Cherokee Morning Song

Monday, March 3, 2014

Mohawks close road





PROTEST: Shawn Brant calling for inquiry, demands action



By Jerome Lessard, The Intelligencer

Brant and about 75 other protesters started putting up a blockade on Shannonville Road, south of Hinchey Road and Airport Parkway, after 8 p.m. Sunday. 


Since then, the road has remained closed to traffic as the morning commute 

saw a strong OPP presence after a dozen protesters spent the night and 
remained in the area.
“It’s happening,” Brant said, while monitoring the erection of a teepee in 
the middle of Shannonville Road, just before 8 a.m. Monday.
"We came in with about 80 guys last night (Sunday), anticipating the
 possibility of confrontations so we came in heavy.”
Brant, who promised such action last week, said things have remained
 “fairly quiet” at the two blockade scenes. A second, but smaller,
 blockade was erected down Shannonville Road, at Old Highway 2, 
where a handful of protesters were seen standing around a small fire 
and under Tyendinaga Police supervision.
"We want to create opportunity for national discussion and awareness 
on the issue that's facing us right now with the murdered and missing women,"
 he added. 

"We are going to be out here as long as it's necessary to facilitate that and movement by the government to create a federal strategy and call a national 

inquiry into this tragedy."
The well-known activist in Quinte noted having the government take action 
would be a signal that Canada cares about the fate of those missing women
 and those who are responsible.
"It would show that Canada cares, that the government recognizes the overwhelming number of people that are being lost," he said. "Right now 
we're losing one of 400 Indigenous women to murder. A national inquiry is 
a first step in indicating the government has regard and places its value on 
the lives of First Nations women.”
Sgt. Kristine Rae, who arrived on Shannonville Road after 11 a.m., said 
OPP and the Tyendinaga Police Service are aware of the road closure and are monitoring the situation with officials from involved municipalities. 
Many OPP and CN police cruisers could be seen parked along Highway 
401 and railways near the blockades.
Following last fall's throne speech where the federal government showed
 “some kind of opening” in regards to files of missing Native women, 
Brant drafted a letter for Prime Minister Stephen Harper. 
He said this ongoing protest is a response to Harper's response.
“We put those facts into clarity and our concerns forward,” he said. 
“February 28 (last Friday) was the day we expected a response, but instead 
of getting a response what we got was the OPP and RCMP putting our 
community under siege,” he said.

A group of Native protesters stand in the middle of Shannonville Road, south Hinchey Road and Airport Parkway, on Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory as members of the OPP monitor traffic in the area Monday, March 3, 2014. Protesters are demanding an inquiry into the hundreds of missing Native women across the country. - JEROME LESSARD/The Intelligencer/QMI Agency
A group of Native protesters stand in the middle of Shannonville Road, south Hinchey Road and Airport Parkway, on Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory as members of the OPP monitor traffic in the area Monday, March 3, 2014. Protesters are demanding an inquiry into the hundreds of missing Native women across the country. - JEROME LESSARD/The Intelligencer/QMI Agency
A group of Native protesters stand in the middle of Shannonville Road, south Hinchey Road and Airport Parkway, on Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory as members of the OPP monitor traffic in the area Monday, March 3, 2014. Protesters are demanding an inquiry into the hundreds of missing Native women across the country. - JEROME LESSARD/The Intelligencer/QMI Agency
A group of Native protesters stand in the middle of Shannonville Road, south Hinchey Road and Airport Parkway, on Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory as members of the OPP monitor traffic in the area Monday, March 3, 2014. Protesters are demanding an inquiry into the hundreds of missing Native women across the country. - JEROME LESSARD/The Intelligencer/QMI Agency

A group of Native protesters stand in the middle of Shannonville Road, south Hinchey Road and Airport Parkway, on Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory as members of the OPP monitor traffic in the area Monday, March 3, 2014. Protesters are demanding an inquiry into the hundreds of missing Native women across the country. - JEROME LESSARD/The Intelligencer/QMI Agency


