Monday, November 30, 2009
Retro Clothing >> unique designs within this retro clothing
The classic bowling shirt is a rare retro find that will have you looking for a strike in no time. Look for bowling shirts with team names still embroidered on them or classic designs on the back.There are some unique designs within this retro clothing parcel and along with men’s and women’s retro clothing and a small quantity of retro clothing for petites.
Retro shoes >> pac man retro shoes
Pac-Man is the footwear that may be necessary for the retro fans, a unique shape because the shoes were painted like kancas
see more post about retro>>just click
see more post about retro>>just click
Retro shoes >> Air jordan retro shoes
these Air Jordan 1 Retros are dedicated to Fathers Days,Watch for these Air Jordan shoes to release on June 7th
Floyd Hand: 'Spiritual vampires' desecrate sweatlodge way of life
BLACK HILLS SIOUX NATION TREATY COUNCIL
MEMBER RESERVATIONS
Cheyenne River
Crow Creek
Fort Peck
Lower Brule
Pine Ridge
Rosebud
Standing Rock
Yankton
Contact: Natalie Hand @ 605-867-5762
November 24, 2009
By Natalie Hand
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com
On November 2, 2009, Floyd Hand, Jr., (Oglala Lakota Sioux) Oglala Delegate to the Black Hills Sioux Nation Treaty Council, along with Ivan H. Lewis (Pima/Maricopa/Yavapai), filed a lawsuit (Case No.: CV-09-8196-PCT-FJM) in the U.S. District Court in Arizona against James Arthur Ray and the Angel Valley Retreat Center.
In the petition, Hand and Lewis assert that Ray caused the desecration of the sacred Lakota ceremony, “Inikaga,” commonly referred to as sweat lodge, by causing the deaths of three participants. The suit contends that Angel Valley Retreat Center is culpable for allowing individuals like Ray to rent their property which offers a sweat lodge for paying participants. Furthermore, Ray and Angel Valley Retreat Center committed fraud by impersonating Native Americans and must be held responsible for causing the deaths of the victims and serious injuries to the survivors.
In the immediate aftermath of the deaths, Ray fled the scene and Angel Valley Retreat Center staff dismantled the sweat lodge, thus tampering with a crime scene.
Hand contends that the “Inikaga” and other ancient Lakota rituals is a way of life, not a religion.
“Ray is a spiritual vampire who will use whatever means necessary to turn a profit. He and others like him that profit from our culture must be held accountable for their continual fraud and desecration. This ceremony comes from the Lakota. We maintain our cultural identity today and people like Ray are trying to mock it as a means to acquire material possessions. They cannot hide behind the Religious Freedom Act. This is NOT a religion," stated Hand.
The Ft. Laramie Treaty of 1868 between the United States and the Great Sioux Nation is a legal binding agreement that is the “supreme law of the land."
Article 1 of the Treaty states that “… if bad men among the whites or other people subject to the authority of the United States shall commit any wrong upon the person or the property of the Indians, the United States will … proceed at once to cause the offender to be arrested and punished according to the laws of the United States, and also reimburse the injured person for the loss sustained …”
For Ivan Lewis, this lawsuit is a long overdue. “I joined with my Lakota brothers to stop the desecration. These new-agers have been selling our native ceremonies for years here on our homeland. The non-natives are taking everything from us. Ray and the Angel Valley folks are a dime a dozen in Yavapai territory. My hope is that this lawsuit will put light on our treaties with the U.S. and will show the people of Arizona that we have sovereign rights," stated Lewis.
Importantly, Hand and Lewis want to emphasize that they are not affiliated with a group calling themselves the “Council of Indigenous Traditional Healers."
“This group claims that they will authenticate and qualify individuals, including non-Indians, to conduct our ceremonies. Our people know who is a real healer and who isn't. Yes, everyone is entitled to pray, but our ceremonies belong with us in our native tongue," noted Lewis.
To date, the plaintiffs have received notification that a judge has been assigned to the case. The Yavapai County Sheriff's Office's homicide investigation continues and hopes to submit evidence to the County Attorney's Office in December.
Comments:
Alex White Plume, Lakota
"Thank you for this. The elders in a meeting at Billy Nills Hall discussed this. They said, we never say no, now they are getting out of hand with our ways. The Lakota make wopila, not to charge for personal gain. A society leader was acknowledged. This society is created to stop people from this type of outright capitalization of ceremonies. They are young, sober, and strong Lakota. We know they will defend our way. This society is sovereign, and can act any where they see our ceremonies being violated. I think the concept will grow across our country."
MEMBER RESERVATIONS
Cheyenne River
Crow Creek
Fort Peck
Lower Brule
Pine Ridge
Rosebud
Standing Rock
Yankton
Contact: Natalie Hand @ 605-867-5762
November 24, 2009
By Natalie Hand
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com
On November 2, 2009, Floyd Hand, Jr., (Oglala Lakota Sioux) Oglala Delegate to the Black Hills Sioux Nation Treaty Council, along with Ivan H. Lewis (Pima/Maricopa/Yavapai), filed a lawsuit (Case No.: CV-09-8196-PCT-FJM) in the U.S. District Court in Arizona against James Arthur Ray and the Angel Valley Retreat Center.
In the petition, Hand and Lewis assert that Ray caused the desecration of the sacred Lakota ceremony, “Inikaga,” commonly referred to as sweat lodge, by causing the deaths of three participants. The suit contends that Angel Valley Retreat Center is culpable for allowing individuals like Ray to rent their property which offers a sweat lodge for paying participants. Furthermore, Ray and Angel Valley Retreat Center committed fraud by impersonating Native Americans and must be held responsible for causing the deaths of the victims and serious injuries to the survivors.
In the immediate aftermath of the deaths, Ray fled the scene and Angel Valley Retreat Center staff dismantled the sweat lodge, thus tampering with a crime scene.
Hand contends that the “Inikaga” and other ancient Lakota rituals is a way of life, not a religion.
“Ray is a spiritual vampire who will use whatever means necessary to turn a profit. He and others like him that profit from our culture must be held accountable for their continual fraud and desecration. This ceremony comes from the Lakota. We maintain our cultural identity today and people like Ray are trying to mock it as a means to acquire material possessions. They cannot hide behind the Religious Freedom Act. This is NOT a religion," stated Hand.
The Ft. Laramie Treaty of 1868 between the United States and the Great Sioux Nation is a legal binding agreement that is the “supreme law of the land."
