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Zahn Tokiya-ku McClarnon is an American actor known for his performances in the Western crime drama series Longmire, the...
09/08/2025

Zahn Tokiya-ku McClarnon is an American actor known for his performances in the Western crime drama series Longmire, the second season of Fargo, and the second season of Westworld. In 2022, he plays the lead role in the AMC series Dark Winds. He also features in the 2021 FX on Hulu series Reservation Dogs, and the Marvel Cinematic Universe series Hawkeye (2021) and Echo (2024).Zahn Tokiya-ku McClarnon was born in Denver, Colorado, the son of a Hunkpapa Lakota mother and a father of Irish ancestry. He grew up near Browning, Montana, where his father worked at Glacier National Park for the National Park Service. He would often visit the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, where his mother grew up, and often stayed with his maternal grandparents on weekends and for longer visits. His mother lived on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. When his father was relocated to Omaha, Nebraska, for work, the family lived in the Joslyn Castle and Dundee neighborhoods. McClarnon has a fraternal twin brother.

CRAZY HORSE MEMORIAL, SOUTH DAKATA - One of the largest sculpture projects in the worldThe Crazy Horse Memorial is a mas...
09/07/2025

CRAZY HORSE MEMORIAL, SOUTH DAKATA - One of the largest sculpture projects in the worldThe Crazy Horse Memorial is a massive mountain carving located in the Black Hills of South Dakota, USA. It depicts Crazy Horse, a legendary Oglala Lakota warrior, riding a horse and pointing into the distance. The memorial honors Crazy Horse's legacy and serves as a symbol of Native American pride, culture, and resilience.
Work on the Crazy Horse Memorial began in 1948 under the direction of sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski and continues to this day. It is one of the largest ongoing sculptural projects in the world. The memorial is intended to be much more than just a carving; it also includes a cultural and educational center, museum, and Native American university.
The Crazy Horse Memorial stands as a tribute to the spirit and endurance of Native American peoples and their contributions to American history and culture. It is a significant tourist attraction and a symbol of hope and inspiration for Indigenous communities across the country.

Congratulations on your 71th birthdayGraham Greene, CM (born June 22, 1952) is an Indigenous (Oneida) Canadian actor who...
09/07/2025

Congratulations on your 71th birthdayGraham Greene, CM (born June 22, 1952) is an Indigenous (Oneida) Canadian actor who has worked on stage, in film, and in TV productions in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in Dances with Wolves (1990). Other notable films include Thunderheart (1992), Maverick (1994), Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995), The Green Mile (1999), Skins (2002), Transamerica (2005), Casino Jack (2010), Winter's Tale (2014), The Shack (2017), Wind River (2017) and Shadow Wolves (2019)!.

𝗪𝗶𝗹𝗱 𝗛𝗼𝗿𝘀𝗲, 𝗗𝗮𝗸𝗼𝘁𝗮 𝘁𝗿𝗶𝗯𝗲 𝗺𝗲𝗺𝗯𝗲𝗿, 𝟭𝟴𝟴𝟬𝘀The Dakota nation have long been about remaining together and keeping to their roo...
09/06/2025

𝗪𝗶𝗹𝗱 𝗛𝗼𝗿𝘀𝗲, 𝗗𝗮𝗸𝗼𝘁𝗮 𝘁𝗿𝗶𝗯𝗲 𝗺𝗲𝗺𝗯𝗲𝗿, 𝟭𝟴𝟴𝟬𝘀The Dakota nation have long been about remaining together and keeping to their roots. Generations have worked to care for one another, from keeping their farms alive, to their households up and running.
Anthropologist Ella Deloria who wrote about the Dakota people shared in 1944, "The Ultimate aim of a Dakota life, stripped of accessories, was quite simple: One must obey kinship rules; one must be a good relative. No Dakota who has participated in that life will dispute that.

A PARENTS WORST NIGHTMARE ........Losing a child and having to bury them. A man lost his son and couldn’t bare the thoug...
09/06/2025

A PARENTS WORST NIGHTMARE ........Losing a child and having to bury them. A man lost his son and couldn’t bare the thought of living without him. He was suffering and couldn’t believe his son was gone. He cried and cried every day and night, missing his son, wishing things were different.He couldn’t sleep and hadn’t slept in a long time. One night an old medicine man came to him in a dream and told him “Enough!! That’s enough crying!!” The dad told him “I cannot stop, I am never going to see him again!” The old Medicine man said, “Do you want to see him again?” The dad says “yes of course” the old medicine man takes him to the entrance of happy hunting ground where he sees many little beautiful children, so happy and innocent, carrying eagle feathers into the happy hunting grounds, smiling and laughing and just so beautiful. The dad asks “where is my son? Who are these kids?” The old medicine man said “these are the children that are called home early, they are innocent and loved and they go right through to the happy hunting grounds, so happy” the dad says “and my son? Where is he? Why isn’t he with these children?” The old medicine man said, “come this way” and guided him to the side of entrance. A small boy with a beautiful smile was standing there watching all the children enter the happy hunting grounds. He was standing there within reach of an eagle''''''''s feather. His dad grabbed him and hugged him, and the boy kissed his dads'''''''' cheeks and told him he missed him. The dad said “why don''''''''t you have a eagles feather like the other kids? Why are you waiting here at the entrance?”
The boy said “I keep trying to get the eagle feather Daddy, but your tears pull it out of reach. I see you are so sad, and I am tied to that feeling so I wait here until you’re ok” the dad burst out crying for the last time, he told his son, “Get that eagle feather and go, I will be ok, and I know you will be too”
- Don''''''''t cry too long for that loved one you lost, whether son, daughter, husband, mother or father!! Let them rest in peace, don''''''''t torment your life, because they won''''''''t come back, have faith that you will be together again, and that Creator makes us a beautiful home with all our loved ones when we leave this world.
Three Generations - Alfredo Rodriguez (1954, American).