A group of Native protesters stand in the middle of Shannonville Road, south Hinchey Road and Airport Parkway, on Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory as members of the OPP monitor traffic in the area Monday, March 3, 2014. Protesters are demanding an inquiry into the hundreds of missing Native women across the country. - JEROME LESSARD/The Intelligencer/QMI Agency



OPP block roadways at Tyendinaga territory



OPP block roadways at Tyendinaga territory

State "concern for public safety" as Mohawks and supporters gather around fire on the side of Wymans Road

********Saturday Mar. 1 11:00 am. UPDATE:******** According to our friends who are at Tyendinaga the scene is peaceful. There has not been a rail link blocked. Despite frustrations that the Federal Government has not responded with even a negative response to the request for an inquiry, folks at Tyendinaga are gathered with good minds and clear intentions.
A group of people have gathered at the Mohawk Territory of Tyendinaga today and gathered in a direct call for an inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women across Canada.
Last weekend Shawn Brant, a Mohawk man from Tyendinaga addressed a group gathered at Six Nations Polytech and said that an ultimatum was issued to the federal government that they launch an inquiry into the matter of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women by February 28th. To date there has been no word from federal officials that an inquiry is in the works.
Now a group of supporters have made a fire alongside Wymans Road within the Tyendinaga Mohawk territory near the Bay of Quinte which is south of the 401. Other media are reporting this as being a blockade, however according to Two Row Times sources at this point the group of supporters are peacefully standing around the fire to bring attention to the demand for a federal inquiry.
Today police blocked off Wymans Road between Hwy 2 & Callaghan Road. Social media reports were floating about saying there was a heavy OPP presence all along the ramps entering and exiting the 401 around the Tyendinaga/Shannonville area all the way to Napanee.
- See more at: http://www.tworowtimes.com/news/regional/opp-block-roadways-at-tyendinaga-territory/#sthash.RK8B1ZiG.dpuf



New database lists 824 murdered, missing native women in Canada

TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILESEnlarge Image
Vigils for murdered and missing aboriginal women are held regularly at the Manitoba legislature. New research puts the total in this province at 111.
Some of the names are familiar, such as Cherisse Houle, the 17-year-old found lying face down in a creek just outside Winnipeg.
Some are forgotten, such as Constance Cameron, whose murder 30 years ago has never been solved.
One name is famous -- Helen Betty Osborne, whose death is emblematic of violent racism in Manitoba.
Those names and hundreds more appear on a new public database, the first of its kind, created by an Ottawa researcher. It pegs the number of missing and murdered aboriginal women in Canada at 824.
That's significantly higher than the widely used and often-criticized number of 582, cobbled together by the Native Women's Association of Canada (NWAC).
The NWAC's list was never public and could not be scrutinized or validated, but it helped catapult the issue of violence against indigenous women onto the national agenda.
The new research, which dug deeper into the past and the public record, shows the number of missing and murdered aboriginal women in Manitoba is 111, up from NWAC's oft-quoted figure of 79.
"I'm not shocked at the number and I know the community is not going to be shocked at the number because we've always said it was more," said Nahanni Fontaine, the province's special adviser on aboriginal women's issues. "And of course, each year, tragically, those numbers go up."
The new database is the first comprehensive and fully public list of missing and murdered aboriginal women, but activists in Ontario are working on a similar one for that province. The database was created by federal civil servant Maryanne Pearce and forms part of her PhD thesis for the University of Ottawa's law school.
The thesis, along with the database, were submitted last fall and are available online.
To gather a complete list of names, Pearce spent seven years cross-referencing newspaper articles, police websites and reports, court documents and other public sources, much as the NWAC did.
Pearce identified thousands of missing and murdered women and was able to determine 824 were Inuit, Métis or First Nations. Her list includes 115 Manitoba women, but further research suggests four young women listed as missing have been found, two recently.
Pearce could not be reached for comment this week, but her thesis advisers are two well-regarded experts in aboriginal law and social science research.
When contacted about Pearce's work, they called it "excellent."
Among her findings, Pearce found 80 per cent of missing or murdered aboriginal women were not in the sex trade. That's despite the perception most cases involve prostitutes or women engaged in high-risk behaviour.
The perception that many missing or murdered women put themselves in harm's way has been used to unfairly discount the problem, said Derek Nepinak, Grand Chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs.
Shawna Ferris, a University of Manitoba gender studies professor, agreed, saying much of the reporting on missing and murdered aboriginal women focuses on whether the victims are involved in the sex trade. Mug shots and details of a woman's street life or addictions don't help to cultivate public concern.
"Shouldn't we be aiming for a city where regardless of the trials people are going through, they're not killed?"
Nepinak said a comprehensive list that can been tested and validated makes it difficult for government, especially Ottawa, to sidestep the issue, and helps bolster the case for a national inquiry into the epidemic of violence against aboriginal women.
"We've only scratched the surface of what happened here," Nepinak said.

