of Behavioral Health Services in Window Rock, along with Dennis Banks and other AIM participants took part in the BIA takeover.

"We uncovered a lot of documentation that showed the corruption and the graft and the misuse of tribal resources, the exploitation of Indian resources, deals that were being made to strip mine, bring uranium mining onto the Indian reservations, and utilize the resources," Foster said.

"They thought of our homelands as waste, yet it held some of the richest resources in the world. And once the government realized that, they made deals that paid but pennies and exploited our leaders. We uncovered all of that in those documentations that were stored in those files," he said.

The only leader who really stuck up for what happened there was PeterMacDonald. The question was posed to him, "Why are these Indians so angry?" He answered, "Look at what you've done. Look what you're doing. These people have a reason to be angry. They're upset and frustrated at the racisim, the discrimination, the humiliations, the oppression, the suppression. You're exploiting their resources, you're not paying the right prices for what you're taking." Foster said MacDonald told them.

That was that anger that resulted in the destruction of the BIA building, he said. "But MacDonald was the only tribal leader in this country that sided with the American Indian Movement on that."Perhaps that's one reason he was hit -- for taking that stand," Foster said. He believes MacDonald was set up for standing strong.

"History shows what we did and how we stood up to that oppression and what we did with our lives and our bodies," Foster said. Over the course of the Indian rights campaigns, Native Americans "gave their lives so we could have a better tomorrow," he said. "But that tomorrow's still coming because we still are not receiving the full benefits of the rights and agreements that were made in the treaties."

BIA Negotiations
While AIM was occupying the BIA building, Chairman MacDonald received a call from John Erlichmann at the Nixon White House."He called me and asked me what they should do, because in those years, the White House, particularly, was looking to Navajo for leadership in Native American affairs.

My suggestion was, go talk to them. He asked me if I supported what they were doing and I said 'yes'. There were other tribal leaders who were quoted in the press that they did not support what AIM was doing, that it was not the legitimate voice for Native Americans. These were recognized leaders of Native American nations", MacDonald said. "So when I got a call from John Erlichmann, he asked me what Navajo's position was and what my position was, do I support it or don't I support it.

"I told him, I support it. He asked me why and I told him, 'I don't agree with some of the methods that they're using to get attention. Nevertheless, attention to the Native American problem is needed.' "That's why I support their effort to uncover the needs of the Native Americans and also the neglect of the federal government through BIA of performing what they said they would perform under the treaties. I said, that's plain and simple. That's why I'm in favor of it."

MacDonald was asked to appear on "Face the Nation" regarding the BIA building occupation by AIM. He flew to D.C. and appeared on the CBS program. "They asked me a lot of questions and I said I support what they're doing and I explained what was needed, that what they needed to do was listen to these people." MacDonald said they may have used force to occupy the building, but that the nation shouldn't look at that. It should look at what the issues are.

Send In The Guard?
"After their program, Erlichmann and I had coffee together over at the old Jefferson Hotel. They were suggesting sending National Guard over there. I said, 'You can't do that. There are women and children over there. These people, some of them are willing to die for what they're doing. You don'twant that'

"I said, what you want to do is go over there. My understanding is they have a list of all the grievances, all the wrongs that they've observed that the government is involved in and things that the government has neglected. Take a look at that and be serious about it. Don't send a BIA person over there. Send either yourself or someone out of the White House representing the president," MacDonald told Erlichmann.

AIM had been there about a week and it was getting very volatile, according to MacDonald. He also recommended the feds take over some money for the protesters to go home on. "So a day or two later, the news came out that the White House had sent a delegation over there to meet with the AIM group.

"The end result was that they went over the grievances and 50 percent or more of the grievances were immediately correctable, and the rest could be dealt with as time moved along," MacDonald said. They also took along some cash, to entice protesters to vacate the building and go home.

"And they did," MacDonald added. "There was no violence, no one got hurt, and the issues they brought before the administration regarding neglect andwhat have you, they responded.

