N'we Jinan Artists - "BIMAACHIIHIIWASSUU" // Cree Nation of Wemindji
Song written, recorded and filmed in Cree Nation of Wemindji. DOWNLOAD on ITUNES: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/eey... ------------------------------------------ SONG CREDITS: Whitney Miniquaken, Nicole Vaillancourt, Layla Miniquaken, Nathaniel Vaillancourt, Darius Shashaweskum, Michael Mark, Gerald Mark, Jared Georgekish, Cherish Stewart, Tyson George & Dillon Chum. Produced by David Hodges Video by Andrei Savu (http://www.dreimedia.com) This song & music video is owned by The Cree School Board (http://www.cscree.qc.ca) Special Thanks to Maquatua Eeyou School. For more information: http://www.nwejinan.com FOLLOW US: FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/nwejinan SOUNDCLOUD: http://www.soundcloud.com/nwejinan Media inquiries: nwejinan@gmail.co
Documentor: 
Justin
Likes: 10
Oren Lyons on Sovereignty: Who We Are - Lummi Nation
Hosted by Children of the Setting Sun and Lummi Indian Business Council Featuring Oren Lyons Tom Sampson Jay Julius Jill Macintyre Witt Tony Hillaire, host
Documentor: 
ChildrenoftheSettingSun
Likes: 9
Norway House Cree Nation: Then & Now
Documentor: 
Jim
Likes: 8
Bangladeshi Band " Feed Back " Singer Maksud
( টেলিফোনে যখন ফিশ ফিশ করে কথা হয় দুজনাই ) 70 এর 80 এবং 90 এর দশক এগুলি আমার বাংলাদেশী ব্যান্ডের সেরা সংগ্রহ যা প্রত্যেকে পছন্দ করে এবং সেগুলি চিরদিনের জন্য এবং অব্যাহত থাকে। আমার কাছে কয়েকটি ভিডিও সহ অনেকগুলি অডিও ক্যাসেট রয়েছে আমি আপনার বিনোদনের জন্য এগুলি প্রকাশ করার চেষ্টা করব, আশা করি আপনি এটি পছন্দ করবেন। সর্বদা ওল্ড ইজ গোল্ড আশা করি সাবস্ক্রাইব করতে ভুলবেন না These are my best collection of Bangladeshi Bands which everyone likes and those are forever on and on. I have so many audio cassette including some video I will try to publish them for your entertainment, Hope you like it . Always Old Is Gold
Documentor: 
Zulifiqar
Likes: 7
Hop to the Drop (Crow Hop)
Documentor: 
John
Likes: 7
CA Sign in 3:23 / 17:38 Woodland Cree First Nation - A Vision for the Future
Documentor: 
John
Likes: 7
Prokofiev Fantasy in F Minor
Documentor: 
Sam
Likes: 6
GATHERING OF NATIONS POW WOW 2019 Grand Entry Friday
Documentor: 
Ingrid
Likes: 6
Interview with Lisa Meeches
Documentor: 
LisaMeeches
Likes: 6
O amar roshiya bondhure ||Shirin shila ||Art of dance ||Atn bangla dance 2018
syful islam_Dance Choreographer 39.3K subscribers Artist: Shirin Shila & Dla team choreography by syful islam Performed by Dhaka lalitakala Academy
Documentor: 
Bushra
Likes: 6
Our 7 Ojibway Teachings:
Manitoba First Nation Elder Dave Courchene explains the origins and lessons of the First Nation Seven Teachings. The lessons of the Bear Spirit (Courage), the Beaver Spirit (Wisdom), the Eagle Spirit (Love), the Buffalo Spirit (Respect), the Sasquatch Spirit (Honesty), the Wolf Spirit (Humility) and the Turtle Spirit (Truth) are all retold in this 11 minute video in both English and Ojibway. At Sagkeeng Child and Family Services (in Sagkeeng First Nation and Winnipeg, Manitoba) we support and empower our families and community. Services we provide include workshops in parenting, traditional skills like making star blankets, moccasins, hand drums, ribbon shirts and harvesting wild rice. Learn more at http://www.sagkeengcfs.org
Documentor: 
SagkeengCFS
Likes: 5
Positive Anicinabe Parenting
Generations of residential school experiences stripped Aboriginal communities from their traditional practices of parenting. Lorraine Boubard of Sagkeeng Child and Family Services is teaching parents their tradition parenting skills again in this video on Positive Anicinabe Parenting. At Sagkeeng Child and Family Services (in Sagkeeng First Nation and Winnipeg, Manitoba) we support and empower our families and community. Services we provide include workshops in parenting, traditional skills like making star blankets, moccasins, hand drums, ribbon shirts and harvesting wild rice. Learn more at http://www.sagkeengcfs.org.
