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Nearly 1,000 American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian children died while attending boarding schools that were set up by the U.S. government for the purpose of erasing their tribal ties and cultural practices, according to a report released on Tuesday by the Interior Department. “For the first time in the history of the country, the U.S. government is accounting for its role in operating Indian boarding schools to forcibly assimilate Indian children, and working to set us on a path to heal from the wounds inflicted by those schools,” Bryan Newland, the department’s assistant secretary for Indian affairs, wrote this month in a letter to Interior Secretary Deb Haaland that was included in the report. The report calls on the federal government to apologize and “chart a road to healing.” Its recommendations include creating a national memorial to commemorate the children’s deaths and educate the public; investing in research and helping Native communities heal from intergenerational stress and trauma; and revitalizing Native languages. From the early 1800s to the late 1960s, the U.S. government removed Native children from their families and homes and sent them to boarding schools, where they were forcibly assimilated.
Persons: ” Bryan Newland, Deb Haaland, Organizations: U.S, Interior Department, Locations: Alaska, U.S
Read previewThe Field Museum in Chicago has covered up several displays featuring Native American cultural items as new federal regulations go into effect. The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act was established in 1990 to facilitate the protection and return of Native remains and cultural objects. AdvertisementFor years, tribal officials and repatriation activists have called for the speedier return of Native remains and objects. The Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University, which still holds onto thousands of Native American remains, has not announced how it will respond to the latest regulations. The new rules are the latest effort by the federal government to ensure museums are giving tribes the proper consideration over Native objects.
Persons: , Bryan Newland Organizations: Service, Museum, Business, Protection, Field Museum, Peabody Museum of Archaeology, Harvard University, Association, American Indian Affairs, New York Times Locations: Chicago
‘War Against the Children’
  + stars: | 2023-08-30 | by ( Zach Levitt | Yuliya Parshina-Kottas | Simon Romero | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +37 min
A new accounting shows that at least 523 institutions were part of the sprawling network of boarding schools for Native American children. ‘War Against the Children’ The Native American boarding school system — a decades-long effort to assimilate Indigenous people before they ever reached adulthood — robbed children of their culture, family bonds and sometimes their lives. “The government was not done with war, so the next phase involved war against the children,” said Mr. Sherman, 83, a former aerospace engineer. Now 76, his voice grows shaky when he recounts the punishments children received — and how children were turned into punishers. Library of Congress, Chronicling AmericaA precise accounting of how many children died at Native American boarding schools remains elusive.
Persons: Douglas, Jose M, Emily Jones, Frank Charles, W.Shoshone, Emily Rosenow, – Walker Castorr, Chico Juan, Sava, Julia Fox, — Taylor Dave, Bertha Snooks, — Pablo Trujillo, , Ben Sherman, , Sherman, “ Don’t, , Lizzie Glode, Lizzie Glode’s, Glode’s, Mark, Richard Henry Pratt, Pratt, Mr, David Wallace Adams, Tailyr Irvine, Luther, Carlisle, Smith, Brown, Clark, ” Thomas J, Morgan, Newspapers.com, Charles Lummis, Brenda Child, Bryan Newland, Deb Haaland, Haaland, Ms, Harwood, Anita Yellowhair, Yellowhair, ” Anita Yellowhair, Kevin Whalen, Sherman Institute Sherman, James LaBelle, LaBelle, Ash Adams, Ursula Running Bear, Hughes Organizations: American Boarding School, U.S ., Dickinson College, Carlisle Indian Industrial School, New York, Archives, Thomas Indian School, Alaska State Archives, Friends Mission School, Industrial Training School, National Archives, Santa Fe Indian School, Interior Department, West, National Native American Boarding School, Coalition, Defense Department, Roman Catholic, Presbyterian, Catholic, Quakers, Oglala Sioux Tribe, Oglala Community School, United, Indigenous, Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, NAA, Rapid, Indian Boarding School, Genoa Indian Industrial School, Industrial, Indian Industrial School Puerto Rico, Philippines Carlisle Indian Industrial School Puerto Rico, Mr, Carlisle Indian Industrial, U.S . Army, College, The New York Times, Carlisle, Rosebud Sioux Tribe, Oglala Lakota Nation, Cadet, Phoenix Indian School, Indian School, Junction News, Arizona mesas, Boarding, Alcatraz . Mennonite