Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Anchorage Native News (community education publication produced by Southcentral Foundation of Alaska) [10] Anishinabek News (monthly community newspaper is produced by the Communications Unit of the Anishinabek Nation at the head office in Nipissing First Nation) [11] Anishinaabeg Today (White Earth Nation) [12]
Gerald Robert Vizenor (born 1934) is an American writer and scholar, and an enrolled member of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, White Earth Reservation.Vizenor also taught for many years at the University of California, Berkeley, where he was Director of Native American Studies.
The White Earth Band of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, [1] also called the White Earth Nation (Ojibwe: Gaa-waabaabiganikaag Anishinaabeg, lit. "People from where there is an abundance of white clay"), is a federally recognized Native American band in northwestern Minnesota. The band's land base is the White Earth Indian Reservation.
The Minnesota Chippewa Tribe is the centralized governmental authority for six Ojibwe bands in Minnesota.The tribe was created on June 18, 1934; the organization and its governmental powers are divided between the tribe, and the individual bands, which directly operate their reservations.
This page is our attempt to organize and classify articles relating to Anishinaabe and Anishinini peoples. Any blue links OR RED LINKS people can add are much appreciated. Feel free to use or modify this page in any way that enhances the coverage of the Anishinaabe on Wikiped
Native American newspapers are news publications in the United States published by Native American people often for Native American audiences. The first such publication was the Cherokee Phoenix, started in 1828 by the Cherokee Nation.
She introduces herself as the daughter of an enrolled White Earth Nation citizen. “Native people understand the need for specificity,” she said. Noodin bolstered Indigenous studies program at ...
The White Earth Boarding School was a Native American boarding institution located on the White Earth Indian Reservation in Minnesota.Established in 1871, it was the first of 16 such schools in the state, aiming to assimilate White Earth Nation children into Euro-American culture by eradicating their Indigenous identities, languages, and traditions.