<![CDATA[NEW TRIBE RISING - Watch]]>Fri, 03 May 2024 21:15:13 -0700Weebly<![CDATA[Ira Hayes]]>Thu, 01 Dec 2022 19:31:54 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/ira-hayes U.S. Marine Corps Memorial statue in D.C. includes Pima Indian Corp. Ira Hayes who served honorably and  the died alone alcoholism. Here is a song and video by Johnny Cash (who was also Native American), honoring Ira Hayes.
WHY
home
Work Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEwSwQtSmDQ


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<![CDATA["Indian Test Pattern"]]>Thu, 01 Dec 2022 00:05:56 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/indian-test-pattern​RCA could have used any other symbol, but they chose to aim the rifle scope at an Indigenous leader's head: a chief. This was an intentional target practice.
Work Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5HJN-6bvVg

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<![CDATA["Green Corn Dance"]]>Wed, 30 Nov 2022 16:30:06 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/green-corn-danceBelow the ​Schemitzun, Feast of Green Corn & Dance with the Pequot (2017) continues today. The Pequot died practicing their religious freedom during their Green Corn Dance, which became the War of 1637.
Work Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BF2QfMbBmFo

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<![CDATA["Successful Massacres"]]>Wed, 30 Nov 2022 01:17:56 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/successful-massacres.. Analyzing Tommy Orange's There There
Successful massacres of American Indians happened frequently in this country and away from the average American eye. Below is a massacre of American Indians directed by President Abraham Lincoln just a year before  he issued the 1963 Emancipation Proclamation that declared slaves forever free within the Confederacy.

The Dakota 38 Full Movie

On the day after Christmas in 1862, 38 Dakota men were hanged under order of President Abraham Lincoln. The hangings and convictions of the Dakota 38 resulted from the aftermath of the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862 in southwest Minnesota. 

​In addition to the 38 men hanged the day after Christmas, there were terrible injustices committed against 265 others in the form of military convictions and inhuman injustices to more than 3,000 Dakota people who were held captive, then forced to march west out of Minnesota.
Warning: this video contains disturbing scenes
Full Movie
Work Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pX6FBSUyQI
https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/traumatic-true-history-full-list-dakota-38


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<![CDATA[The Missions]]>Tue, 29 Nov 2022 20:21:02 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/the-missions
"Toppling Mission Monuments and Mythologies: A Conference - California Indian Scholars and Allies Respond and Reflect" was an online event hosted by Critical Mission Studies, a research project based at the CSRC in collaboration with partners at UC Riverside, UC San Diego, and UC Santa Cruz. The project is supported by a grant from UC Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives.
Speakers include Deborah Miranda (Ohlone Costanoan Esselen/Chumash), Caroline Ward-Holland (Fernandino Tataviam), Yve Chavez (Tongva), Olivia Chilcote (Luiseño, San Luis Rey Band of Mission Indians), Val Lopez (Amah Mutsun), Renya Ramirez (Ho-Chunk/Ojibwe), Cutcha Risling Baldy (Hoopa Valley), Stan Rodriguez (Santa Ysabel/Kumeyaay). With respondents Jalane Schmidt of Black Lives Matter (UVA) and Amy Lonetree (Ho-Chunk). Sponsored by Critical Mission Studies, a project of the U of California.
Work Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxeXO0BlgYQ


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<![CDATA["Sleeping Americans"]]>Tue, 29 Nov 2022 08:00:00 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/sleeping-americans... Analyzing Tommy Orange's There There
Orange is not only talking about Americans sleeping during the Indian Head test pattern, he want reader to ask:
  • Why did American's continue to sleep, generation after generation while America's Indigenous people's were slaughtered, their head flown as flags, forced to relocate to reservations, removed from homes as children into military boarding schools, uprooted from reservations into urban cities, and finally terminated. 
  • Why do Americans hold Indians in the past, without the opportunity to be accepted differently in the present or future?
WHY Video

​As a member of the “Apsaalooke Nation”, Supaman  makes his home on Apsáalooke lands in Montana.

“Supaman” Is Christian Takes Gun Parrish, a Native American dancer and innovative hip hop artist who has dedicated his life to empowering and spreading a message of hope, pride and resilience through his original art form.