Article 1 of the Treaty states that “… if bad men among the whites or other people subject to the authority of the United States shall commit any wrong upon the person or the property of the Indians, the United States will … proceed at once to cause the offender to be arrested and punished according to the laws of the United States, and also reimburse the injured person for the loss sustained …”
For Ivan Lewis, this lawsuit is a long overdue. “I joined with my Lakota brothers to stop the desecration. These new-agers have been selling our native ceremonies for years here on our homeland. The non-natives are taking everything from us. Ray and the Angel Valley folks are a dime a dozen in Yavapai territory. My hope is that this lawsuit will put light on our treaties with the U.S. and will show the people of Arizona that we have sovereign rights," stated Lewis.
Importantly, Hand and Lewis want to emphasize that they are not affiliated with a group calling themselves the “Council of Indigenous Traditional Healers."
“This group claims that they will authenticate and qualify individuals, including non-Indians, to conduct our ceremonies. Our people know who is a real healer and who isn't. Yes, everyone is entitled to pray, but our ceremonies belong with us in our native tongue," noted Lewis.
To date, the plaintiffs have received notification that a judge has been assigned to the case. The Yavapai County Sheriff's Office's homicide investigation continues and hopes to submit evidence to the County Attorney's Office in December.
Comments:
Alex White Plume, Lakota
"Thank you for this. The elders in a meeting at Billy Nills Hall discussed this. They said, we never say no, now they are getting out of hand with our ways. The Lakota make wopila, not to charge for personal gain. A society leader was acknowledged. This society is created to stop people from this type of outright capitalization of ceremonies. They are young, sober, and strong Lakota. We know they will defend our way. This society is sovereign, and can act any where they see our ceremonies being violated. I think the concept will grow across our country."
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Friday, November 27, 2009
LIVE TONIGHT: AIM WEST CONCERT
Friday night's AIM West Concert of Native sounds, piano, poetry and jazz, is now available in video archives: Bob Young Project, Dr. Loco and the Rockin' Jalapenos and Native youth musicians, from the AIM West 40 Year Anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz:
http://livestream.com/earthcycles/folder
http://livestream.com/earthcycles/folder
More info: www.aimwest.info
Still the Best Man
We live about 900 miles away from each other and, if we're lucky, we see each other in person once every four or five years. So it was a real treat to see Al Rodriguez, my best friend from high school and the best man in our wedding, come up from Santa Barbara for Jordan's wedding this past weekend.
Except for the neatly trimmed snow-white goatee, he looks as though he stepped out of our 1970 high school yearbook -- tall, dark and still thin. My family used to call him "Bean," as in stringbean. I call him Al Rod.
I also call him a trusted friend, someone who makes me a better man by gently challenging me, whether it's to better articulate what I'm saying or, just as often, to justify my views.
We've always had a great rapport, even though we've had some l-o-n-g stretches between phone calls or e-mails.
We met through our dads, who worked at a pipe foundry. We became close friends as high school freshmen and ran track and cross country. Al went away to Sioux Falls (S.D.) College on a track scholarship, but then transferred to San Jose State as a junior and we roomed together, with others, for two years. After college, I moved to Oregon and married Lori. He stayed in California and eventually married Elizabeth, an East Coast transplant. They have a daughter, Nicole, who graduated from UCSB a year ago.
Al was a lifesaver during the wedding weekend. I wound up being busier than I expected the day before and day of the wedding, and Al jumped in to spend lots of time with my mom, acting as shuttle driver, lunch companion and all-around caretaker. I owe him big time.
He arrived early enough Friday that we had a few hours together to catch up on each other's lives. (We had lunch at the Butte Falls Cafe, above, a downhome kind of place in Jamie's hometown of about 400 people.) Where we once used to confide in each other about female relationships and debate great existential questions, now -- understandably -- it's all about family, our tenuous employment situations and the future.
Watching Al converse with family and friends over the weekend, it became obvious to me why he is such a good friend and why other people like him so much. 1) He listens. 2) He doesn't interrupt. 3) He asks "why?"
That may sound simple enough but I've gotta say there are a lot of people who don't get it. Nothing aggravates me more than someone who talks over me, who doesn't give me the courtesy of finishing a sentence because they are so eager to jump in. Al really takes time to focus on what the other person is saying. As a result, the conversation doesn't jump all over the place. It stays focused.
I've always prided myself on being a good listener. And I've always been aware how that quality contributes to being a good journalist. As an introvert at heart, I'd rather listen and observe than be the one at the heart of the action.
Al is at least a head taller than me. But I suppose I can understand people mistaking us for brothers. After all, I've always considered him mi hermano.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Thanksgiving 2009
After a string of four consecutive years spending the holiday at our cabin on Orcas Island, we stayed home this year. And the experience was different in every way.
Instead of preparing the meal ourselves and enjoying the smell of roast turkey filling the house, we set the alarm at 6:30 so we could get an early start on packing. With only two days left to prepare for moving day, we had to spend the day emptying cabinets, filling boxes and moving furniture onto the main floor for tomorrow's moving sale.
Hardly the way you want to spend your favorite holiday -- one that's rich with meaning and pretty much devoid of the commercial overkill that taints Christmas.
Thanks to our good friends Sue and Eric Wilcox, we knew we could take a break in the early afternoon to join their extended family and friends for a turkey dinner with all the trimmings. There were 20 seats at the table and we were mighty grateful to fill two of them. The food was delicious, surpassed only by their generosity.
Simone joined Kyndall on a visit to her mother's house in central Washington. Jordan and Jamie celebrated a day early and then hit the road today, aiming to arrive in Stockton, Calif., (about an hour south of Sacramento) to spend the night with one of Jamie's relatives. Nathan slept in, packed some stuff, then joined some friends later in the evening.
Even if we hadn't been preparing to move this year, I'm thinking it might have been just three of us -- Nathan, Lori and me -- at the cabin. We'll see what next year brings.
For now, it's enough to look forward to moving into our new home Saturday. We actually get the keys tomorrow, so if all goes well we might be able to take a few things over a day early.
Instead of preparing the meal ourselves and enjoying the smell of roast turkey filling the house, we set the alarm at 6:30 so we could get an early start on packing. With only two days left to prepare for moving day, we had to spend the day emptying cabinets, filling boxes and moving furniture onto the main floor for tomorrow's moving sale.