"The only thing left was an old BIA building that was mostly ruffled up and destroyed. I think they said some files were missing and some files were scattered all over. BIA never moved back in there. If I know that the government is wrong, I'm not afraid to get out in front and demand justice," MacDonald said.

walksalone11

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Re: Here we go again.
« Reply #4 on: January 05, 2010, 07:49:13 am »
MINNEHAHA FREE STATE RAIDED BY 600 POLICE!
PROTESTERS INJURED AND JAILED - YOUR HELP IS NEEDED!

PROTESTERS ARE NOT RECEIVING MEDICAL ATTENTION!
PLEASE CALL THE HENNEPIN COUNTY JAIL AT
612-348-5112 AND DEMAND MEDICAL ATTENTION FOR THE INJURED AND THE IMMEDIATE
RELEASE OF ALL THE PROTESTERS!

The Minnehaha Free State/Liberated Zone in Minneapolis MN was raided Sunday
morning at 4am by 600 State Troopers in what MN Governor Arnie Carlson has
called the largest law enforcement operation in MN history. Police fired
tear gas into all 7 seven houses occupied by a coalition of Big Woods Earth
First! the American Indian Movement (AIM)and the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota
Community. 33 people were arrested, 20 of them from lockdowns. (included an
activist in a Santa suit locked into the chimney of one of the homes) Many
of the protesters where tortured with pepper spray and pain compliance
holds. One protester who was locked by the neck to a tripod had his life
put in serious danger when the police overturned the tripod without taking
any precautions to protect him. The extent of his injuries remains unknown.
Media were blocked from the site by a wall of riot police and there are
extensive reports of police brutality.

        During the raid various items sacred to the Mendota Community were
destroyed. The sacred fire was extinguished in violation of federal laws
which protect Native American religious expression. The sun dance tipi was
destroyed, and the sweat lodge, site of numerous ceremonies over the past 4
months of occupation, was burnt down. Governor Carlson was on site gloating
to the press and warming himself by the fires of burning camp materials.

        The protesters occupied the homes to block a new highway project
intended to take a few minutes of the driving time from downtown
Minneapolis to America's largest mall, the Mall of America. The highway
will cut through a park, destroy homes and one of the last remaining
examples of old growth oak Savannah as well as sites sacred to the Mendota
Mdewakanton Dakota community. Over the course of the last 4 months the
Mendota have been fighting for federal recognition as part of their efforts
to protect the oaks and a sacred spring from destruction. Sunday was the
protesters 133rd day of continuous occupation, believed to be the longest
running urban occupation in American history.

        For more information about the situation call the Big Woods EF!
hotline at (612) 362-3387.

Your support is desperately needed to help with the legal defense and to
keep the resistance alive. Checks can be made out to MNRAG and mailed to
Big Woods EF! PO Box 580936 Minneapolis MN 55458-0936. There is also
information posted at http://www.ruckus.org.


walksalone11

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Re: Here we go again.
« Reply #5 on: January 05, 2010, 07:51:49 am »
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Indian_Movement


The American Indian Movement (AIM) is a Native American activist organization in the United States. AIM gained international press when it seized the Bureau of Indian Affairs headquarters in Washington, D.C., in 1972, and in 1973 had a standoff at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. AIM was founded in 1968 by Dennis Banks, George Mitchell, Herb Powless, Clyde Bellecourt, Harold Goodsky, Eddie Benton-Banai, and a number of others in Minneapolis' Native American community.[1] Russell Means was another early leader. The early organization was formed to address various issues concerning the Native American community including poverty, housing, treaty issues, and police harassment [2]. From its beginnings in Minnesota, AIM soon attracted members from across the United States (and Canada). It was also involved in the Rainbow Coalition (Fred Hampton). Charles Deegan Sr. was involved with the AIM patrol.