Documentor: 
SagkeengCFS
Likes: 5
Making Hand Drums with Sagkeeng Child and Family Services - 2012
http://www.sagkeengcfs.org The traditional teachings and cultural skills of making hand drums are powerful anchors to First Nation culture and health. At Sagkeeng Child and Family Services (in Sagkeeng First Nation and Winnipeg, Manitoba) we support and empower our families and community. Services we provide include workshops in traditional skills like making star blankets, moccasins, hand drums, ribbon shirts and harvesting wild rice. Learn more at http://www.sagkeengcfs.org
Documentor: 
SagkeengCFS
Likes: 5
Lake St. Martin is not a reservoir.
Unknown Speaker 0:00 Let's open up in paradise. Can we do that and let's just start our meeting. Oh, Unknown Speaker 0:05 yeah. Unknown Speaker 0:11 Okay God Heavenly Father or Jesus will come to you today about this meeting we're having for the betterment of our community and a membership Lord, our elders or youth or adults and families are like Thank you, Lord, for making this meeting available for us to me. He asked the Lord to guide us bring thoughts to our to our concerns here, Lord, and to brainstorm here and also tell the political figures are and here to help us out with this very important matter that's concerning our future. In our community, a little subscription Lord, we asked about the common guidance. And Lord, we thank you for this day, in the traveling mercies upon us and also Lord, we rebuke this COVID-19 In Jesus name, Lord, he asked us to protect our families and our loved ones, or our homes, you protect our leaders are to this meeting that we're about to have learned that you bring us meaningful consultations with this province and this government that we're always forever fighting with Lord, but through you, Lord Jesus, we are battles or we fought for us, and our concerns will be put to rest. And Lord, that You know the future that we don't know. Unknown Speaker 1:23 Lord Jesus, I your thoughts are not our thoughts. Your ways are not always thought but you know what we need what we need at this time, Lord is your help. At this time, Lord at this table, and the political figures are handled, the leaders that they'll help us fight this battle. Lord, we thank you for this day, Lord. Let's have this good meeting together. And we ask you, Lord, to guide us in Jesus mighty name I pray Lord, Amen. Unknown Speaker 1:51 Amen. Unknown Speaker 1:59 Okay, I guess I'll start. Unknown Speaker 2:02 That's okay with everybody. I call this meeting today for political support. For our first nation. I know Unknown Speaker 2:11 interlake reserves tribal council is trying to get involved. But I'll tell you this much. From a consumers point of view in my community, I was born and raised in Scotland. Unknown Speaker 2:23 And the total of the players that I think that are trying to get involved are people that are never even set foot or lived on a first nation that know the concerns that we the people that are brought up in that community to know that what we went through through the years growing up in that community. Unknown Speaker 2:42 And I think I'll call this column city slickers people that are micromanaging, and people that want to think they know what's best for us, is not what's best for us. Sometimes you got to put the dollar figure aside and do what's right and my community, they destroyed meaning they the province of Manitoba, destroyed our community of little Saskatchewan and the body of licks and Martin. Unknown Speaker 3:12 When they destroyed that body of Lexa, Martin, they disrupted an ecosystem. They disrupted the lives for eight long years, for First Nations people. Unknown Speaker 3:25 And now to come back and now build a tribe correctly, a channel of $500 million channel. Now they're kind of again, nickel and dime the First Nations. Again, we're at the short end of the stick again. Unknown Speaker 3:43 I'm sick and tired of Unknown Speaker 3:45 people trying to tell us what's best for us. We had a minister Deputy Minister Michelle burrows attend our community about a year ago, year and a half ago. He called that lake St. Martin lake of Lake St. Martin reservoir. Unknown Speaker 4:03 And I stopped him from going any further in his speech, I said that is a lake that was formed by a meteorite millions of years ago. That is not a reservoir, that body of Lake st Maarten is not a reservoir and anytime you talk about a reservoir to me, a reservoir means they're going to hold water back for whom anything to do with water in this province of Manitoba. It tells me that Manitoba hydro has their thoughts and their fingers in anything that has to do with water in our in our in our first thing in our community and in our province. Another red flag for me was a hydrologist by the name of Eric Blake Unknown Speaker 4:48 was going to help the first