Hardly the way you want to spend your favorite holiday -- one that's rich with meaning and pretty much devoid of the commercial overkill that taints Christmas.
Thanks to our good friends Sue and Eric Wilcox, we knew we could take a break in the early afternoon to join their extended family and friends for a turkey dinner with all the trimmings. There were 20 seats at the table and we were mighty grateful to fill two of them. The food was delicious, surpassed only by their generosity.
Simone joined Kyndall on a visit to her mother's house in central Washington. Jordan and Jamie celebrated a day early and then hit the road today, aiming to arrive in Stockton, Calif., (about an hour south of Sacramento) to spend the night with one of Jamie's relatives. Nathan slept in, packed some stuff, then joined some friends later in the evening.
Even if we hadn't been preparing to move this year, I'm thinking it might have been just three of us -- Nathan, Lori and me -- at the cabin. We'll see what next year brings.
For now, it's enough to look forward to moving into our new home Saturday. We actually get the keys tomorrow, so if all goes well we might be able to take a few things over a day early.
Return to Alcatraz: 40 Years of Resistance
Return to Alcatraz: 40 Years of Resistance
By Brenda Norrell
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com
ALCATRAZ -- With the sounds of the Miwok singers and the calling out of the names of the original occupiers of Alcatraz, American Indians ushered in a new era of resistance, remembering how the act of holding the rock became the bedrock of a new generation.
During the Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony, commemorating the 40 year anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz, Clyde Bellecourt of the American Indian Movement, told thousands gathered to prepare to hold President Obama accountable.
Bellecourt said that last year everyone was excited when President Obama was elected. "I was happy too. I went to his inauguration. The whole world was excited."
"I told every one of you to be vigilant, to be watchful. We've heard promises before."
Bellecourt pointed out that President Obama has bailed out the car companies, bailed out Wall Street and bailed out the banks. The Indian people, however, have not been bailed out. Obama made campaign promises to the Indian people. So far, the missing billions in the trust funds have not been returned to the Indian people.
"We haven't seen a penny of what belongs to us. There may be a day when we have to hold his feet to the fire."
"We don't want a stimulus package. We don't want anyone to bail us out." Bellecourt said Indian people want what is justly theirs and guaranteed by treaties.
Referring to the Massacre of Wounded Knee, he said, "We'll never let this sacred hoop be broken again." Bellecourt said it is time to nourish the sacred tree and this hoop of life.
"We're still at war," he said, responding to questions of how to join the American Indian Movement. "I draft every one of you."
On Alcatraz, Doug Duncan said casinos have brought greed to Indian country and many elected tribal governments are now acting like whites. In northern California, the Pomo people are struggling to have their sacred land returned at Bloody Island, the site of the Massacre of Bloody Island in 1850.
Lenny Foster, Dine', spiritual leader for inmates in state and federal prisons, said he continues to visit Leonard Peltier in prison in Pennsylvania. Urging calls and letters to Obama to grant Peltier clemency, Foster said Peltier's health has not been good.
"He's been incarcerated for 33 years on fabricated evidence, "said Foster, adding that Peltier is one of the world's most famous political prisoners. Foster said Peltier's release would spark reconciliation between the United States and Indian people. Referring to the longstanding failure of the US to live up to its promises, he said, "We're not asking for any more than what is guaranteed to our people. Our people signed treaties."
During the weeklong events of AIM West, which began on Nov. 23, Bill Means spoke of the recent visit by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Adequate Housing, Raquel Rolnik, to his Oglala homeland at Pine Ridge, South Dakota. Describing some of the worst living conditions in America, Means, cofounder of the International Indian Treaty Council, said there is a need for 6,000 more homes. On the average, 14 Lakotas live in each home. Because of the lack of funding and repairs, HUD homes have mold, disrepair, broken windows and doors that don't shut.
Means said the people are asking for what was guaranteed by treaty and are not seeking the benevolence of the United States. "The United States is not living up to their legal commitments through the treaties." Housing, education and health care were assured when the US took the lands of the Indian people.
Bellecourt, Foster, Means, Madonna Thunder Hawk, Yvonne Swan and Mark Maracle were among the AIM-West speakers on issues ranging from the theft of Indian children by social services to the theft of Indian lands for energy development. During the week, the Ohlone people were honored with images shown on Coit Tower, towering above the city, from sunset to dawn, before the Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony. Still, the Shellmounds of the Ohlone people continue to be desecrated in the San Francisco region.
At the AIM-West gathering, Mark Maracle described the genocide of Indian people in the United States and Canada and how Indian children were sent to residential schools and boarding schools. "They murdered their minds."
"They continue to do it today," Maracle said. Speaking of the need for unity, Maracle said the Haudenosaunee's Great Law is for everyone.
"We are a Nation," he said, pointing out that the Mohawks are not a "tribe." He said the United States is not 100 percent sovereign. Only Native nations are 100 percent sovereign.
"We have the greatest weapon, the truth."
Thousands gathered before first light at the Alcatraz Sunrise Gathering on Nov. 26 to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz. In the 1960s, American Indians occupied Alcatraz in a series of occupations. On November 20, 1969, Indians of All Tribes -- American Indian men, women and children -- made a stand here for justice. Alcatraz, vacated by the Bureau of Prisons in 1963, became the rallying place for the people to demand that their treaties be honored and their lands be returned. Lakota, Creek, Mono, Pomo, Paiute, Navajo, Mohawk, Chippewa and others took a stand that became a pivotal point for sovereignty, justice and freedom in Indian country.
For photos, audios and videos of this week's events:
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/
Photos of Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony by Francisco Da Costa: http://www.flickr.com/photos/franciscodacosta/sets/72157622881354112/show/ LISTEN: KPFA Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony (2 hours audio archive)
http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/56482
VIDEO COVERAGE
To watch videos of coverage by Earthcycles and Censored News over the past month, go to Earthcycles Livestream at:
http://livestream.com/earthcycles/folder
or http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Click "ON-DEMAND" or "Menu" after the commercial, or scroll down to videos.
--Nov. 24-25: AIM West (two videos, more to be added)
--Nov. 13: O'odham Solidarity Event
--Nov. 15: US torture protest vigil and arrests at Fort Huachuca
--Oct 22-24: Acoma Pueblo uranium summit
Thanks for joining us!