In the decades since AIM's founding, the group has led protests advocating indigenous American interests, inspired cultural renewal, monitored police activities, and coordinated employment programs in cities and in rural reservation communities across the United States. AIM has often supported indigenous interests outside the United States as well. By 1993 AIM had split into two main factions, with the AIM-Grand Governing Council based in Minneapolis and affirming its right to use the name and trademarks for affiliated chapters.


Contents
[hide]

    * 1 Background
          o 1.1 The initial AIM movement
          o 1.2 Early AIM protests
          o 1.3 Protest marches
          o 1.4 The Longest Walk and The Longest Walk 2
          o 1.5 Connection to other minorities
    * 2 History
          o 2.1 AIM protests
          o 2.2 Goals and committments
          o 2.3 1970's Wounded Knee FBI stand-off at Pine Ridge Reservation
          o 2.4 1980's support of Nicaraguan Sandinista independence movement
          o 2.5 AIM protests and contentions
          o 2.6 the 2000's
          o 2.7 Other Native American organisations
    * 3 International Indian Treaty Council
          o 3.1 Campaigning goals
          o 3.2 The United Nations Adoption of Indigenous Peoples Rights
    * 4 Ideological differences within AIM
    * 5 Notes, references
    * 6 External links

[edit] Background
[edit] The initial AIM movement

AIM was founded at a time of continuing social change and protest following achievement of national legislation of the Civil Rights Movement, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965. The tactics AIM adopted were based on its leaders' perceptions that Indian activists had failed to achieve enough results at the time of its founding. AIM believed that advocates for Indian interests who had worked within the American political system had not been effective. The political system simply ignored Indian interests. The AIM leadership decided at its founding that a more aggressive approach had to be adopted in order for their voices to be heard. Up to this time, Indian advocacy had worked within the system by lobbying activities with the US Congress and the state legislatures.[3]
[edit] Early AIM protests

AIM used the American press and media to present its own unvarnished message to the United States public. It did so by ensuring an event which the press would want to cover. If successful, news outlets would seek out AIM spokespersons for interviews and receive its message. Instead of relying on traditional lobbying efforts, like other activist groups, AIM sought to control its message to the American public. AIM was always on the look out for an event that would result in publicity. Sound bites such as the "AIM Song" were often caught on camera and quickly became associated with the movement.
[edit] Protest marches

During ceremonies on Thanksgiving Day 1970, commemorating the 350th anniversary of the Pilgrims’ landing at Plymouth Rock, AIM seized the replica of the Mayflower. In 1971, members occupied Mount Rushmore , in 1972, they marched the "Trail of Broken Treaties" and took over the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) headquarters in Washington, D.C. AIM’s occupation of Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation in 1973, and other events during the 1970s were designed to achieve this goal of gaining attention. They ensured AIM would be noticed to highlight its belief that the rights of Indian people had eroded.[4]
[edit] The Longest Walk and The Longest Walk 2

The Longest Walk, one of the American Indian Movement's famous marches, took place during the year of 1978. This 3,600 mile walk's initiate purpose was to gather enough aid and support to stop the proposed legislation and abolish Native American treaties with the United States government after eleven new legislative bills were introduced by the 95th United States Congress. These treaties were supposed to protect the remaining pieces of Native sovereignty.

On July 15, 1978, "The Longest Walk" marched into Washington D.C. with several hundreds of supporters marching alongside them, including American boxer Muhammad Ali, American Senator Ted Kennedy and actor Marlon Brando. The Longest Walk of 1978 led to the defeat of the eleven legislative bills, and protected the remaining Treaty rights of the Native American people possessed. The activism contributed to the passage of the American Indian Religious Freedom Act.[5]

On July 11, 2008, an 8,200-mile walk, which had started from the San Francisco Bay area, for Native American rights, environment protection, and to stop global warming, reached Washington, D.C after approximately 175 days. Participants crossed 26 states on two different routes. The Longest Walk 2, as it was called by the walkers, consisted of over 100 Native American nations and an international group who walked and picked up more than 8,000 bags of garbage on their way to Washington, D.C. In Washington, the walkers delivered a 30-page manifesto, "The Manifesto of Change", and a list of demands, including mitigation for climate change, environmental sustainability plans, protection of sacred sites, and renewal of improvement to Native American sovereignty and health. This walk commemorated the thirtieth anniversary of the original Longest Walk.[6]
[edit] Connection to other minorities