nation in their fight Unknown Speaker 4:53 to how to protect the first nation. Now the Latin that Eric blade hydraulic Unknown Speaker 5:00 was told by senior officials in Manitoba. If you help little Saskatchewan first nation in their endeavor to fight against the Manitoba provincial government of Manitoba, you will not see another contract for the rest of your life. So that that individual Eric blade reported that the chief counsel and not through a red flag, what are they hiding? What are they planning? It came to light on Thursday from our meeting and often we had a zoom meeting. It came to light that they're building a 25 kilowatt Unknown Speaker 5:34 towers or erecting alongside between the channel and the access road that was already constructed. They built an access road. Unknown Speaker 5:44 Now, if they're putting towers in there, and they're gonna put a hydro dam there is what I'm saying. And I told the ministers I spoke to not ministers, their messenger boys that they sent to us because it wasn't a meaningful consultation. Now they were they said, there's a flaw that that design has a flaw. The narrows, Alexei Martin is a bottleneck style. They're planning on diverting water through that bottleneck. Now if that water can be diverted through that bottleneck, what's going to happen? The lake of lakes and market is going to rise and it's going to be spread out where they're going to cause future more inland flooding. Unknown Speaker 6:29 Today, we see no scattering there's culverts Unknown Speaker 6:34 and brims and everything. manholes are erected eight feet high. They're eight feet above. You could see it right there by our health center, our band office, eight feet high, you could see the manholes up didn't brim than everything they raised, except for our funeral, our prayer, burial grounds of lakes, little Saskatchewan, our burial grounds, there's no brim around it. We were told, they're either gonna zoom every single body that's in that graveyard. Unknown Speaker 7:08 Or they're gonna bring it or they're gonna mount it and put a monument in the middle. Unknown Speaker 7:16 Now let's see if we were to do that at Brookside Boulevard here at the cemetery would they allow anybody to do that zoom their loved ones Unknown Speaker 7:25 they are piling the flat so the higher the provinces hiding more information from us. Unknown Speaker 7:31 And that that's really heartbreaking when when we are told we can't even build within an easement line that they wrote a block line right across little Saskatchewan First Nation is the first nation that has sandbars. There's some high points or some low points it's like a zigzag our community and that's why our elders called it khakis, Canada, that's our GOP name of little Saskatchewan. And there's land there that zigzags and there's some high ground some lovin, but here the government comes in the put a line right through there, like our lives on the side don't matter. So they put us up on higher ground. Unknown Speaker 8:10 And when they're planning to put us on higher ground, they believe that all our concerns and all our problems will be put to rest. However, they're not put to rest because there's other concerns that are in the first nation number one is our burial site. Number two, our houses that are on that other side of the easement line where there's both three or four families right now that refuse to move. Unknown Speaker 8:35 Number three is the decommissioning of the septic tanks, the septic fields in that community, the whole community of lakes close to scheduled where we have to be commissioned properly. Now, our own m dollars were cut in half. And they are not willing the meaning the government indigenous services Canada doesn't want to give us any more money to decommission those old septic tanks. If those old septic tanks remain remain in the community and the flood comes it's going to destroy the ecosystem in that in that body of lakes and Unknown Speaker 9:12 a lot of concerns are are at hand. The former homes that are still erected. We own we pay a mortgage on those homes. There's some homes that are under CMHC. For still paying for those. Unknown Speaker 9:28 Why doesn't the government relieve our concerns of nobodies living in those homes now? Why don't they take that CMHC Unknown Speaker 9:38 fee out of our headache or problems? It's been eight, nine long years already since 2011 flood Unknown Speaker 9:47 and these are the concerns we have with CMHC fees are still being tacked on to us. And yet nobody's living in CMHC units. Unknown Speaker 9:57 But that's all say for now. If If covered Unknown Speaker 10:00 Sort of Leroy wants to add or Tom Rhodes. Unknown Speaker 10:07 I can't say anything faster. Sorry, because you're not sharing. Unknown Speaker 10:13 I think one of the issues that Unknown Speaker 10:16 that you're