MORE INFO:
http://www.aimwest.info/
By Brenda Norrell
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com
ALCATRAZ -- With the sounds of the Miwok singers and the calling out of the names of the original occupiers of Alcatraz, American Indians ushered in a new era of resistance, remembering how the act of holding the rock became the bedrock of a new generation.
During the Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony, commemorating the 40 year anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz, Clyde Bellecourt of the American Indian Movement, told thousands gathered to prepare to hold President Obama accountable.
Bellecourt said that last year everyone was excited when President Obama was elected. "I was happy too. I went to his inauguration. The whole world was excited."
"I told every one of you to be vigilant, to be watchful. We've heard promises before."
Bellecourt pointed out that President Obama has bailed out the car companies, bailed out Wall Street and bailed out the banks. The Indian people, however, have not been bailed out. Obama made campaign promises to the Indian people. So far, the missing billions in the trust funds have not been returned to the Indian people.
"We haven't seen a penny of what belongs to us. There may be a day when we have to hold his feet to the fire."
"We don't want a stimulus package. We don't want anyone to bail us out." Bellecourt said Indian people want what is justly theirs and guaranteed by treaties.
Referring to the Massacre of Wounded Knee, he said, "We'll never let this sacred hoop be broken again." Bellecourt said it is time to nourish the sacred tree and this hoop of life.
"We're still at war," he said, responding to questions of how to join the American Indian Movement. "I draft every one of you."
On Alcatraz, Doug Duncan said casinos have brought greed to Indian country and many elected tribal governments are now acting like whites. In northern California, the Pomo people are struggling to have their sacred land returned at Bloody Island, the site of the Massacre of Bloody Island in 1850.
Lenny Foster, Dine', spiritual leader for inmates in state and federal prisons, said he continues to visit Leonard Peltier in prison in Pennsylvania. Urging calls and letters to Obama to grant Peltier clemency, Foster said Peltier's health has not been good.
"He's been incarcerated for 33 years on fabricated evidence, "said Foster, adding that Peltier is one of the world's most famous political prisoners. Foster said Peltier's release would spark reconciliation between the United States and Indian people. Referring to the longstanding failure of the US to live up to its promises, he said, "We're not asking for any more than what is guaranteed to our people. Our people signed treaties."
During the weeklong events of AIM West, which began on Nov. 23, Bill Means spoke of the recent visit by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Adequate Housing, Raquel Rolnik, to his Oglala homeland at Pine Ridge, South Dakota. Describing some of the worst living conditions in America, Means, cofounder of the International Indian Treaty Council, said there is a need for 6,000 more homes. On the average, 14 Lakotas live in each home. Because of the lack of funding and repairs, HUD homes have mold, disrepair, broken windows and doors that don't shut.
Means said the people are asking for what was guaranteed by treaty and are not seeking the benevolence of the United States. "The United States is not living up to their legal commitments through the treaties." Housing, education and health care were assured when the US took the lands of the Indian people.
Bellecourt, Foster, Means, Madonna Thunder Hawk, Yvonne Swan and Mark Maracle were among the AIM-West speakers on issues ranging from the theft of Indian children by social services to the theft of Indian lands for energy development. During the week, the Ohlone people were honored with images shown on Coit Tower, towering above the city, from sunset to dawn, before the Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony. Still, the Shellmounds of the Ohlone people continue to be desecrated in the San Francisco region.
At the AIM-West gathering, Mark Maracle described the genocide of Indian people in the United States and Canada and how Indian children were sent to residential schools and boarding schools. "They murdered their minds."
"They continue to do it today," Maracle said. Speaking of the need for unity, Maracle said the Haudenosaunee's Great Law is for everyone.
"We are a Nation," he said, pointing out that the Mohawks are not a "tribe." He said the United States is not 100 percent sovereign. Only Native nations are 100 percent sovereign.
"We have the greatest weapon, the truth."
Thousands gathered before first light at the Alcatraz Sunrise Gathering on Nov. 26 to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz. In the 1960s, American Indians occupied Alcatraz in a series of occupations. On November 20, 1969, Indians of All Tribes -- American Indian men, women and children -- made a stand here for justice. Alcatraz, vacated by the Bureau of Prisons in 1963, became the rallying place for the people to demand that their treaties be honored and their lands be returned. Lakota, Creek, Mono, Pomo, Paiute, Navajo, Mohawk, Chippewa and others took a stand that became a pivotal point for sovereignty, justice and freedom in Indian country.
For photos, audios and videos of this week's events:
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/
Photos of Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony by Francisco Da Costa: http://www.flickr.com/photos/franciscodacosta/sets/72157622881354112/show/ LISTEN: KPFA Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony (2 hours audio archive)
http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/56482
VIDEO COVERAGE
To watch videos of coverage by Earthcycles and Censored News over the past month, go to Earthcycles Livestream at:
http://livestream.com/earthcycles/folder
or http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Click "ON-DEMAND" or "Menu" after the commercial, or scroll down to videos.
--Nov. 24-25: AIM West (two videos, more to be added)
--Nov. 13: O'odham Solidarity Event
--Nov. 15: US torture protest vigil and arrests at Fort Huachuca
--Oct 22-24: Acoma Pueblo uranium summit
Thanks for joining us!
MORE INFO:
http://www.aimwest.info/
Photo AIM West 2009
AIM West gathering on Wednesday. Friday night's concert includes Bob Young and Dr. Loco, at the Baha'i Center in San Francisco. Photo Brenda Norrell. (Double click on image to enlarge.)
Watch AIM West Tuesday night program:
http://bit.ly/5qhfgI
Watch AIM West Wednesday afternoon program:
http://bit.ly/4Z2B1U
Please check back for more sessions, as others will be posted.
FRIDAY, November 27, 2009
11:00am - 2:00 pm Bay Street Mall Ohlone and Shellmound Way Emeryville, CA Annual Black Friday protest at Emeryville's Bay Street Mall. The Bay Street Mall was built on top of an ancient Ohlone burial site after years of protest actions by the local Native American community. The construction of the mall unearthed HUNDREDS of human remains, many of which were taken away to landfill in the name of consumerism. While the construction of the mall couldn't be stopped, we in the Bay Area Native American community ask the non-Native community to join us in protesting this obscene structure. On "Black Friday" every year we remind the public that this is sacred Indian land and the Bay Street Mall should be boycotted.