Among the first written records of the Blackfeet Indians were the journals of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, who co...
09/05/2025

Among the first written records of the Blackfeet Indians were the journals of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, who contacted the tribe in about 1806. Unfortunately, those descriptions largely misrepresented Blackfeet women. “As Western men, they only saw what they wanted to see—women with less virtue,” said Susan Webber, a Montana state representative who also teaches Indian women’s studies and philosophy at Blackfeet Community College. Traditionally, Blackfeet women owned their homes and were subservient to no one. “Our role was always ‘sits beside him,’ not ‘sits behind him’ or ‘walks three paces behind him.’ In our ways, women are men’s greatest support and greatest weapon,” says Webber. What early explorers and anthropologist often failed to recognize was the balance of power that existed between genders in Native American communities like the Blackfeet.Buffalo hunts demonstrate this interdependence between genders. For the Blackfeet, the women depended on the men to hunt the bison while the men depended on the women to process and transform the buffalo hides. After butchering the animal, the women then had to prepare the buffalo hides for its many uses, such as constructing the tipi. Tanning hides is an arduous process – each buffalo hide took two full days of work to prepare, though some parts took longer such as drying the hide in the sun. A woman of average skill was said to be able to tan as many as 25 hides in a season. One tipi could require up to 12 to 14 buffalo hides. Erecting the tipi itself was no small feat, either. A tipi cover weighed close to 100 lbs. The wooden poles (as seen in the travois of Russell’s paintings discussed previously) were typically 18 to 20 feet long each. The average tipi was 14 to 16 feet in diameter and stood about 17 feet tall on average.
In the days when leather was a basic article of daily life for the Blackfeet, a woman was judged by her tanning skills. The first stage of tanning turns a fresh hide into rawhide, which was a useful material for many purposes, the most common of which was as storage containers. These rawhide containers were known as parfleches. A parfleche is made of a solid piece of rawhide, folded like an envelope. Some parfleches were used to hold dried food, which when properly folded and tied with strings, were typically safe from mice and bugs. Other uses for rawhide containers included making square or cylindrical bags to hold sacred objects or headdresses and special clothing, or transforming rawhide into saddle bags for transporting. And of course, rawhide was used to make moccasin soles, drumheads, and rattles.
The Blackfeet woman’s role was intricate, working hard not only in preparing shelter, food, and tools, but also in raising and caring for the children. In Seeking New Hunting Grounds, the central figure rides with her children, her toddler wrapped in a blanket in front while her infant is carried on her back in a cradle board. Historically, Blackfeet mothers made the cradle board frames out of willow branches, and later out of large boards cut to their desired shape. They then covered the board with fitted pieces of buckskin laced with an oblong bag in which to place the baby. Often cradle boards were lined with fur or moss. Some mothers attached long strands of beads or shells hanging to amuse the baby with their movement and sounds.

A member of the Miami tribe.The Miami people, are a Native American nation, originally speaking one of the Algonquian la...
09/05/2025

A member of the Miami tribe.
The Miami people, are a Native American nation, originally speaking one of the Algonquian languages. Among the peoples known as the Great Lakes tribes, it occupied territory, that is now identified as Indiana, southwest Michigan, and western Ohio.

By 1846, most of the Miami had been removed, to Indian Territory (now Oklahoma). The Miami Tribe of Oklahoma, is the only federally recognized tribe of Miami Indians, in the United States. The Miami Nation of Indiana, is an unrecognized tribe.