His videos have received millions of views which have put him in high demand touring extensively throughout the U.S.A and internationally. He is currently on tour around the country spreading the good medicine of resiliency, love, laughter and inclusion. 

​Work Cited
​https://youtu.be/CNORQCae48Y

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<![CDATA["Fast Metal"]]>Mon, 28 Nov 2022 08:00:00 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/fast-metal"A Tribe Called Red" ... Analyzing Tommy Orange's There There
In his prologue, Tommy Orange references "fast metal" that could be fast metal cars or fast bullets. We believe Orange also mentions fast metal as music and music's transforming influence in Indigenous Peoples' lives. Specifically, Orange mentions a group formerly known as A Tribe Called Red, now called The Halluci NationOrange acknowledges that "A Tribe Called Red" is "a small kind of miracle ... in the spirit of the age" ... this music group gives their music and videos for free online.  See one of their videos below.
In There There, the author's character Edwin Black  listens to "A Tribe Called Red" and describes this contemporary new music that combines Indigenous Peoples' modern, past, and present in one music.

Black says, "Back in my room I put my earphones in. Put on A Tribe Called Red. They're a group of First Nations DJs and producers based out of Ottawa. They make electronic music with samples from powwow drum groups". 
However ... "The problem with Indigenous art in general is that it's stuck in the past." -  Edwin Black There There character

Orange helps bring important questions into discussion:
Questions: 
  • If Indigenous peoples are "stuck in tradition, in the past, how can the past still be relevant to Indigenous peoples living now"?
  • Bow can being Native be modern?
  • Why do Indigenous people need to re-invent themselves?
  • How can Indigenous people continue to live when ideas of the past (old ways) still hold expectations on who is a “real Indian”?

No Longer Stuck in the Past

Picture
Bear Witness and Tim “2oolman” Hill of A Tribe Called Red are reintroducing themselves as The Halluci Nation, to reflect the evolution of their music and mission. Source: https://thehallucination.com/

​Indigenous people appear to be the only group of people living in the United States that other Americans, and the rest of the world, keep in the past. To many, if Indigenous peoples' culture and way of life (art,  foods, music etc.) do not pull from the past or "tradition", than it is not Indigenous (Orange, 77). Why?


​https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=USqLVySEUE8&t=41s

​The Halluci Nation, takes its name from a phrase coined by John Trudell, to describe the vast global community of people who remember at their core what it means to be human. As a visionary artist and activist, Trudell recognized the connection between his accomplishments and what ATCR did intuitively through music and art. 

Trudell’s voice was the first heard on Tribe’s last record, We Are The Halluci Nation, and will, fittingly, be the first you hear on The Halluci Nation’s upcoming record, One More Saturday Night. The album is a love letter to the Electric Pow Wow gatherings launched at Ottawa’s Babylon nightclub in 2007. It represents an imagined denouement to the biweekly Saturday-night parties that ended abruptly in 2017, without ever getting the proper send-off. One More Saturday Night thus pays homage to the parties’ energy and momentum that elevated The Halluci Nation to this pivotal point in their career of fully mastering their own music style while also moving beyond club music; or “mixing dance music with dance music,” as Bear Witness succinctly puts it. 

“We wanted to pay homage to the Electric Pow Wow and wrap that whole decade of experience up and close the cycle, and in doing so give direct coordinates of where the future was headed. In a nutshell, that’s what this album is about,” says Bear. “We just wanted to make a party record, as well, one that people could dance to while still having the strong message we are known for.” 

​As was the case with its proud legacy, The Halluci Nation’s future revolves around collaboration. From hip-hop star, Yasiin Bey (AKA Mos Def), to the
Indigenous Australian band, OKA, to the Wayuu-Colombian powerhouse, Lido Pimienta, the group has always sought out artists from around the world who would join the Halluci Nation family to form a like minded community as well as an international indigenous alliance.  The upcoming record will be no exception – with features as inspired and unpredictable as the music from Texas “electro-cumbia” producer, El Dusty, Anishnaabeg drum group, Chippewa Travellers, Maori artist, Rob Ruha, Inuk singer, Tanya Tagaq, and round-dance/R&B singer Antoine, among many others.