FRIDAY, November 27, 2009
6:00pm - 10:00 pm Bahai'i Center 170 Valencia St San Francisco, Calif: Benefit fundraiser at the Bahai’I Center, 170 Valencia Street in San Francisco! Tickets $10-20 donation, no one turned away for lack of funds. Doors open at 6 pm until 10 pm. Music by Bob Young Project, Local Artists, special guests and much more!! Please bring cans of food for Inter-Tribal Friendship House in Oakland. -- Mark Anquoe AIM-West http://www.aimwest.info/
Watch AIM West Tuesday night program:
http://bit.ly/5qhfgI
Watch AIM West Wednesday afternoon program:
http://bit.ly/4Z2B1U
Please check back for more sessions, as others will be posted.
FRIDAY, November 27, 2009
11:00am - 2:00 pm Bay Street Mall Ohlone and Shellmound Way Emeryville, CA Annual Black Friday protest at Emeryville's Bay Street Mall. The Bay Street Mall was built on top of an ancient Ohlone burial site after years of protest actions by the local Native American community. The construction of the mall unearthed HUNDREDS of human remains, many of which were taken away to landfill in the name of consumerism. While the construction of the mall couldn't be stopped, we in the Bay Area Native American community ask the non-Native community to join us in protesting this obscene structure. On "Black Friday" every year we remind the public that this is sacred Indian land and the Bay Street Mall should be boycotted.
FRIDAY, November 27, 2009
6:00pm - 10:00 pm Bahai'i Center 170 Valencia St San Francisco, Calif: Benefit fundraiser at the Bahai’I Center, 170 Valencia Street in San Francisco! Tickets $10-20 donation, no one turned away for lack of funds. Doors open at 6 pm until 10 pm. Music by Bob Young Project, Local Artists, special guests and much more!! Please bring cans of food for Inter-Tribal Friendship House in Oakland. -- Mark Anquoe AIM-West http://www.aimwest.info/
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Home Sweet Home
As if we didn't already have enough on our plate...
We've just sold the Craftsman-style home we have lived in since 1986 and are preparing to move into a brand-new condo this Saturday. As in two days after Thanksgiving.
Yes, we're downsizing. No, we didn't think things would move this fast when we decided in September that it was worth doing. We thought we'd put it on the market and see what happened. We took a couple of weekends to clean out our attic, our basement and closets, and then got it ready for staging in October. Lo and behold, it was on the market for just five days. We received two offers and just like that we were in a position to make an offer on a condo in a new 10-unit development less than two miles west of us in Northeast Portland. After some minor back and forth, our offer was accepted and it was full speed ahead.
I've waited until now to post anything about the move, partly because I didn't want to detract from the other major thing going on in our lives -- planning for this month's wedding of Jamie and Jordan -- and partly because I didn't want to jinx us in case anything went awry with financing, home inspections or the buyers of our home. Our patience was rewarded this week. The morning after we arrived back home after the wedding, we were in a title insurance office signing loan documents to close the sale. Now, all that's left is to sell selected furniture items on Friday, finish packing up and wait for the movers to show up Saturday morning.
So how does it feel to leave the comfort of a place that's been our home for 23 years?
Exciting. After living in a sturdy old house, built in 1926, we're looking forward to the conveniences of a new home where everything works, efficiently and unfailingly. Can't say that was always the case here, with some seriously old appliances and the quirks that come along with owning an older home.
Emotional. This is where we've lived since Nathan was 6 and Simone was 3, the place where we brought Jordan home, at 5 months old, from the foster home where he'd been living before we adopted him. It's the place where we opened our home to a succession of dogs, cats, rats, a rabbit and a few anoles (small lizards that, unfortunately, didn't do too well with us because we couldn't regulate the heating lamp in their very well -- you can imagine the end result).
Liberating. After all these years of watering, mowing and raking, not to mention shelling out for a new roof and gutters, exterior paint jobs, etc., we can finally say goodbye to it all. Owning a home is a wonderful thing, but there's no escaping the responsibilities. There's also no escaping the escalating property taxes. Not that we're against paying our fair share to support the schools, parks and other local services. Taxes are the price of civilization -- something that (cheap partisan shot coming) too many self-centered folks fail to realize or choose to ignore.
Prideful. This is where we raised three great kids and built a warehouse of memories. From our home on the corner, we could walk our kids to school and take them to the neighborhood park. As they grew older, we could see them to the bus stop down the street. Later still, we could listen for the familiar sound of a car, signaling they'd made it home from wherever they'd been with their teenage friends.
Exciting. Did I mention we're excited? After living with, between and surrounded by boxes for the past few weeks, I'm more than ready to pack up and move. Yes, we'll be leaving a physical place. But we'll taking our memories with us and starting a whole new raft of them. Just as it's still sinking in that our youngest son is actually married, so too is it sinking in that we're actually moving. We'll be waking up in a new place, with a small balcony outside our bedroom and a new view of the world.
How cool is that?
We've just sold the Craftsman-style home we have lived in since 1986 and are preparing to move into a brand-new condo this Saturday. As in two days after Thanksgiving.
Yes, we're downsizing. No, we didn't think things would move this fast when we decided in September that it was worth doing. We thought we'd put it on the market and see what happened. We took a couple of weekends to clean out our attic, our basement and closets, and then got it ready for staging in October. Lo and behold, it was on the market for just five days. We received two offers and just like that we were in a position to make an offer on a condo in a new 10-unit development less than two miles west of us in Northeast Portland. After some minor back and forth, our offer was accepted and it was full speed ahead.
I've waited until now to post anything about the move, partly because I didn't want to detract from the other major thing going on in our lives -- planning for this month's wedding of Jamie and Jordan -- and partly because I didn't want to jinx us in case anything went awry with financing, home inspections or the buyers of our home. Our patience was rewarded this week. The morning after we arrived back home after the wedding, we were in a title insurance office signing loan documents to close the sale. Now, all that's left is to sell selected furniture items on Friday, finish packing up and wait for the movers to show up Saturday morning.
So how does it feel to leave the comfort of a place that's been our home for 23 years?
Exciting. After living in a sturdy old house, built in 1926, we're looking forward to the conveniences of a new home where everything works, efficiently and unfailingly. Can't say that was always the case here, with some seriously old appliances and the quirks that come along with owning an older home.
Emotional. This is where we've lived since Nathan was 6 and Simone was 3, the place where we brought Jordan home, at 5 months old, from the foster home where he'd been living before we adopted him. It's the place where we opened our home to a succession of dogs, cats, rats, a rabbit and a few anoles (small lizards that, unfortunately, didn't do too well with us because we couldn't regulate the heating lamp in their very well -- you can imagine the end result).