AIM's leaders spoke out against similar disadvantages the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement spoke against. For the AIM, the talked about high unemployment, slum housing, and racist treatment, fought for treaty rights and the reclamation of tribal land, and advocated on behalf of urban Indians whose situation bred illness and poverty. They opened the K-12 Heart of the Earth Survival School in 1971, and in 1972, mounted the Trail of Broken Treaties march on Washington, D.C. They took over the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), in protest of its policies, and demanded reforms. With its provocative events and advocacy for Indian rights, AIM attracted scrutiny from the FBI and Department of Justice.[7] The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) used paid informants to report on AIM’s activities and its members.[8] In February, 1973 AIM leader Russell Means as well as others took over a small Indian community of Wounded Knee, South Dakota. They were protesting because of its supposedly corrupt government. When FBI agents were dispatched to remove the AIM occupiers, a standoff ensues. Through the resulting siege that lasted for 71 days, two people were killed, twelve wounded, and twelve hundred arrested. Wounded Knee was a seminal event, drawing worldwide attention to the plight of American Indians. AIM leaders were later tried in a Minnesota court and, after a trial that lasted for eight months, were acquitted of wrongdoing[9].
[edit] History
[edit] AIM protests

AIM has opposed the use of caricatures of indigenous people as mascots for national and collegiate sports teams, such as the Cleveland Indians, the Atlanta Braves, the Chicago Blackhawks and the Washington Redskins. AIM organized protests at World Series and Super Bowl games involving those teams. Protesters held signs with slogans such as "Indians are people not mascots," or "Being Indian is not a character you can play.[10]

Although such requests were ignored for years, AIM received attention in the mascot debate. NCAA schools such as Florida State University,University of Utah, University of Illinois and Central Michigan University negotiated with the tribes whose names or images they used for permission and to collaborate on portraying the mascot in a way that honors Native Americans.
[edit] Goals and committments

AIM has been committed to improving conditions faced by Native peoples. They founded institutions to address needs, including the Heart of The Earth School, Little Earth Housing, International Indian Treaty Council, AIM StreetMedics, American Indian Opportunities and Industrialization Center (one of the largest Indian job training programs), KILI radio, and Indian Legal Rights Centers.[11]

In 1970, several members of AIM, including Dennis Banks and Russell Means, traveled to Mt. Rushmore. They converged at the mountain in order to protest the illegal seizure of the Sioux Nation’s sacred Black Hills by the United States Federal Government. The protest brought the issues of the American Indian Movement to the attention of the media. [2]

In 1972 at Gordon, Nebraska, an American Indian, Raymond Yellow Thunder was murdered by two white men, Leslie and Melvin Hare. After their trial, the Hares received the minimal sentence of manslaughter. Members of AIM went to Gordon to protest the unjust sentencing [12]. In the winter of 1973, Wesley Bad Heart Bull was stabbed to death at a bar by a white male, Darrell Schmidt. The offender was jailed, but was quickly released on a $5000 bond. He was charged with second degree manslaughter. In protest of the unjust charges, a group of American Indian Movement members traveled to Custer, South Dakota. AIM leaders, Dennis Banks, Russell Means and David Hill held negotiations with the judge in the case, but the talks were not successful. In response to this, the Custer Chamber of Commerce building, two patrol cars, and a sign were burned down. Many of the AIM demonstrators were jailed due to the protest [2].


