Native Unity: Sixty Years Ago

Native Unity

NATIVE UNITY DIGEST: The Native American people need to find a way to pull together to become more visible to the rest of the world. This concept is being promoted in the Digest through news articles, features, OP/ED pieces and contributor submissions on all aspects of Native life and tribal cultures throughout the U.S.and Canada. Bobbie Hart O'Neill, editor.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Sixty Years Ago

By Larry Mitchell

The Elders on my rez
had this prophecy sixty years ago:

They said there will come a time
When our people will kill each other over an evil spirit
and it will not be alcohol!

Now I hear about our people fighting and dying
Over a drug called ‘Meth’
Families are falling apart.
Their houses become like poison.
Young girls teeth are rotting and falling out
Over this drug.
Some stay awake for days lost in violent paranoia!

It is not just on my rez
But it is happening all over Indian Country!
Native people are dying here in the Twin Cities
over this drug.
This devil drug leaves a path of violence and sorrow
and is a threat to our survival as a people!

The Elders on my rez
had this prophecy sixty years ago!

May 16, 2006 in Potawatomi Song-Poems Permalink

Native Protestors Clash With Non-Native Residents
Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Native protesters in Caledonia, Ontario, clashed with non-Native residents on Monday, putting negotiations to resolve the long-running dispute on hold.

The protesters from the Six Nations Reserve removed their blockade yesterday but re-erected it when non-Native residents put up their own barricade. Some non-Natives then tried to abandon their blockade but weren't supported by their fellow residents. There were fist fights and scuffles among the two groups.

Tensions also simmered when non-Natives angrily left bread and cheese, a symbol of Queen Victoria's offering to the Six Nations Reserve, at the Native blockade. Native protesters hurled the bread and cheese back at the non-Natives.

The situation worsened when a transformer station at the protest site caught fire, causing a power loss for 8,000 people. Non-Natives claimed the Native protesters sabotaged the transformer but there are conflicting reports about whether it was a malfunction or not.

Talks to resolve the dispute had been set to resume today but have been put on hold.

(This is an important story to me because if my genealogy record is correct, Joseph Brant was my great-great grandfather. Bobbie)

Copyright © 2000-2006 Indianz.Com. In Print

House Restores Funds Critical To Indian Programs
Monday, May 22, 2006

Republicans and Democrats in the House rebelled against the Bush administration's budget proposal last week and restored funds to critical Indian programs.

By a 293-128 vote, the House passed Interior's fiscal year 2007 budget bill on Thursday. The measure funds Indian programs at a total of $5.9 billion, $204 million above current levels and $62 million above the amount the White House requested in February.
The White House had sought to eliminate the entire urban Indian health program and all Johnson O'Malley education grants. Tribal leaders and key members of Congress protested the cuts as ill-advised.

In the report accompanying the bill, members of the House wrote that "reductions to Indian health, welfare and education programs are unacceptable."

The House Appropriations Committee restored all $32.7 million for urban the 23 Indian health clinics across the country. The money will prevent the facilities from cutting back services or closing their doors outright.

"Funding for the urban health program has been restored and the proposal to eliminate this program is rejected," the report states.
The House also fully restored $16.3 million to Johnson O'Malley, a program that provides school supplies, tutoring and other services to Native American students in public schools. "The committee feels that the justification for the reduction, that there are other programs in the government that could provide these funds, is unfounded," the report states.

The House expressed displeasure with the lack of funding for post-secondary education as well. For the past five years, the Bush administration has zeroed out the budgets for United Tribes Technical College in North Dakota and Crownpoint Institute in New Mexico.
The two tribal colleges "are institutions of higher learning that provide an educational benefit to Indian country," the bill report states. "The continued reduction of funding for these institutions is of great concern."
Other areas of concern included the construction of new Indian Health Service facilities. The Bush administration sought to cut $20 million from the account but the House added $19 million, brining the total for facilities construction to $36.7 million.

"The Service needs to do a better job of requesting and justifying construction funding for its hospital and clinic facility needs," the House wrote. "At the level of funding requested in 2007, it would take 48 years to complete the facilities on the current priority list."
Overall, the IHS is funded at $2.83 billion for 2007. This represents a $138 million increase over current levels and $7.6 million above the Bush administration's request.

Over at the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the bill includes nearly $2 billion for the operation of Indian programs, an increase of $11.2 million increase over current levels and $6.8 million above the Bush administration's request.

The House commended the BIA for presenting its budget in a better format. But lawmakers directed the agency to submit a report by December 31 that explains how money is being used at the central office in Washington, D.C., and at the regional offices.

"The committee however, remains concerned about the amount of carryover monies in many of the accounts and about complaints from tribes that there was inadequate consultation with Tribes and tribal leaders during preparation of this year's budget," the report states.
"The committee is also concerned that the process of making budgetary data available to tribes is inadequate."

The Office of Special Trustee, whose budget has grown considerably since the start of the Bush administration, is funded at $150 million. This represents a cut of $35 million to cut back historical accounting projects of individual Indian and tribal trust funds.

The House again criticized the administration's decision to take money away from the BIA and spend it at OST. "The committee believes that these funds would have been better used to fund greatly needed health, law enforcement and education programs in Indian country," the report states.

The bill now goes onto the Senate for consideration. In prior years, lawmakers have made changes to the figures passed by the House but the overall levels for Indian programs has generally remained the same.

Indianz.com. In Print
URL:http://www.indianz.com/News/2006/014080.asp

TO SUBMIT an ARTICLE or OPINION PIECE to the Native Unity Digest, e-mail bobbieo@digitaldune.net.

NATIVE UNITY - A place for Native American Peoples to solidify their tribes to make a positive impact on the cultural, social, economic and political fabric of American society and a place for non-Natives to better understand the ways of the American Indian.

Visit Vietnam Vet. Larry Mitchell at http://www.potawatomivet.com and click on his blog at the site.

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