First Nation American Indian classroom Resources found on the Educational CyberPlayGround.
| Alaska • First Nation • First Nation 2 • Thanksgiving • China << • Next |
- CODE TALKERS
- LAW
- PEOPLE
- LITERATURE
- RESOURCES
Navajo Code Talkers
List of Names of Code Talkers
When Navajos Fought Japanese for Ne-He-Mah
Navajo verb is "like a tiny imagist poem." na'il-dil means
"You are accustomed to eat plural separable objects one at a
time." This linguistic and phonetic complexity makes the
language not only difficult for non-Navajos to understand
but almost impossible to counterfeit.
also see
Navajo Code Talkers lobby for Native language bill
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Three Navajo Code Talker are in Washington, D.C., to push for
passage of the Esther Martinez Native American Language Act.
Keith Little, Merril Sandoval and Samuel Tso used the Navajo
language to create an unbreakable code during World War II.
They are visiting the White House and Congress to lobby for
the importance of preserving all Native languages.
"The Navajo Code Talkers have been called into action one more
time; they\ are taking to Capitol Hill this week in an
unprecedented effort to save one of America's greatest
legacies -- its Native languages," said Ryan Wilson, the
president of the National Alliance to Save Native Languages
and president of the National Indian Education Association.
H.R.4766 would authorize the Department of Heath and Human
Services to award grants for language immersion programs. It
passed the House before Congress went on recess but was held
up in the Senate.
The bill is named after Esther Martinez, a Tewa language
instructor who was killed in an auto accident shortly after
receiving a National Heritage Fellowship.
Navajo Temperment Differences
(1) Bruce Lepper: Do you think that the Navajo, who have innate patience, do not have this choice, whereas you do, because you are from a culture where paying a lot of attention to time is what you describe as a culturally arbitrary value? And does it not seem likely, in view of the existence of this innate temperament among the Navajo, that we are all carrying innate temperaments, some of them intact, some of them vestigial, depending on the historical stability of our biological groups?
(2) Jay R. Feierman: That's a very thought provoking question,
which I've thought about for the past 35 years. The Navajo
seem to have innate calmness, as it can be demonstrated on the
first day of life, based on the work of Dan Freedman, who
measured activity levels in the newborn nursery of Navajo
compared to non-Navajo babies. Also, the few Navajos I know
who have been adopted at birth by Anglos also have this same
calm disposition to them. I also delivered about 300 Navajo
babies and when Navajo women are in labor, for the most part
they remain relatively calm and don't make the loud type of
sounds which I was used to hearing from Anglo women in labor.
So in terms of calmness, I don't believe its a choice for
them, its just the way they are. However, I suspect that the
innate calm disposition of the Navajo and their
inattentiveness to time are two separate issues, with the
former being innate and the latter being culturally acquired.
In terms of time there is very little that a traditional
Navajo sheep herder living on the reservation needs to do at
one hour which couldn't wait a few hours or even a few days.
When I was living with them in the early 1970s, most of the
traditional Navajo didn't wear wrist watches. If they'd tell
you they were coming to see you on one day, they may come
sometime that week. They also were not into numbers. They
didn't know off the top of their head numerical things which
Anglos knew, such as how old they were and even how many
children they had, if they had a lot of children (average was
6.7 children/family). When one would ask a traditional Navajo
woman how many children she had (through a translator), she
would say each name out loud and hold up a different finger
for each name and then give the total number. When traditional
Navajo go off the reservation to the University, the time
demands are often very difficult for them. Yet, some of them
do adapt and go on to get advanced degrees and work in the
time conscious business world. About 15 years ago, when pagers
and cell phones were just becoming part of the required
equipment of a technocrat, my Navajo friends from the
reservation, who would stay with us in our house when they
came to Albuquerque to shop, would laugh every time my pager
or cell phone rang. They didn't even have a landline phone and
probably checked their mail every few weeks in the post
office.
So what I learned from them was that my adherence to exact
time schedules was culturally arbitrary, although necessary to
get the kinds of things done I was doing in the industrialized
world. When I said that I learned about patience from them,
what I really learned was the arbitrary nature of my time
adherence. Their innate calmness made it easy for them to sit
and wait without appearing impatient, but that was also
because they also didn't have a lot of other things on their
schedule to do that day.
There have been times in my life where I have had to wait long
periods of time, such as having to wait in an airport for a
flight which has been delayed 24 hours. When I've had to do
that, I have wished that waiting was as easy for me as it is
for the Navajo. Also, I learned to culturally adapt to their
quiet and patient ways when I was living with them. We had a 4
wheel drive Jeep, as there were only about four paved roads on
the reservation, which was bigger than the state of
Connecticut. When we'd be out in the middle of nowhere and
picked up a Navajo walking, the Navajo would get in the Jeep
and say nothing. After a half hour or hour, the Navajo would
make a motion with his or her hand that this is where they
wanted to get off. They just wouldn't talk, even if they could
speak English. At best, they would answer questions with
monosyllable answers but one got the impression that it was a
strain on them to make small talk. The mother of a Navajo
woman friend, who married an Anglo man, used to say about this
man that he didn't talk much "for an Anglo."
