We, the Elders, have done our best to represent our Red Nation as Ojibway, Cree, and Dakota. We present this story knowing it is an attempt to capture the richness and beauty of the Red Nation a people of the heart and the land. We are an oral people. We cannot transfer our way of life through written words alone. Sacred law must be spoken and heard. Our way of life is meant to be lived and experienced. Our words are meant to inspire and guide our fellow human beings to follow the path of the heart. We believe that there is one Creator for all, that there is one Mother Earth that sustains all of us. We do not own the Earth. How can anyone own their mother? We owe our existence to Mother Earth. We believe that the spirit of the original Red Man was lowered to Mother Earth and our spirit chose to be born on Turtle Island. This story tells of our human life and journey until our return back to the spirit world. We believe the Creator has always been within our reach and that we have to return to the Earth to be guided to our true purpose.
An overview of the past and present of the Blackfeet people. Traces their customs, family life, history, and culture, as well as relations with the U.S. government.
Offers a brief introduction to longhouses, covering building materials, construction methods, and the people who lived in these traditional Native American dwellings.
The Indians of New England: A Critical Bibliography
Aboriginal Law: Solicitors' Issues, 2009 Update: Materials Prepared for the Continuing Legal Education Seminar, Aboriginal Law: Solicitors' Issues 2009, Held...
Myths and Realities of Tribal Sovereignty: The Law and Economics of Indian Self-rule
"These stories are taken, for the most part, from tales told by Indian tribes of the Pacific Northwest and collected by the anthropologist Franz Boas"--T.p. verso.
Indian Traders of the Southeastern Spanish Borderlands: Panton, Leslie & Company and John Forbes & Company, 1783-1847
Indios de Norteamérica
These volumes are a first person narrative of a soldier in the West during the Great Sioux War and the Cheyenne Outbreak as well as other important Indian battles.
Other participants are not so well known generally The seven characters are these individuals , in alphabetical order here : John G. Bourke , a well - educated freethinker who , as an officer with the 3rd Cavalry , fought the native ...