Library, Bethel College, Cultural, University of Minnesota, Asbury Manual Labor School, of Indian Education, Sherman Indian High School, U.S, Senate, Railroad, Carlisle Indian School, Indian Child Welfare, Department, Canadian, “ Federal, Schools, Harwood Hall, Albuquerque Indian School . National Archives, Arizona National Guard, 158th Infantry, United States, Albuquerque Indian School, NEW, Carlisle Indian Industrial School Indiana, JERSEY MARYLAND D.C, NEW YORK PENNSYLVANIA Carlisle Indian Industrial School Trenton Philadelphia, JERSEY MARYLAND, JERSEY MARYLAND DELAWARE D.C, Carlisle Indian Industrial School Trenton NEW, Carlisle Indian Industrial School Trenton NEW JERSEY Philadelphia, Carlisle Indian Industrial School Trenton NEW JERSEY Philadelphia MARYLAND DELAWARE D.C, Navajo, Intermountain Indian School, Sherman Institute, Sherman Institute Sherman Institute, Fontana Farms, Wrangell Institute, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Alaska State Library, Utah’s Intermountain, Public, University of North, Utah ”, E.O, San Francisco, of Congress, City, Tribal Locations: United States, Oklahoma , Arizona, New Mexico, Alaska, Pima, Apache, Papago, Sava Cook, Mohave, Shoshone, Pueblo, Denver , Colorado, Santa, East, Oglala, Pine Ridge, S.D, Carlisle, Pa, Tribe, Utah, Genoa, Nebraska, Omaha, Nance County, Neb, Kiowa, Southern Plains, Philippines, Tailyr, Rosebud, , Junction, Arizona, Alcatraz, North Newton , Kansas, Fort Mitchell, Ala, U.S, Mississippi, Riverside , Calif, Laguna Pueblo, United, Colorado, Washington, Western New York, Philadelphia, Trenton . PA, Westchester County, N.Y, Pa . Trenton Philadelphia, JERSEY, DELAWARE, JERSEY MARYLAND DELAWARE, Trenton, Carlisle Indian Industrial School Trenton NEW JERSEY, Carlisle Indian Industrial School Trenton NEW JERSEY Philadelphia MARYLAND DELAWARE, Steamboat, Ariz, Brigham City , Utah, Phoenix, Southern California, Sherman, Navajo, Fairbanks , Alaska, Wrangell, Anchorage, Port Graham, punishers, Mt, Edgecumbe, University of North Dakota, Canada, Whiterocks , Utah, San, Albuquerque, purloined
The Quinault Indian Nation, located about 150 miles west of Seattle, has experienced severe flooding because of sea-level rise over the past few years. "If I want to move, I'm assuming that I'm going to be responsible for a whole new house payment and a whole new home," Frenchman said. Now, the first phase of construction in the upper village is nearly complete. "The only thing that I'm going to miss is the view of the river," said Mail. Frenchman is hoping to relocate to the upper village, but doesn't know how she'll be able to afford a new home.
Persons: I've, Lia Frenchman, Frenchman, we've, Indian Affairs Bryan Newland, Ryan Hendricks, Quinault, Newland, Larry Workman Frenchman, Hendricks, that's, there's, she'll, Katie Brigham Organizations: Resilience, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, NOAA, U.S . Department of, Indian Affairs, Department of, Infrastructure Law, U.S . Army Corps of Engineers, Indian Health Service, Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA Locations: Seattle, Washington, Quinault Nation, Taholah, Quinault, U.S, Taholah , Washington, apace
These gaps have led Native American police Reuters met with to take matters into their own hands, some forming their own missing units. Driven by decades of Native American activism, data showing the scale of the crisis, and the appointment of the United States' first ever Native American cabinet secretary Deb Haaland, the issue of missing indigenous people entered the U.S. mainstream in the last five years. MORE AT RISKFactors ranging from poverty and a history of colonial oppression make Native American people disproportionately at risk of going missing. REUTERS/Adria Malcolm“Very few tribes have the funds and staff available to make MMIWR a priority,” said Darlene Gomez, an Albuquerque lawyer who represents families in 17 missing Native American cases. Families of victims and their lawyers say police routinely blame missing Native American women for their own disappearance due to factors such as substance abuse — and it’s not just outsiders.
Persons: Kathleen Lucero, didn’t, Lucero, , Isleta, , Victor Rodriguez, Deb Haaland, Bryan Newland, ” Newland, Adria Malcolm “, Darlene Gomez, Daryl Noon, “ We've, ” Noon, Raul Torrez, Torrez, Zachariah Shorty, Vangie Randall, Shorty, Randall, Raul Bujanda, Bujanda, it’s, Jamie Yazzie, Yazzie's, Tre James, Noon, Michael Henderson, Andrew Hay, Donna Bryson, Claudia Parsons Organizations: Reuters, American, of Indian Affairs, Bay, Indian, Isleta Police Department, REUTERS, New, HOME, BIA, Unit, FBI, Navajo, Thomson Locations: ISLETA PUEBLO, N.M, Manzano, New Mexico, American, U.S, Pueblo, Albuquerque, Oklahoma, United States, Isleta Pueblo, Navajo, Arizona, Utah, Native, Albuquerque’s Bernalillo, Kirtland , New Mexico, Mexico, Washington
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