Liberating. After all these years of watering, mowing and raking, not to mention shelling out for a new roof and gutters, exterior paint jobs, etc., we can finally say goodbye to it all. Owning a home is a wonderful thing, but there's no escaping the responsibilities. There's also no escaping the escalating property taxes. Not that we're against paying our fair share to support the schools, parks and other local services. Taxes are the price of civilization -- something that (cheap partisan shot coming) too many self-centered folks fail to realize or choose to ignore.
Prideful. This is where we raised three great kids and built a warehouse of memories. From our home on the corner, we could walk our kids to school and take them to the neighborhood park. As they grew older, we could see them to the bus stop down the street. Later still, we could listen for the familiar sound of a car, signaling they'd made it home from wherever they'd been with their teenage friends.
Exciting. Did I mention we're excited? After living with, between and surrounded by boxes for the past few weeks, I'm more than ready to pack up and move. Yes, we'll be leaving a physical place. But we'll taking our memories with us and starting a whole new raft of them. Just as it's still sinking in that our youngest son is actually married, so too is it sinking in that we're actually moving. We'll be waking up in a new place, with a small balcony outside our bedroom and a new view of the world.
How cool is that?
The Ohlone, for all of San Francisco to see
By Brenda Norrell
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/
Photo: Ann Marie Sayers, Ohlone, gazes at the images on Cloit Tower. Photo Brenda Norrell.
SAN FRANCISCO -- The images of the Ohlone people on Coit Tower tonight were absolutely magical. High above San Francisco, on a hilltop above the bay, Ann Marie Sayers spoke of the Ohlone people as the images were shown on this high tower for the people of San Francisco to see. This was a creative act of excellence, when art becomes true art, reflecting the original energies, as Mark Toby once said.
Mary Jean Robertson broadcast live on KPOO tonight. Coit Towers shows films and images on the tower until dawn:
http://www.kpoo.com/hearus.html
Celebrating the 40th year anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz.
http://cbs5.com/entertainment/coit.tower.movies.2.1334820.html
The Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony begins at dawn on Thursday morning, from Pier 33.
SAN FRANCISCO -- The images of the Ohlone people on Coit Tower tonight were absolutely magical. High above San Francisco, on a hilltop above the bay, Ann Marie Sayers spoke of the Ohlone people as the images were shown on this high tower for the people of San Francisco to see. This was a creative act of excellence, when art becomes true art, reflecting the original energies, as Mark Toby once said.
Mary Jean Robertson broadcast live on KPOO tonight. Coit Towers shows films and images on the tower until dawn:
http://www.kpoo.com/hearus.html
Celebrating the 40th year anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz.
http://cbs5.com/entertainment/coit.tower.movies.2.1334820.html
The Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony begins at dawn on Thursday morning, from Pier 33.
LISTEN LIVE: KPFA Online San Francisco: Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony
Thursday November 26th at 6:00am
http://www.kpfa.org/home
Listen to the AIM West 40 Year Anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz:
(Videos of Nov. 24 and Nov. 25)
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Thursday November 26th at 6:00am
http://www.kpfa.org/home
Listen to the AIM West 40 Year Anniversary of the Occupation of Alcatraz:
(Videos of Nov. 24 and Nov. 25)
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
AIM West Watch Livestream Today
Earthcycles and Censored News welcome Native youth mentor Sage, livestreaming from AIM West. Sage and Govinda/Photo Brenda Norrell.
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Chat is open at Livestream website. Program begins shortly after 10 a.m. Pacific time.
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Chat is open at Livestream website. Program begins shortly after 10 a.m. Pacific time.
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Watch live streaming video from earthcycles at livestream.com
"A Living Prayer"
This is the song that Jamie chose to be played as she walked down the leaf-strewn path to her place between her pastor and her bridesmaids.
In this world I walk alone
With no place to call my home
But there's one who holds my hand
The rugged road through barren lands
The way is dark, the road is steep
But He's become my eyes to see
The strength to climb, my griefs to bear
The Savior lives inside me there
In Your love I find release
A haven from my unbelief
Take my life and let me be
A living prayer, my God to Thee
In these trials of life I find
Another voice inside my mind
He comforts me and bids me live
Inside the love the Father gives
In Your love I find release
A haven from my unbelief
Take my life and let me be
A living prayer, my God to Thee
Take my life and let me be
A living prayer, my God to Thee
AIM West livestream today Wed., Nov. 25, 2009
The American Indian Movement leaders are being broadcast live today, Wednesday, Nov. 25, from the AIM West 40 Year Reunion of the Occupation of Alcatraz in San Francisco. Join Bill Means, Clyde Bellecourt, Wadona Thunder Hawk, Yvonne Swan, Tony Gonzales, Mark Anquoe and more beginning at 10 a.m. Pacific time. The Sunrise Gathering on Alcatraz begins at dawn on Thursday.
Watch livestream at:
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Watch livestream at:
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Photos: Wadona Thunder Hawk. Photo 2: Clyde Bellecourt at AIM West on Tuesday. Photo 3: Tomas Reyes and others at the feast. Photos Brenda Norrell.
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
A country wedding
As I sit down to write tonight, two thoughts come to mind: 1) I'm officially a father-in-law now; 2) I don't think there's any way to do justice to telling the tale of Jordan and Jamie's wedding. But I'll try.
On Sunday afternoon, Nov. 22, slightly more than 100 people gathered in folding chairs on the grass to see a handsome, suntanned young man, with a military haircut and his crisp Army uniform, and a beautiful blonde, blue-eyed young woman, wearing a sleeveless, low-cut white wedding gown, join their lives together in marriage.
The ceremony took place at the Lake Creek Historical Society grounds, about 20 miles northeast of Medford, and a million miles from the dense, urban area that's my normal.
They stood -- between two oak trees a few yards from clear, rushing waters of Lake Creek -- and gazed at each other as if they were the only two people on Earth. I felt that way when I married Lori 34 years ago, and the memories came flooding back watching our son and his bride.
If there was a theme to the day, it was City Meets Country. And I mean that in a positive way. On Jamie's side sat dozens of people, clad in blue jeans, leather vests, pearl-button shirts and cowboy hats. On Jordan's side sat men in sport coats and neckties and women in long dresses. No denim and no cowboy hats for that crowd.