dealing with, and you can see it with the, with the pen is the nature of Brian Pallister himself. Unknown Speaker 10:26 He, Unknown Speaker 10:28 and we've been, we've been seeing each other seeing him for eight, nine long years. And he just is ignorant to the whole situation. He doesn't know anything, many indigenous people and accounts are short. And you know, we've had meetings and they just kind of look at and don't recognize their requirements. They took a conscious decision on their own, between the federal government, the provincial government, and as he might have to consciously like your community along with some of the other ones, but yet they don't take the responsibility to rectify all that. Unknown Speaker 11:09 Damage into Europe. Unknown Speaker 11:12 Can you hear me? Yeah. Unknown Speaker 11:15 If I could, I guess one of the problems Unknown Speaker 11:19 is consultation, and there's no consultation with Florida. That's fine. We're gonna reach out to our political advocates to assist us with Unknown Speaker 11:28 bureaucrats in Ottawa, I believe this hospital over the regional office, because of the provincial government in Canada, they're often the problem with juniata, we will have proper jurisdiction over the bridge station, with them flooding us up. And also why the environmental studies moving forward? We haven't we don't get enough dollars to properly do an environmental assessment with the impacts that are coupled with the floodwaters. Unknown Speaker 12:00 And also, we have written letters with no response. I guess this is one of the reasons why we're reaching out Unknown Speaker 12:08 to our political are Unknown Speaker 12:10 letters that are written. Unknown Speaker 12:14 There's no response whatsoever. I think the minister can still be aware of what's going on. I think this is the tenor of the leadership of Moses Gatlin. Unknown Speaker 12:24 And also downs, right, seem at home. Unknown Speaker 12:30 Or in our heart, we were told that Unknown Speaker 12:34 origins Unknown Speaker 12:37 and all still has a purpose. They're coming forth, in allowing this traffic does affect us downstream off the lake, Lake St. Martin, idea, that's another concern that we have our experiments might be pumping IRGC. Unknown Speaker 12:58 But does not do that. At this time we can, or Unknown Speaker 13:03 where we won't have the details as council members, mommy's happy moving forward. But those are just some of my concerns, a consultation portion of it, then environmental impact studies that should have been done and the letters that we've written in also a finer design environment that works for the first nation. There's no response to the letters. And also they don't, they're proposing actions Unknown Speaker 13:30 on our date. Unknown Speaker 13:32 That's why I see it. Unknown Speaker 13:36 So I've started Unknown Speaker 13:40 that's how we got our house Unknown Speaker 13:44 built, Unknown Speaker 13:45 we get moved to hire calm, which was Unknown Speaker 13:48 made over the past 15 years or so. Unknown Speaker 13:53 Another just someone that thinks and also with the concerns of the librarians, woman for this product. Unknown Speaker 14:01 Thank you. I'll leave it at that we'd like Unknown Speaker 14:19 I guess a couple of things that I wanting our political Unknown Speaker 14:25 team here to make a push. I need AMC sovereign chiefs and also the assembly of First Nations very well guarded. Unknown Speaker 14:38 To push on their ends for meaningful consultations, meaning they're meaningful, not meaningful to me, means ministers to be at the table. Unknown Speaker 14:52 Not messenger boys to relay messages back and forth. Unknown Speaker 14:58 If they want meaningful consultation, Unknown Speaker 15:00 To me that will be meaningful to have the ministers present at our next meeting, moving forward, and also the concern that is never brought up again. Unknown Speaker 15:15 We did bring it up the first nation brought it up Unknown Speaker 15:19 the 1976 agreement. Unknown Speaker 15:22 My grandfather Daniel shorting was chief at the time middle Saskatchewan, and an Indian agent by the name of Christine Hutson signed on our behalf. Unknown Speaker 15:34 Now, this this, this item this paper can be found in the archives, as well we found it. Unknown Speaker 15:43 It was Lance Unknown Speaker 15:45 that was given to the first nation back in 1976. To accommodate for farming lands that were destroyed during the flood issues back then them this. Unknown Speaker 16:00 And back in those days were given 25 parcels of land on the north side of the road of 513. Unknown Speaker 16:08 Today, you see a community that is been erected there a school, pipe, water and sewer and roadways, culvert sacks were made on that north side of 513, which is today known as like St. Maarten First Nation. Unknown