This June we celebrate the 195th anniversary of the birth of Goyathlay (Geronimo), a famous and important Apache warrior...
09/05/2025

This June we celebrate the 195th anniversary of the birth of Goyathlay (Geronimo), a famous and important Apache warrior.Goyathlay, commonly known as Geronimo, is one of the most famous and significant warriors of the Apache people. Born in June 1829 in No-Doyohn Canyon, Mexico (now Arizona, USA), Geronimo became renowned for his fierce resistance against the encroachment of the United States and Mexico into Apache territory. After his family was attacked and killed by Mexican soldiers in 1858, Geronimo became a determined warrior, leading retaliatory attacks and fighting to protect Apache lands. He led many uprisings and military campaigns against American and Mexican forces, becoming a symbol of indigenous resistance. Geronimo was not only a courageous warrior but also an important cultural and political icon, representing resilience and bravery. His life and career significantly contributed to the preservation and dissemination of Apache culture, and he is recognized as one of the most important figures in the history of indigenous struggles in North America. After years of fighting, Geronimo surrendered to the U.S. Army in 1886 and was sent to Florida, then Alabama, and finally Oklahoma. Despite being imprisoned, he maintained his influence and prestige within the Apache community. Geronimo's legacy continues to be honored and remembered in indigenous communities and around the world, symbolizing resistance and the defense of indigenous rights.

Pocahontas remains an enduring figure in American history, symbolizing the early cultural exchanges between Native Ameri...
09/05/2025

Pocahontas remains an enduring figure in American history, symbolizing the early cultural exchanges between Native Americans and European settlers.

The Mysterious Beauty: Native AmericanNative American women were depicted as attractive, desirable, and pious. Interesti...
09/05/2025

The Mysterious Beauty: Native AmericanNative American women were depicted as attractive, desirable, and pious. Interestingly, that beauty was one that matched nineteenth-century beauty ideals for white women: light skin, carefully groomed hair, a thin and shapely body dressed in popular colors.
In some tribes, there is a belief that a person is composed of four things: a physical, an emotional, a mental and a spirit part. Together, these four elements make a person who must bring positivity to these elements to have a balanced life.
This fictitious Native American woman was also morally upstanding. Narratives focused on her superior housekeeping, her fierce devotion to her children, her piety and self-sacrifice. There are 2 conflicting theories on how she gained these: speculation that Native American women learned their values from their natural surroundings, another that they were transmitted through contact with missionaries and white settlers.
With recent movements for Native American rights, women tend to show themselves as they are: descendants of a persecuted nation. And their history, the one of their tribe and families, is sometimes quite enough to show their beauty.
Native American men were another story. Repeatedly portrayed as violent, ruthless, and cruel, they reflected nineteenth-century sexual, racial, and colonial fears. These portrayals reflected popular values by suggesting that ruthless Native American men could only be tamed by civilization or the tempering influence of a woman.
It would be easy to cast these gendered portrayals of indigenous women in a positive light, but they ended up hurting Native Americans more than they helped.
While the articles portrayed women in a positive light according to the criteria of the day, they simultaneously created a fictional Native-American woman, divorced from her
cultural heritage and male counterparts and dependent on the white population for her identity.
But the Native American community is still evolving in a society which abandoned them. Popular beauty standards in America don’t fit with their culture and traditions. Therefore, a lot of Native American women feel like outcasts.

Wes Studi and the DOD-Wesley Studi is a Cherokee actor and film producer, who has garnered critical acclaim and awards t...
09/05/2025

Wes Studi and the DOD

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Wesley Studi is a Cherokee actor and film producer, who has garnered critical acclaim and awards throughout his career.

Studi deployed to Vietnam for 12 months with the 39th Infantry Regiment, seeing intense urban combat in the Cholon section of Saigon and as part of a naval riverine unit.

Studi has appeared in Academy Award-winning films, such as Dances with Wolves (1990), The Last of the Mohicans (1992), and Geronimo: An American Legend (1993).

“You’ve heard about the apology from the pope and all. I have to put in my two cents in terms of what the pope really needs to do, which is rescind, or do something about, the Doctrine of Discovery. That is the papal bull that legitimizes almost every kind of annihilation and genocidal activity that’s ever happened toward Natives in North America.” ~Wes Studi

A LAUGH FOR TODAY❤When NASA was preparing for the Apollo moon landings of the late 60s and early 70s, they did some astr...
09/05/2025

A LAUGH FOR TODAY❤
When NASA was preparing for the Apollo moon landings of the late 60s and early 70s, they did some astronaut training along a Navajo Indian reservation in the SW. One day, a Navajo elder and his grandson were herding animals and came across the space crew. The old man, who only spoke Navajo, asked a question, which the grandson translated: "What are the guys in the big suits doing?" A member of the crew said they were practicing for their trip to the moon." Then, recognizing a promotional opportunity for the spin-doctors, added, "We will be leaving behind a special record with greetings in many languages and such. Would the old man be interested in giving us a greeting to include?"
Upon translation, the old man got really excited and was thrilled at the idea of sending a message to the moon with the astronauts. The NASA folks produced a tape recorder and the old man recorded his message at which the grandson fought back the urge to laugh... but he refused to translate.
After Apollo 11 had successfully landed on the moon and brought its astronauts homes, a new group were training in the desert when one of the NASA officials recognized the Navajo elder and his grandson and went to tell them that the old man's message was indeed on the moon which was met with laughter.
Finally, the NASA rep caught on that not everything was as simple as he had originally thought and asked for a translation. With a chuckle the youngster replied: "Beware of white man; they come to steal your land!

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