[edit] 1970's Wounded Knee FBI stand-off at Pine Ridge Reservation

In February of 1973, a group of AIM members took part in a seventy-one days long siege at Wounded Knee, South Dakota [2]. The occupation was in response to the 1890 massacre of at least 150 Lakota Sioux men, women, and children by the U.S. Seventh Calvary at a camp near Wounded Knee Creek [13] During the siege, the American Indians occupied the Sacred Heart Church and the Gildersleeve Trading Post. Although periodic negotiations were held between AIM spokesman and U.S. government negotiators, there was shooting from both sides. There were two AIM members killed at Wounded Knee and numerous others were wounded [14].

During the stand-off Marlon Brando asked a Native American woman, Sacheen Littlefeather to speak at the Oscars on his behalf, refusing the the Oscar for his performance in The Godfather. She appeared in full Apache clothing. She stated that owing to the "poor treatment of Native Americans in the film industry" Mr. Brando would not accept the award. The event grabbed the attention of the US and the world media. This was considered a major event and victory for the movement by its supporters and participants.

The Leonard Peltier shootings incident also took place during this stand-off.
[edit] 1980's support of Nicaraguan Sandinista independence movement

During the Sandinista/Indian conflict in Nicaragua of the mid-1980s, Russell Means sided with Miskito Indians opposing the Sandinista government. The Miskito charged the government with forcing relocations of as many as 8,500 Miskito. This position lost AIM some support from certain US left-wing organizations in the U.S., who opposed Contra activities and supported the Sandinista movement. The complex situation included Contra insurgents' recruiting among Nicaraguan Indian groups, including some Miskitos. Means recognized the difference between opposition to the Sandinista government by the Miskito, Sumo, and Rama on one hand, and the Reagan administration's support of the Contras, dedicated to the overthrow of the Sandinista regime.[15]


[edit] AIM protests and contentions

Many AIM chapters remain committed to confronting government and corporate forces that they allege seek to marginalize indigenous peoples.[16] They have challenged the ideological foundations of national holidays, such as Columbus Day[17] and Thanksgiving. AIM argues that Thanksgiving should be a National Day of Mourning, and protests the continuing theft of indigenous peoples' territories and natural resources.[18][Need quotation on talk to verify][19][Need quotation on talk to verify][20][Need quotation on talk to verify] AIM has helped educate people about the full history of the US and assert the Native American perspective in U.S. history. Its efforts are recognized and supported by countless institutional leaders in politics, education, arts, religion, and media.[21]
[edit] the 2000's

In April 2003, AIM chapters met at a conference with the founder of the Center for the SPIRIT (Support and Protection of Indian Religions and Indigenous Traditions) to discuss plans to protect and maintain Native American religious rights.[22] In June of that year, United States and Canadian tribes joined together internationally to pass the "Declaration of War Against Exploiters of Lakota Spirituality." SPIRIT teamed up with the AIM to declare war against all "plastic Indians." They felt they were being exploited by those marketing the sales of replicated Native American spiritual objects and impersonating sacred religious ceremonies as a tourist attraction. AIM delegates are working on a policy to require tribal identification for anyone claiming to represent Native Americans in any public forum or venue.

In February 2004, AIM gained more media attention by marching from Washington D.C. to Alcatraz Island. This was one of many occasions when Indian activists used the island as the location of an event, since their occupation of Alcatraz in 1969. Their 2004 march was in support of Leonard Peltier, whom they felt was wrongly imprisoned and who has become a symbol of spiritual and political resistance for Native Americans.[22]

In December 2008, a delegation of Lakota Sioux including Russell Means delivered a declaration of secession from the United States to the U.S. State Department. Citing many broken treaties by the U.S. government in the past, and the loss of vast amounts of territory originally awarded in those treaties, the group announced its intentions to form a separate nation within the U.S. known as the Republic of Lakotah.[23]
[edit] Other Native American organisations

Other Native American rights activists have created groups such as WARN (Women of All Red Nations), NATIVE (Native American Traditions, Ideals, Values Educational Society), LISN (League of Indigenous Sovereign Nations), and the IPC (Indigenous Peoples Caucus).[22] Although each group may have its own specific goals or focus, they are all fighting for the same principles of respect and equality for Native Americans.
[edit] International Indian Treaty Council