MAP: Unsolved Cases of Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women in Manitoba

Blue pointers indicate missing cases; red pointers indicate deaths. Use the controls at left to zoom in or out of the map, and click on any pointer for more details.  Having difficulty seeing the map below? Try opening it in a new window.



Saturday, March 1, 2014

Thursday, February 20, 2014

CPS Abuse Of Native Children


For generations, Lakota children were forcibly seized from their families and placed in boarding schools.
Today, foster children are illegally placed in state institutions and psychiatric facilities, while safe, loving homes with relatives are illegally rejected.

Read more: http://lakotalaw.org/about-us

Video: http://lakota.cc/1bjcFXt

SIGN THE 

PETITION: http://www.lakotalaw.org/Action

Monday, February 17, 2014

US PRESIDENTS IN THEIR OWN WORDS CONCERNING AMERICAN INDIANS

Presidents Day


WASHINGTON - Today some tribal offices and federal government offices are closed to commemorate Presidents’ Day.

American Indians have a different worldview than do non-Indians of the federal government including American presidents. That is not to say, American Indians are anti-American or even anti-government. This is evidenced by the large percentage of American Indians who serve in the United States military.
However, given what American Indians have had to endure in the United States, understandably American Indians view history through a different lens. This is true of even how the men who have been president of the United States are viewed by Native people.
The following quotes about American Indians are from various presidents since President George Washington and up to President Barack Obama. 
The quotes here do not include all presidents. However, there are quotes from every president since President Franklin Roosevelt.
The reader will get a sense of how the hostility towards American Indians has lessened during the past two hundred plus years. Just as federal policies toward American Indians have altered, so too have attitudes by presidents. Of course, United States presidents set forth policy.
“Indians and wolves are both beasts of prey, tho’ they differ in shape.”
George Washington
“If ever we are constrained to lift the hatchet against any tribe, we will never lay it down till that tribe is exterminated, or driven beyond the Mississippi… in war, they will kill some of us; we shall destroy them all.”
Thomas Jefferson
“My original convictions upon this subject have been confirmed by the course of events for several years, and experience is every day adding to their strength. That those tribes cannot exist surrounded by our settlements and in continual contact with our citizens is certain. 
They have neither the intelligence, the industry, the moral habits, nor the desire of improvement which are essential to any favorable change in their condition. 
Established in the midst of another and a superior race, and without appreciating the causes of their inferiority or seeking to control them, they must necessarily yield to the force of circumstances and ere long disappear.”
Andrew Jackson
“Ordered that of the Indians and Half-breeds sentenced to be hanged by the military commission, composed of Colonel Crooks, Lt. Colonel Marshall, Captain Grant, Captain Bailey, and Lieutenant Olin, and lately sitting in Minnesota, you cause to be executed on Friday the nineteenth day of December, instant, the following names, to wit… “Text from President Lincoln to General Sibley ordering the execution of American Indians in Minnesota.
Abraham Lincoln
“I don’t go so far as to think that the only good Indians are dead Indians, but I believe nine out of ten are, and I shouldn’t like to inquire too closely into the case of the tenth.”
Theodore Roosevelt
“All of our people all over the country – except the pure blooded Indians – are immigrants or descendants of immigrants, including even those who came over here on the Mayflower.”
Franklin Roosevelt
“The United States, which would live on Christian principles with all of the peoples of the world, cannot omit a fair deal for its own Indian citizens.”
Harry Truman
“There has been a vigorous acceleration of health, resource and education programs designed to advance the role of the American Indian in our society. Last Fall, for example, 91 percent of the Indian children between the ages of 6 and 18 on reservations were enrolled in school. This is a rise of 12 percent since 1953.”
Dwight Eisenhower
“For a subject worked and reworked so often in novels, motion pictures, and television, American Indians remain probably the least understood and most misunderstood Americans of us all.”
John Kennedy
“The American Indian, once proud and free, is torn now between White and tribal values; between the politics and language of the White man and his own historic culture. His problems, sharpened by years of defeat and exploitation, neglect and inadequate effort, will take many years to overcome.”
Lyndon Johnson

