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Search resuls for: "Onondaga Nation"


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Native Americans began playing lacrosse as a spiritual and social activity more than 1,000 years ago. Their lacrosse sticks were made of wood and had sacred meaning. But many Indigenous stick artisans went out of business when plastic and aluminum replaced wood in the 1970s. He's crafted more than 80,000 sticks by hand, and he's one of the last people who knows how to make them this way. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: Alfie Jacques, He's, Alfie's Organizations: Business Locations: Onondaga
Four or five years ago, Sidney Hill’s young son came to him with a question that Mr. Hill didn’t know how to answer. “We lost all this land,” Mr. Hill recalled his son saying. “How can that be?”In many ways, Mr. Hill was the best person to answer that question. As Tadodaho, the spiritual leader of the Onondaga Nation, he was responsible for protecting its legacy and guiding it into the future. The younger generation needed to know, he said.
Persons: Sidney Hill’s, Hill, , Organizations: State, Onondaga Nation Locations: Onondaga, New York, Syracuse
The Cherokee Nation was promised a seat in Congress in the 1835 Treaty of New Echota. The Cherokee Nation appears closer than ever to finally seating a delegate. She said lawmakers asked tough questions, but she felt "very optimistic" the Cherokee delegate was something the committee ultimately supported. The Cherokee Nation is continuing to galvanize support and encourages US citizens to reach out to their representatives in Congress and tell them to fulfill the treaty promise. "I think the stars are aligned for a Cherokee Nation delegate to be seated," she said.
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