The International Indian Treaty Council (IITC) was established in June 1974 by the American Indian Movement. The AIM gathering, which occurred in Standing Rock, South Dakota was attended by delegates of ninety-eight Indigenous Nations. The sacred pipe serves as a symbol of the Nations “common bonds of spirituality, ties to the land and respect for traditional cultures”. The IITC focuses on issues such as treaty and land rights, rights and protection of indigenous children, protection of sacred sites, and religious freedom.
[edit] Campaigning goals

In order to effectively reach their goals the IITC uses networking, coalition building, technical assistance, and coalition building. In 1977, the IITC became a Non-Governmental Organization with Consultative Status to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. The organization concentrates on involving Indigenous Peoples in U.N. forums. In addition, the IITC strives to bring awareness about the issues concerning Indigenous Peoples to non-Indigenous organizations [24].
[edit] The United Nations Adoption of Indigenous Peoples Rights

On September 30, 2007 the United Nations General Assembly adopted the “Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.” There were 144 states or countries that voted in fair. Four voted against it while 11 countries/states abstained. Those four that voted against it were the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Their main reason for voting against it was because they felt as if it “goes too far.” The importance of this Declaration is that the Indigenous Peoples have the chance to have their rights recognized. Some of their rights include rights to self-determination, traditional lands and territories, traditional languages and customs, natural resources and sacred sites. Many would simply view these as basic human rights[25].
[edit] Ideological differences within AIM

In 1993, AIM split into two factions, each claiming to be the authentic inheritor of the AIM tradition. One group is based in Minneapolis, Minnesota and associated with leadership by the Bellecourts, is known as the AIM-Grand Governing Council. AIM-International Confederation of Autonomous Chapters is led by Russell Means and others.

In 1993 the latter group issued its "Edgewood Declaration", citing organizational grievances and complaining of authoritarian leadership by the Bellecourts. Ideological differences were growing, with the Grand Governing Council (GGC) taking a spiritual, perhaps more mainstream, approach to activism. The GGC tends toward a more centralized, controlled political philosophy.

The autonomous chapters group argues that AIM has always been organized as a series of decentralized, autonomous chapters, with local leadership accountable to local constituencies. The autonomous chapters reject the assertions of central control by the Minneapolis group as contrary both to indigenous political traditions, and to the original philosophy of AIM[26].

walksalone11

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Re: Here we go again.
« Reply #6 on: January 05, 2010, 07:54:40 am »
http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=176604646&blogId=428115940




 Thursday, August 28, 2008
   
Black Hills FOX News - News Stories: Ceremony @ Mt. Rushmore remebering Native American protest
Category: News and Politics
Press Contacts:
 
Madonna Thunder Hawk-Co-Founder of The Black Hills Alliance-(605) 441-0342
 
Quanah Parker Brightman-Vice President of U.N.A.-(415) 233-3170


For Immediate Release:
 
 
 
Native Americans to gather in Keystone, South Dakota to Commemorate the 38 Year Anniversary of the Historic Invasion and Occupation of the ''Shrine of Democracy' Mount Rushmore and to Honor the Women of the Red Power Movement.
 
What:Mount Rushmore Reunion to Remember the Native American Occupation and Take Over of Mount Rushmore
When:Friday August 29th , 11:00am to 4am
Where:Amphitheater, Mount Rushmore National Memorial Amphitheater, Keystone South Dakota
Sponsors: United Americans Inc.(U.N.A.), The family of Chief Lame Deer, Fast Horse Productions
Co-Sponsor:American Indian Movement(AIM)
 
 
August 29, 2008 marks the 38th anniversary of the historic Mount Rushmore Occupation of 1970. Native Americans representing groups from around the country will gather to reflect on that day, renewing friendships and bonds and to honor the women of the red power movement.
 