“What we have done with the American Indian is its way as bad as what we imposed on the Negroes. We took a proud and independent race and virtually destroyed them. We have to find ways to bring them back into decent lives in this country.”
Richard Nixon
“I am committed to furthering the self-determination of Indian communities but without terminating the special relationship between the Federal Government and the Indian people. I am strongly opposed to termination. Self-determination means that you can decide the nature of your tribe’s relationship with the Federal Government within the framework of the Self-Determination Act, which I signed in January of 1975.”
Gerald Ford
“It is the fundamental right of every American, as guaranteed by the first amendment of the Constitution, to worship as he or she pleases… This legislation sets forth the policy of the United States to protect and preserve the inherent right of American Indian, Eskimo, Aleut, and Native Hawaiian people to believe, express, and exercise their traditional religions,”
as he signed into law the American Indian Religious Freedom Act.
Jimmy Carter
“Let me tell you just a little something about the American Indian in our land. We have provided millions of acres of land for what are called preservations – or reservations, I should say. They, from the beginning, announced that they wanted to maintain their way of life, as they had always lived there in the desert and the plains and so forth. And we set up these reservations so they could, and have a Bureau of Indian Affairs to help take care of them. At the same time, we provide education for them – schools on the reservations. And they’re free also to leave the reservations and be American citizens among the rest of us, and many do. Some still prefer, however, that way – that early way of life. And we’ve done everything we can to meet their demands as to how they want to live. Maybe we made a mistake. Maybe we should not have humored them in that wanting to stay in that kind of primitive lifestyle. Maybe we should have said, no, come join us; be citizens along with the rest of us.”
Ronald Reagan
“This government to government relationship is the result of sovereign and independent tribal governments being incorporated into the fabric of our Nation, of Indian tribes becoming what our courts have come to refer to as quasi-sovereign domestic dependent nations. Over the years the relationship has flourished, grown, and evolved into a vibrant partnership in which over 500 tribal governments stand shoulder to shoulder with the other governmental units that form our Republic.”
George Herbert Walker Bush
“Let us rededicate ourselves to the principle that all Americans have the tools to make the most of their God-given potential. For Indian tribes and tribal members, this means that the authority of tribal governments must be accorded the respect and support to which they are entitled under the law. It means that American Indian children and youth must be provided a solid education and the opportunity to go on to college. It means that more must be done to stimulate tribal economies, create jobs, and increase economic opportunities.”
Bill Clinton
“Tribal sovereignty means that. It’s sovereign. You’re a… you’re a… you’ve been given sovereignty and you’re viewed as a sovereign entity.”
George W. Bush
“We also recommit to supporting tribal self-determination, security, and prosperity for all Native Americans. While we cannot erase the scourges or broken promises of our past, we will move ahead together in writing a new, brighter chapter in our joint history.”
Barack Obama