For the Children of the Xingu River
It was the children's faces, sometimes their eyes looking at me. They got straight to my heart. For our improvised The post For the Children of the Xingu River appeared first on Intercontinental Cry.
View ArticleAymara Culture Protects Their Children from Psychological Distress
A team of Chilean researchers has recently published a report on the mental health of Aymara schoolchildren in Northern Chile, The post Aymara Culture Protects Their Children from Psychological...
View ArticleViolence continues in Guatemala
I can’t help but wonder what they must have felt, trapped in the Spanish embassy, as they died in the fire. I can’t but wonder what the people outside thought. The victims of this terrible act of...
View ArticleThe Invisible Populous of Appalachia: Seeking Statutory Recognition
West Virginia has an abundance of diversity not only with its flora but also with the people that live there. In the midst of this diverse state, there exists an “invisible” population of American...
View ArticleWaitangi Day – ramblings of a #Maori socialist
Two days ago my wife and I took the existential indigenous pilgrimage up to the Treaty grounds for the dawn service. The weather wasn’t flash but the atmosphere buzzed with a spirit of pride. I must...
View Article“The Right Thing To Do…”
On Friday February 7th, Stephen Harper visited the Blood Reserve to announce a new legislation known as the First Nations Education Act. Prime Minister Harper was welcomed by our elected Chief Charles...
View ArticleBig Solar: Plundering the Mojave Desert
The world’s largest solar thermal energy facility, the Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, opened last Thursday in California’s Mojave Desert. Unfortunately, this is bad news for neighboring indigenous...
View ArticleThe Time is Now! A final plea from IC’s Editor and Publisher
Over the years, IC has published more than 3,000 articles on the rights and struggles of Indigenous Peoples around the world. Can you spare $5 for 3,000 more? When I started IC Magazine nearly ten...
View ArticleWhy Venezuela Matters to the Indigenous Movement
Independent media and social networking movements continue to bridge lives and lifestyles, the (increasingly small) world over. Collective movements spontaneously emerge, collaborate, simultaneously...
View ArticleThe most sacred of all Hawai’i is facing a genocidal threat
At the Anishnabek Educational Institute on Muncey Delaware Territory I met up with a Hawiian woman named Waimakalani Iona. She described a scenario all too familiar to Onkwehon:we people: the...
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