Speaker 16:25 Those lines were never surrendered by our first nation or by any means given authorization to the province of Manitoba or to Lake St. Maarten first nation to to move on to those lands. Unknown Speaker 16:41 And Stephen Craner was a meeting with Jeff saw Chuck and their legal counsel was Gord Unknown Speaker 16:51 Gord Hannon and along with our first nation chief and council and our legal representatives to date, they never sent us a reply or our concern that we just that I just spoke about, they never brought that up to what they're gonna do to reimburse the first nation for those lands. Unknown Speaker 17:11 If we took that to court and went to court, I guarantee you a little Saskatchewan would win in court because that's taken away lands that were given to us in 1976. Now they put a new community they're I think they built 200 houses. They're a new school and like I said, the road pipe water and sewer. Unknown Speaker 17:32 I guarantee you we'd we'd win that case. But it all falls down in the mighty dollar all the time. And, and $500 million Unknown Speaker 17:42 mega project. Unknown Speaker 17:46 Why can't we, my grandchildren and my children, why can't they enjoy the recreational use of that lake that has been destroyed? They can't even swim there today. We can't fish anymore. There's no fish to fish. We can't swim there. My children and I we swim, we break out in red dots. Unknown Speaker 18:07 Dolphin, Manitoba and Portage la prairie Manitoba have a $44 million project. They have aquatic centers in those in those Unknown Speaker 18:18 non Aboriginal communities. What's stopping us from acquiring an aquatic center where we could share fare Ford, Lake St. Martin little Saskatchewan, dolphin river, we're all close within proximity. Why can't we share a facility of that magnitude $44 million dollar project or what's wrong with our requests, where we can have the safety of our children or grandchildren we use that facility Not only that, but even our elders can use a hot tubs and all that. And we could you could use a lot of ideas or you can use those that Aquatic Center for safe boating practices you can teach in that facility. So an aquatic center was something that I came up with about three four years ago already for our land, and to be at least give us the land I'm speaking about is the old Canadian Forces based on St. Maarten in St. Maarten, Manitoba. There's there's a Canadian old an old army base that's still there today. Give us that land in front of the land that you took away from us. That lake where Lake St. Martin yesterday, give us a round off off the highway where we could use it for economic benefit. Down the road. We can build an aquatic center we could build a conference center, a gas station, and maybe even a casino or something. Something where the First Nations can share and meaningful jobs out of this. Unknown Speaker 19:55 You know, the jobs that we're talking about is not the labor jobs. I'm talking about the head Unknown Speaker 20:00 Equipment jobs where we can make money as contractors we could work side by side with the contractors on that on that five year mega project Unknown Speaker 20:10 and obviously more land we need more land. We looked at land on off number six highway and all the way to gypsum though. Little Saskatchewan Economic Development Corp already has lens that where we're currently at our addition store reserves, but we obviously our community is growing. And we also have farmers in the community where they're still trying to survive and they need more heyland Unknown Speaker 20:38 so the land given to Alexa Martin first nation that belonged to SAS First Nation give us some land to replace that. And the legal battle should stop there. Because Unknown Speaker 20:50 give us some nice land off number six highway the main vein to the north where we could practice at least to help eat ourselves the First Nations rather than always asking for a handled Unknown Speaker 21:07 but those are some of the things that we need the chief Domus, we need meaningful consultations with the province Unknown Speaker 21:17 if you can arrange that and I don't know if Perry was gonna fire letter out to the province but he was supposed to join us today. Unknown Speaker 21:27 But obviously we need jobs to work on and then sickness in northern was awarded apparently this contract to do the $500 million project. He came to our first nation and offered us for our our $255,000 crackle we have Unknown Speaker 21:44 he they offered us $40 an hour for that piece of equipment. I told him according to the Manitoba heavy that book that tells us what we should charge and a wet rate is 171 an hour. And he said no, I we can't pay that we'll pay you $40 we pay for any repairs any breakdowns. We'll pay for a man will pay for the fuel, diesel, whatever grease, said how