“We wanted to take the music to another place,” says 2oolman. “We showed a little bit of our ambitious side on this record and we got to do a lot of songs that we’d been wanting to do for a long time. And this is just the beginning. I wouldn’t be surprised if you heard The Halluci Nation produce a project for someone else. We’ve got so much more coming.”

This is a beginning, not an end, after all. The Halluci Nation maintains focus on what they feel they can impact most: how Indigenous people are seen. Through groundbreaking stage shows and ever-changing visuals, Bear Witness and 2oolman are working to create media that reflects today’s Indigenous identity. By partnering with striking visual artists such as Whess Harman, Saige Mukash and Cedar-Eve Peters along with a growing community of musical collaborators. They see themselves simply as contributors to a necessary conversation around a subtle and complex representation of the contemporary Indigenous experience. 

The Halluci Nation is real. 

Work Cited
​​​https://thehallucination.com/press-kit/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=USqLVySEUE8&t=41s


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<![CDATA["Flags"]]>Mon, 28 Nov 2022 02:59:46 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/flags​... Analyzing Tommy Orange's There There
Orange's reference to "flags" helps illustrate the non-Native peoples' patriotism, who literally flew Native bodies on poles like flags. 
Today, American Indian Nations have adopted the idea of flying flags and forming U.S. type governments.   

The video below is of a young student named Peter, who offers his choices for "Top 10 Native American Flags." There are countless flags of Native Americans, including in flags of Canada and the Americas Indigenous Peoples.  

​​Today, the U.S. Government only federally recognizes 574 tribal Sovereign Nations. These 
nations are within, but separate from the United States and the U.S. states, with the right to govern themselves.

The U.S. government forced Tribal Nations to adopt constitutions and form recognizable local Tribal governments in order to receive federal recognition.

​Unfortunately, the U.S. government does not recognize countless Native American individuals, communities, bands, tribes, and nations recognized for various reasons, including the U.S. Indian Termination Policy of 1953.
Picture
Three members of the Native American Women Warriors post the colors inside Bob Jones Auditorium at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, during the National American Indian Heritage Month observance there Nov. 13, 2019. From left: Army veteran Keshon Smith; Marine Corps veteran Carrie Lewis; and Army veteran Mitchelene BigMan, president and founder of NAWW. The observance was organized by Huntsville Center’s Equal Employment Opportunity office in coordination with Team Redstone and the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command. The Native American Women Warriors are an all-female group of Native American veterans who started as a color guard but have since grown and branched out as advocates for Native American women veterans in areas such as health, education and employment. The members make appearances at various events around the country, serving as motivational and keynote speakers, performing tribal dances, and fulfilling the role of color guard representing all branches of the U.S. military. (DVIDS)

Flag Songs
Many tribes even have their own national anthems known as flag songs that focus on veterans. They’re popular among Plains tribes from which the modern powwow originated, said Dennis Zotigh of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian. Powwows are social gatherings, generally with competitive dancing.​​



Other tribes including the Lumbee, Eastern Cherokee, Mohegan and Pequot on the East Coast, and Cochiti, Jemez and Taos pueblos in the Southwest also composed their own flag songs, telling their stories and admiration for the U.S. flag, Zotigh said.
      - Military Times​
Work Cited
https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2017/11/25/to-native-americans-honoring-flag-might-mean-a-different-anthem/
https://nara.getarchive.net/media/three-members-of-the-native-american-women-warriors-5c1953

https://youtu.be/xJmnPHfUaLw

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<![CDATA["Dreams"]]>Sun, 27 Nov 2022 22:17:46 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/dreamsPower of Dreams - Native American Dream
A dream therapy session with Dr. Edwin Stronglegs Richardson, working with a Hopi military warrior named Ersala Eagles Cry and her eagle dreams during dessert storm and during a sacred sweat lodge ceremony. 
Work Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3XzU1jwx9bA

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<![CDATA[Horrible, True Facts About Columbus]]>Fri, 25 Nov 2022 21:13:40 GMThttp://newtriberising.org/watch/horrible-true-facts-about-columbusAuthor Vincent Schilling highlights ​Horrible, True Facts about #Columbus and #ColumbusDay in this YouTube video.
Work Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCir-NX0zdQ​
​https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/8-myths-and-atrocities-about-christopher-columbus-and-columbus-day

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