A couple of older men on horseback had set up in the road outside the grounds to direct people with their cars. Jamie walked in, on her father's arm, to Alison Krauss' enchanting song, "A Living Prayer." Inside Pioneer Hall, a home-cooked buffet of teriyaki chicken, pasta salad, green salad, baked potatoes with all the fixings, and three kinds of pie. The deejay played Keith Urban and Lee Ann Womack along with Van Morrison and James Brown.
From start to finish, I couldn't shake the feeling that I was watching myself in a movie. Going into the men's room to have a few words with Jordan before the ceremony began; walking with Lori, arm in arm, to our seats in the front row; rising to grab the mike and offer a toast...all of it felt pretty surreal.
Of course, the evening went all too fast. Before we knew it, the dancing had come to a close, Jamie and Jordan had departed in a stretch limo for two nights in the honeymoon suite at the historic Jacksonville Inn, and friends and family were pitching in to fold tables, put away chairs, sweep the floors, box up leftovers and generally just clean up.
It's amazing to think that people can search a lifetime for their soulmate and never find him or her. And others? They're fortunate, like Jamie and Jordan, to recognize what they have in each other and to see past the superficial differences. How unlikely that they would even meet -- she a country girl, raised on a horse ranch in tiny Butte Falls, Oregon, spending the summer at a youth camp outside Portland one year; he a city boy, raised in the heart of Oregon's largest city and yet longing to be in the wide-open spaces. What a fluke that he would take the horsemanship class taught by Jamie that summer. Otherwise, how else would they have met?
My 82-year-old mom, Theresa, came up from Fremont and my best friend from high school, Al Rodriguez (also our best man those many years ago), came up from Santa Barbara to join us for the big event. Nathan, Jordan's older brother, served as best man. Simone, accompanied by her partner Kyndall, helped out wherever needed and mingled with our guests, including a contingent of friends whose sons and daughters have grown up with Jordan, beginning with preschool -- and even earlier.
As I said above, I don't think there's a way to fully tell the story of Jordan and Jamie's wedding. I can say the two of them have our love and total respect. In the past year, it seems that both of them have grown into more mature, self-confident individuals, totally committed to each other as a lifelong pair. This week, they'll have an early Thanksgiving with her parents and then hit the road in Jamie's Jetta, bound for El Paso, Texas, and Fort Bliss, where they'll make their home while Jordan continues with advanced infantry training. Once they get settled, Jamie can look for work, too, as a licensed veterinary technician.
We wish them peace and happiness.
(Wedding photos will be posted soon. The one above? Taken at the Rede Reunion in July.)
Leaving the newspaper
I've been away from the blog for several days, so my first act is to post Doug Bates' farewell column, as I said I would.
Here it is: Autumn in the world of ink on paper
Enjoy.
Here it is: Autumn in the world of ink on paper
Enjoy.
LIVE from AIM West San Francisco
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Join us again live Wednesday morning at 10 a.m. Pacific for AIM West speakers online or at the Baha'i Center, 170 Valencia St., San Francisco. Listen to Bill Means, Clyde Bellecourt, Mark Maracle, Madonna Thunder Hawk, Yvonne Swan, Mark Anquoe, Tony Gonzales and more.
Watch tonight's program by clicking on "ON-DEMAND" (after the commercial, it is a free site) and then select show for Nov. 24.
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Join us again live Wednesday morning at 10 a.m. Pacific for AIM West speakers online or at the Baha'i Center, 170 Valencia St., San Francisco. Listen to Bill Means, Clyde Bellecourt, Mark Maracle, Madonna Thunder Hawk, Yvonne Swan, Mark Anquoe, Tony Gonzales and more.
Watch tonight's program by clicking on "ON-DEMAND" (after the commercial, it is a free site) and then select show for Nov. 24.
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Monday, November 23, 2009
US Censorship: Editors the blood is on your hands
What the United States does best is to deceive the masses with the media
By Brenda Norrell
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com
TUCSON -- During the past few weeks, there's been a wave of censorship and news distortion surrounding events in Tucson. In the first case, the O'odham Solidarity Project hosted the event, "Apartheid in America: Surviving Occupation in O'odham Lands."
There were several ways that this event was censored by editors and publishers. First of all, most didn't even send reporters. Then, there are reporters who wrote articles that were not published. Here is the primary way that editors censor a reporter's article. They say, "Get the other side of the story." In the case of the O'odham event, speakers spoke and there was no opposition. Their words deserve to be quoted.
Of course the bottom line was that most newspapers did not want to risk quoting the controversial Ward Churchill, the guest speaker. They were afraid to print his words and engaged in a form of censorship. In the borderzone, the media is reluctant to point out the similarities between the militarization of the US/Mexico border and the border of Palestine. Along with the militarization and oppression, the two borders have in common the same spy industry contractor, the Israeli defense contractor Elbit Systems, subcontracted in the US by Boeing. The city of Tucson is nursed by the poison milk of war manufacturers and military operations.
The O'odham Solidarity Event offered a special potency because of the presentations by Ofelia Rivas and her brother Julian Rivas, O'odham living on the border, a region militarized by US border agents, where the elected tribal government and tribal police oppress their own people. Here, O'odham have no civil rights. O'odham and migrants are murdered by US border agents who are never held accountable.
The second case of news distortion was in the coverage of the Southwest Weekend of Witness to End Torture. In one newspaper's coverage, both the peaceful protesters and the counter protesters were covered as if they stood on the same moral ground. However, to report this accurately as a journalist, the newspaper should have pointed out that the counter protesters screamed insults and slurs constantly.
Sierra Vista, home to Fort Huachuca's US Army Intelligence Center, made the news in recent years when the Ku Klux Klan joined with Minutemen. The Southern Poverty Law Center lists Sierra Vista as the home of a hate organization, the anti-immigrant American Border Patrol. This climate of hate, with its rancid hate speech, was obvious during the peaceful vigil, protest and walk.
Of course neither AP nor the major newspapers in the US sent reporters to cover the US torture vigil. Those present at the vigil called for an end to US torture, the closure of Guantanamo and an end to drones. Drones, unmanned aerial vehicles are now carrying out "rogue assassinations," and killing civilians.
