My husband and I attended the last Snake Dance at Hopi that Anglos were permitted to attend.
Saturday Art: Hopi Snake Dance…impressions |
| By: wendydavis Saturday September 11, 2010 2:52 pm |
At the End of our Ropes |
| By: Dakinikat Sunday May 30, 2010 11:01 am |
Unless you’ve spent some time down here on the Gulf Coast, you’re unlikely to really understand the people that live down here. Hard scrabble is a way of life. Historically, we’ve had systemic attacks on our people, our culture and our environment. The hostility runs pretty deep down here because the history of maltreatment runs pretty deep. There are several historical events that you really need to understand to understand the people of Southeastern Louisiana and the surrounding areas
Tribal Government Innovation: An Unlikely Source of a Fair and Successful Recovery? |
| By: sarahhicks Tuesday March 2, 2010 9:10 am |
The hope for a successful and equitable recovery resides in an unlikely group of Americans whose women are “more likely to be in poverty than any other major racial or ethnic group.” That’s the way the Institute for Women’s Policy Research described Native women.
In many Native communities economic crisis is not an occasional disaster. It is a daily, and ongoing, reality. For generations our communities have faced conditions that are even worse than those of the current economic crisis: the scourge of high unemployment and poverty rates, health disparities, and substandard housing and infrastructure.
Back in 2000, when the national unemployment rate was less than 4 percent, the U.S. Census reported on-reservation Native unemployment at 22 percent. At that time, the Census also reported the per capita income for American Indians and Alaska Natives living on reservations at $7,942, well below the U.S. average for all races.


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