about you give me all your equipment, your rock rocks, your your excavators, your dozers, everything. I'll give you $40 an hour. How does that sound? He said no, no, I can't do that. He said, Well, how do you feel the first nation should be able to swallow a $255,000 machine for $40 an hour? No. Unknown Speaker 22:29 So that's right. I mean, they think we're stupid is what they think these contractors think the Indians are stupid. We're not stupid anymore. We follow that Manitoba heavy booklet. And that everybody should follow it in the province of Manitoba. And that's why we have that Manitoba, heavy book that use as a guide. And these contractors come in and try and be a little less and give us lowball amounts. Unknown Speaker 22:56 So that's obviously one of the things that we want is to share in jobs and, and I've heard this before because I also look after employment and training in my community when we built 170 new homes. Unknown Speaker 23:09 I have heard comments where we have to kick out contractors from our first nation from the comments and one of them was European Indian. Two weeks of pay, they're gone. That's the mentality they have of our people. And I told them to leave and their their comments were not appreciated. And we told them to leave we kicked them out. Because that's not acceptable in today's day and age. Unknown Speaker 23:35 Another comment was all I told me reserve housing, what do we care didn't want to put a final paint coat on inside the closets. Again, they made those nominal it's only a reserved house. Unknown Speaker 23:47 So there's a lot of abuse that we put up with and that we endured through the years from contractors that would be a little less. So now today, this is what we need. We need meaningful consultations. Transcribed by https://otter.ai
Documentor: 
Hector
Likes: 5
The Ballad of Crowfoot
This short film examines the situation of Aboriginal people in North America through the figure of Crowfoot, the legendary 19th-century Blackfoot leader of the Plains. A rapid montage of archival photos, etchings and contemporary newspaper clippings is married to the words and music of an impassioned ballad written by Mi'kmaq singer and songwriter Willie Dunn. Directed by Willie Dunn - 1968
Documentor: 
NFB
Likes: 5
Indomitable
DJ Shub - ft. Northern Cree Singers (Official Video)
Documentor: 
Ralf
Likes: 4
Our Language, Our Selves
Sagkeeng First Nation Elder Lilian Spence talks about how important it is for Aboriginal youth to learn their Objiway language because it helps root them in their culture and understand their history. At Sagkeeng Child and Family Services (in Sagkeeng First Nation and Winnipeg, Manitoba) we support and empower our families and community. Services we provide include workshops in parenting, traditional skills like making star blankets, moccasins, hand drums, ribbon shirts and harvesting wild rice. Learn more at http://www.sagkeengcfs.org
Documentor: 
SagkeengCFS
Likes: 4
Moccasin Making with Sagkeeng Child and Family Services - 2013
http://www.sagkeengcfs.org The traditional teachings and cultural skills of making moccasins are powerful anchors to First Nation culture and health. At Sagkeeng Child and Family Services (in Sagkeeng First Nation and Winnipeg, Manitoba) we support and empower our families and community. Services we provide include workshops in traditional skills like making star blankets, moccasins, hand drums, ribbon shirts and harvesting wild rice. Learn more at http://www.sagkeengcfs.org
Documentor: 
SagkeengCFS
Likes: 4
Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media - Feature Film
Manufacturing Consent explores the political life and ideas of world-renowned linguist, intellectual and political activist Noam Chomsky. Through a collage of biography, archival material and various graphics and illustrations, Mark Achbar and Peter Wintonick's 22-award-winning documentary highlights Chomsky's probing analysis of mass media and his critique of the forces at work behind the daily news. Manufacturing Consent examine la vie politique et les idées du réputé linguiste, intellectuel et militant Noam Chomsky. Ce documentaire vingt-deux fois primé de Mark Achbar et Peter Wintonick allie éléments biographiques, documents d’archives et illustrations diverses pour mettre en lumière l’analyse approfondie que Chomsky a faite des médias de masse et sa critique des forces qui influent sur les nouvelles quotidiennes.
Documentor: 
Noam
Likes: 4
Voices on the Rise: - Episode 1Indigenous Language Revitalization in Alberta
Traveling to the community of his ancestors Eli Hirtle begins his language journey across Alberta. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TELUS STORYHIVE supports compelling, original stories told by filmmakers from BC and Alberta by providing production funding, training and exposure to new audiences.