 
On August 29th 1970, a small group of young Indians invaded Mount Rushmore, the so-called  'national shrine of democracy' The invasion brought together Indians form different tribes and reservations who converged to help the Sioux Nation in their efforts to reclaim the sacred Black Hills and to force the Federal Government to be held accountable for the illegal taking of their Lands. At 7pm on August 29th , after eluding authorities, the group of young natives reached the top of the mountain near the four faces of the presidents where they hung a large flag with the words:SIOUX INDIAN POWER.
The Paha Sapa-The Black Hills-is a sacred place for all Sioux People. It is where all Sioux life began,where our creation stories originate from 'The heart of everything that is'
 
 
United Native Americans is sponsoring the reunion of this historic event that honors and recognizes the women of the Red Power Movement such as Madonna Thunder Hawk, Martha Fast horse and Maxine Bordeaux-warriors who have fought for native rights, protection, family and community,treaty rights, human rights, environmental justice and cultural preservation. The younger generation will have the opportunity to experience living history with presentations planned, listening in the oral tradition to elders who were part of the original occupation.
 
The reunion will also recognize the United Nations International Day for the Worlds Indigenous Peoples adopted in 2007. In observance of this day, we Demand that the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 be Recognized and Honored by The United States of America. U.S. Courts have recognized the illegality of these actions and offer modest payments, but the Sioux Nation Remains determined to get the Black Hills Returned to Tribal Communities. We will not accept any amount of money for our own sacred sites.  In the words of Lehman Brightman-President of U.N.A.- The Principal Leader of the invasion, who was asked how long the native people intended to stay:'As long as the grass grows, the water flows and the sunshine's'.

walksalone11

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Re: Here we go again.
« Reply #7 on: January 05, 2010, 04:28:41 pm »
Tuesday January 5, 2010 1:00 am PST

British Columbia Olympics to Face Civil Disruptions by Survivors of Canadian Indian Residential schools -
Government Given Deadline for Return of Bodies

Vancouver - The group representing survivors of Indian residential schools on Canada's west coast announced today that it will hold civil disobedience actions and disruptions during the February 2010 Olympics near Vancouver if the Canadian government and mainline churches have not announced a timetable for the repatriation of the remains of the thousands of children who died in these schools.

The Friends and Relatives of the Disappeared (FRD), which held high-profile protests and occupations of churches in Vancouver and Toronto during 2007 and 2008 and compelled the Canadian government to issue an apology for the residential schools in July, 2008, has given Canada and the Roman Catholic, Anglican and United Church of Canada until February 15, 2010 to announce when and how they will return for a proper burial the remains of Indian children who died under their care.

As part of this deadline, the FRD has also demanded that the government and churches make public the names of those responsible for the deaths of these children, and indicate by what judicial mechanism the guilty or the responsible institutions will face trial.

Nearly half of the 150,000 children who attended Canadian Indian residential schools died as a result of conditions in the schools. (Globe and Mail, April 24, 2007) In April, 2008, the FRD released to the media and police a list of twenty eight mass graves near former Indian residential schools where many of the children are alleged to be buried.

"We will halt church and government operations during the Olympics if that's what it takes to get the bodies of our relatives back" said Carol Martin, a Nishga native woman and FRD spokesperson.

"The world has to know that our people are still dying from the genocide Canada and the churches inflicted on us. We've waited long enough for justice."
For more information contact the FRD at:
hiddenfromhistory@ yahoo.ca or 250-753-3345 (Canada)
And see the website: www.hiddenfromhisto ry.org




Read and Hear the truth of Genocide in Canada, past and present, at this website: www.hiddenfromhistory.org , and watch Kevin's award-winning documentary film UNREPENTANT on the same website.

UNREPENTANT: Kevin Annett and Canada's Genocide
- Winner, Best Foreign Documentary Film, Los Angeles Independent Film Festival, March 2007
- Winner, Best Canadian Film, Creation Aboriginal Film Festival, Edmonton, 2009

Soon to be released feature film, THE DIARY, based on Kevin Annett's epic struggle to bring to light genocide in Canada - see the trailer at:
www.thediarymovie.com/trailer

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