At Fort Huachuca, five people peacefully crossed over onto the army base and were voluntarily arrested to bring attention to Fort Huachuca's longstanding role in publishing torture manuals and training soldiers who carry out torture. The production of the School of Americas torture manual was here, a fact made public by the US in 1996. Major Gen. Barbara Fast, who previously served at Fort Huachuca, was the chief of interrogations at Abu Ghraib.
During the 1970s and 1980s, tens of thousands of people in the Americas were tortured, raped and assassinated as a result of US torture training by the School of the Americas. The US kidnappings and torture continues around the world, masked with the words "secret renditions." Mercenaries, such as Blackwater, now XE, murdered with impunity. Bush and Cheney have not been held accountable for violating the Geneva Conventions.
So, for those editors and publishers who censor and distort the facts of the oppression at the border, and the United States role in ongoing torture and assassinations, the blood is also on your hands.
Video coverage of the O'odhan event and torture vigil and arrests at:
http://www.livestream.com/earthcycles
Photos and articles at Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/
Southern Poverty Law Center's Hate Map:
http://www.splcenter.org/intel/map/hate.jsp
AIM West this week
Nov. 23 -- 27, 2009
By Mark Anquoe
Photo: Mark Anquoe/by Brenda Norrell
Brothers and Sisters,
Lots of things happening this week in San Francisco. If you're interested in the American Indian Movement and want to be more involved, come to one of our meeting days (monday and wednesday). If you want to see and be seen, please join us for a public feast on Tuesday or the Alcatraz Sunrise Ceremony on Thursday morning. And PLEASE join us at the Emeryville Shellmound Protest on Friday. Details below. See you there! --
MONDAY, November 23, 2009
10:00am - 5:30pm
Koret Auditorium, SF Main Public Library 100 Larkin St. San Francisco, CA Opening ceremonies for anniversary week events. Speakers include Bill Means, Madonna Thunder Hawk, Mike Flores and Mark Maracle. Also special screening of AIM-West film production "El Salvador: I Want My People To Live".
TUESDAY, November 24, 2009 12:00pm - 5:00pm
Bahai'i Center 170 Valencia St
San Francisco, CA Potluck feast, speakers, singers and traditional dancers from all over Indian Country! Special program starts at 12:00pm. Speakers will include Mary Jean Robertson and Clyde Bellecourt. Bring food to share! Food prep starts at 10am WEDNESDAY, November 25, 2009 10:00am - 5:00pm
Bahai'i Center 170 Valencia St
San Francisco, CA A full day of topics led by a panel of distinguished community organizers: Sacred Sites; Immigration and Border issues; Environment and COP-15 in Copenhagen; Treaties, and Mineral Resource and Mining Extraction; Prisoner Rights and strategy campaign for Leonard Peltier’ Executive Clemency; Federally Recognized, Unrecognized and Disenrollment; Building AIM chapters and defining role of supporters, coalitions, alliances, and capacity building; Youth and International Solidarity with Liberation Movements.
THURSDAY, November 26, 2009
5:00am - 9:00am
Alcatraz Island, San Francisco Annual UnThanksgiving Sunrise Gathering on Alcatraz Island. Board ships from Pier #33 - Hornblower Alcatraz Tours, purchase tickets online, $14 kids under 5 free! The sunrise program will be broadcast from THE ROCK live on radio KPFA 94.1 starting at 6am to 9am with Miguel Molina, and Co-Anchored by Tony Gonzales of AIM-WEST with Mary Jean Robertson, DJ of KPOO radio. For those of you too far away to attend, this event will be audio broadcast live at http://www.kpfa.org/
FRIDAY, November 27, 2009 11:00am - 2:00pm
Bay Street Mall Ohlone and Shellmound Way Emeryville, CA Annual Black Friday protest at Emeryville's Bay Street Mall. The Bay Street Mall was built on top of an ancient Ohlone burial site after years of protest actions by the local Native American community. The construction of the mall unearthed HUNDREDS of human remains, many of which were taken away to landfill in the name of consumerism. While the construction of the mall couldn't be stopped, we in the Bay Area Native American community ask the non-Native community to join us in protesting this obscene structure. On "Black Friday" every year we remind the public that this is sacred Indian land and the Bay Street Mall should be boycotted.
FRIDAY, November 27, 2009
6:00pm - 10:00pm Bahai'i Center 170 Valencia St San Francisco, CA Benefit fundraiser at the Bahai’I Center, 170 Valencia Street in San Francisco! Tickets $10-20 donation, no one turned away for lack of funds. Doors open at 6 pm until 10 pm. Music by Bob Young Project, Local Artists, special guests and much more!! Please bring cans of food for Inter-Tribal Friendship House in Oakland. -- Mark Anquoe AIM-West http://www.aimwest.info/
California Shellmounds
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZenzsAWMvE
Footage from the 2006 Emeryville Shellmound Protest including that evening's news story. When Native American protesters decided to walk away from their secluded "protest corner", the police tried to stop and intimidate the protesters. The walkers refused to stop. Video shot by Perry Matlock end edited by Mark Anquoe.
PLEASE JOIN US THIS YEAR! 11am, Friday, November 27, 2009. Meet at Shellmound and Ohlone Way in Emeryville, CA. For more information visit :
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/11/20/18629643.php
http://www.aimwest.info/
California shellmounds are massive ancient structures built by Native Americans that were used as human burial sites. The Bay Street Mall in Emeryville, California was built on the ruins of a 3500 year old Ohlone Shellmound. The construction of the shopping mall was strongly opposed by the local Native American community, who wanted the sacred site to be left undisturbed.
Despite their opposition, the mall was built in 2001. During the mall's construction, hundreds of human remains were found and visibly removed as waste in front of protesters. Since that time, the Native American community in the San Francisco Bay Area has held annual protests on Black Friday ("The biggest shopping day of the year") to ask the non-Native community to boycott the shopping center that has permanently desecrated this unique and irreplaceable sacred Ohlone site.
The number of burials found [...] still remains a mystery.
"We did find a lot of intact burials," said Oakland archeologist Sally Salzman Morgan, who was hired by Emeryville to study the site. "Its too inflammatory to say how many there were. But most (burials) were disturbed."
Rosemary Cambra, tribal chair of the Muwekma Ohlone, calls the citys new, culturally-sensitive development the legally-permitted erasing of a culture. "Were still living in the world of politics of erasure," Cambra said. "Its just an old way of racism. Nothing has really changed for tribal groups in the Bay Area."
--Mark Anquoe
AIM-West
http://www.aimwest.info
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