Documentor: 
Darla
Likes: 4
Cree Language of the Plains Sessions
Sean.Prpick · Cree Language of the Plains Sessions
Sean.Prpick
Documentor: 
Greg
Likes: 3
Cree Language Session 1 Sean.Prpick
Sean.Prpick · Cree Language Session 1
Documentor: 
Greg
Likes: 3
Cree Language Session 2 Sean.Prpick
Sean.Prpick · Cree Language Session 2
Documentor: 
Greg
Likes: 3
Fancy Fan Action (Tha Powwow 2012)
Young Spirit
Documentor: 
Ralf
Likes: 3
What Native Elders Think About Indigenous Cooking
"What Native Elders Think About Indigenous Cooking." Brian Yazzie, a Diné/Navajo traveling chef now based in St. Paul, MN, brings Native cuisine back home to the Navajo Nation in Arizona. There he looks for truly Indigenous ingredients, as even "classic" Native comfort foods like fry bread have colonizer origins. Brian plans to make meals for a small group, just his family and local community leaders, but when word spreads and suddenly he's cooking for a large group of curious and impatient community elders, how will Brian impress them? Watch him make blue corn mash with agave syrup and seeds, plus Navajo steamed corn soup, in a crammed kitchen full of curious elders who think he should be on "Rachel Ray." What Native Elders Think About Indigenous Cooking | alter-NATIVE: Kitchen Ep. 2 Learn more about "Independent Lens": http://www.pbs.org/independentlens Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/independentlens Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/IndependentLens Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/independent... Chief Operating Officer Tom Mikkelsen Wolf
Documentor: 
Brian
Likes: 3
A Message From Russell Means
Russell Means (1939-2012), the American-Indian (Oglala Sioux) activist and actor (Chief Chingachgook in "The Last of the Mohicans") is of one of the country's most famous Native Americans. In this unscripted monologue, delivered June 9, 1993 from a junk site in Gallup, New Mexico, Means (then 54) calls our attention to environmental injustices, telling us that even western science has verified that the earth is a living organism in space (as Dr. James Lovelock, and then Dr. Lynn Margulis, hypothesized in the 1970's about the planet's interacting systems, defining the Gaia Theory). Means tells us, "Mother Earth is what its all about...She's a live being... She hurts, she feels, like you and I." The monologue was originally shown at the end of the play, "Wheels Over Indian Trails" based on his life. Coming from a long oral tradition, Means felt information, especially that about the big environmental picture, shared by all life on earth, should be out there, free to be heard. He liked the Internet age for that reason. Gayil Nalls This video is licensed under the Standard YouTube License, which allows for play on YouTube and through YouTube-run products. Use outside of this context is available by permission and license only. To license this video, please contact Nalls Studio at nalls [at] nallsstudio.com
Documentor: 
Gayil
Likes: 3
Mystical House volume 1
Documentor: 
NDeep
Likes: 3
Darla Daniels - Traditional Fiddle Tunes
Metis fiddler Darla Daniels performs at Building Bridges Among Faith Traditions, the annual concert of the Edmonton Interfaith Centre for Education and Action (EICEA) on January 31, 2016.
Documentor: 
Darla
Likes: 3
Impeachment, Warmongering Iran, and Bull Moose Kim Iversen Show 1-13-21
Documentor: 
KimIversen
Likes: 3
Norway House and Cross Lake, Manitoba 1984
Documentor: 
Jim
Likes: 3
Salish Society - True Love
This song is dedicated to Lillian Leon. The next generation coming together to share the gift of song, drum, rattle. Love what you do, do what you love
Documentor: 
ConwayKootenay
Likes: 3
04 Piano Sonata No. 6, Op. 82 IV. Vivace
Documentor: 
Sam
Likes: 2
05 Etude In A-Flat Major, Op. 25 No. 1
Documentor: 
Sam
Likes: 2
07 Etude In B Minor, Op. 25 No. 10
Documentor: 
Sam
Likes: 2
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KimIversen said: Impeachment, Warmongering Iran, and Bull Moose Kim Iversen Show 1-13-21:
Sam said:
This is Sam
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This is Anons post
Anon said:
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KimIversen said:
KimIversen said: Impeachment, Warmongering Iran, and Bull Moose Kim Iversen Show 1-13-21:
Styxhexenhammer666 said:
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Styxhexenhammer666 said:
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Styxhexenhammer666 said:
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Styxhexenhammer666 said:
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Styxhexenhammer666 said:
This is Styx
Anon said:
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Styxhexenhammer666 said:
Sam said: Prokofiev Fantasy in F Minor: null
Ingrid said:
Ingrid said: Watch youtube videos at 1.5 X the normal speed: You can learn alot faster by listening to lectures or podcasts when you speed up the video. You can control the playback speed by choosing the gear icon in the bottom right of the video screen.