See how Americans are celebrating nation’s 250th anniversary
Digest more
This article is part of Native News Online’s America 250: A Republic Built on Native Land initiative. As the United States marks its 250th anniversary, Native News Online asked readers
KSNF Joplin on MSN
Native American heritage showcased at Joplin Public Library
The American Indian Center of Springfield visited Joplin Public Library to share the history and future of Native American heritage, including traditional dress, dances, music, and powwows, with around 40 kids and teens.
The winter holidays and especially Christmas have different meanings to tribes and Native individuals across Indian Country as they commune with friends and family Dennis Zotigh Beckham Barehand (Dine' and Cold Springs Rancheria Mono) dances in Ballet ...
It is a story of freedom and sacrifice, but it is also a story that begins with the occupation of lands inhabited by Native people since time immemorial and the forced removal of Native Americans through federal policies rooted in assimilation.
When the founders of the United States designed the Constitution, they were learning from history that democracy was likely to fail – to find someone who would fool the people into giving him complete power and then end the democracy. They designed ...
The Native Forward Scholars Fund recently received a $50 million unrestricted gift from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott. The gift is the largest donation to date to a Native American organization and came at a time when Native Forward is experiencing a 35% ...
Native American cultures are imbued with democratic, environmental, and spiritual principles that now permeate modern American culture and many other cultures around the world.
View post: One of the Greatest Bass Solos of All Time Belongs to a 1971 Classic — And It Still Rocks A small handful of American living near Native American reservations are using tribal laws to skirt high gas prices. Due to tribal legislation, gas ...
This week marked the deadline for California schools to comply with a state law that prohibits the use of culturally insensitive terms for Indigenous groups as school names or mascots. Over two dozen schools are named after Native American tribes,