In response to your last question, we probably all do carry
"innate temperaments, some of them intact, some of them
vestigial, depending on the historical stability of our
biological groups?" However, in an amalgamated society, such
as the United States, it is much more difficult to make
generalizations about groups as it is with the Navajo, who
although now number in the hundreds of thousands, may all be
the descendants of one small hunter-gather band of a few dozen
individuals, which migrated from central Alaska to the
American southwest a only a few hundred years ago. I hope I
answered your question in this rambling reply.~ Regards, Jay
R. Feierman
Pair study American Indian languages to preserve them
Oregon:
The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla say only 44 elders
among its 2,525 tribal members still fluently speak their
three native languages: Cayuse, Nez Perce and Walla Walla. To
help preserve those languages, the tribe has received $585,000
in grants to create language classes on reservation schools
and master-apprentice teams for elders to pass on the language
to others. At the end of three years, apprentices may become
licensed as language teachers. "It's been the best year of my
life, the most enlightened," said apprentice Linda Sampson.
"It's opened my eyes." Sampson hopes the program will spark
renewed interest in learning tribal languages, something she
believes is crucial. "Every tribe has the same goal --
keeping their language going," she said. "You can preserve
it, but you've got to transfer it to your kids."
http://www.oregonlive.com/news12 113070774232722
Concept: Why aren't First Nation people citizens of the state
in which they reside, and the answer is, they do not live in
the state.
Reservation land is considered outside of the state even if it
is enclosed by it.
Yes, they still do use public education, state roads, etc.,
and hence the taxation and sovereignty issues are very much
disputed.
First Nation People living on reservation land and not in a state at large.
If an Indian moves onto state land, he or she is subject to
the laws of the state and local ordinances.
For instance, reservation territory does not have to calibrate
gasoline dispension, allow the State Health Department to
inspect facilities, or follow state environmental laws. That,
again, is on reservation land. The local assertion of the NYS
Oneidas has been that any land they buy here should be removed
from state tax rolls, and not subject to any state or local
regulation. This was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in
the case of the City of Sherrill v.s. the Oneida Indian Nation
a couple of years ago, though in most cases, the taxes are not
yet paid.
The Supreme Court ruled that on land purchased off the
reservation, taxes are due and they are subject to state and
local laws unless the land is put into trust with the Office
of I.B.A.
There are enormous issues of state v.s. Indian government
sovereignty here. Yes, it is problematic. The land claim issue
here revolves around land that was purchased by the State of
NY long ago, but the purchase was not ratified by the U.S.
Congress.
Only Congress pass laws regarding First Nation People.
Another example would be if I committed a crime on reservation
landor if a crime was committed against me there, it would
fall only to the
First Nation Justice System which controls whatever happens
on the reservation. No state or local laws would apply
there.
I could not take someone to court in the State of New York for
committing a crime against me on the reservation. This is my
understanding after signing a contract with their legal
department.
Instead of having I.D. as citizens of the State of New York,
they have clan cards.
The Oneidas used to use them off reservation to avoid sales
tax in stores, but I believe that may have been struck down.
Ex-governor Cuomo negotiated a pact with the Oneidas for a
Casino, but that appears illegal because he was a representive
of the State and not Federal Government. It is expected to be
challenged in court.
States cannot negotiate pacts with foreign entities.
Another example is the issue of school tax. Most Oneidas here
attend public school off the reservation. They do not pay
school tax. Instead they offer what is called the "Silver
Covenant Grant." However, this money can, and has been
withheld. In Stockbridge, the Nation was not pleased with a
Native American teacher that the school felt was doing her
job. The grant was withheld, and the school district was
forced to fend for money in other ways, and cut back on
programs in order to avoid firing the teacher. In other
instances they have imposed that certain essays be assigned
the students that show the Oneida in a certain light,
threatening to withhold the grant money if the district did
not comply.
First Nation People have been in North America for probably 16,000 years .
Black Indian Mexico
Facts, along with analysis, pics, reading list, links, and
page reference "proofs" of African origins of heroes in
Mexican History.
Black Indian Slave Narratives
It is significant to know that the
Freedmen of Indian Territory
were a unique people with a unique lifestyle and culture. Most
of the Freedmen were bilingual, although many did speak little
or no English and only the language of their Indian
slavemasters. The Oklahoma Slave Narratives contain many
references to their culture and lifestyle, illustrating how
immersed they were in the Native way of life.
Cherokee
Cherokee Freedmen win tribal citizenship lawsuit Read Ruling : Oklahoma: The Cherokee Tribe's highest court has ruled that the Cherokee Freedman, descendants of African-American slaves who lived among the tribe, may claim full Cherokee citizenship. The Judicial Appeals Tribunal said the Freedmen can retain citizenship and tribal privileges despite not having identifiable "Indian" blood. "If the Cherokee people wish to limit tribal citizenship, and such limitation would terminate the pre-existing citizenship of even one Cherokee citizen, then it must be done in the open," the court wrote. The court said the only way to legally terminate the Freedmen's citizenship is through the Cherokee constitution. The current constitution, enforced in 1975, does not limit tribal citizenship by blood. The Freedmen dispute began in the 1980s when Lucy Allen, 73, a Freedmen descendant, was barred from voting in tribal elections.
Cherokee
Tribe:
http://www.cherokee.org/
Eastern Tribe:
http://www.cherokee-nc.com/
And this is the ONLY other Federally recognized Cherokee
tribe,
The United Keetowah Band
This is a SMALL intense group.
Military
and
Other Standards
and
U.S. Gov
The National Register of Historic Places
is pleased to promote awareness of and appreciation for the
history and culture of American Indians and Alaska Natives
during National American Indian Heritage Month. This month is
dedicated to recognizing the intertribal cultures, the events
and lifeways, the designs and achievements of American Indians
and Alaska Natives. As part of the observance, this site
showcases historic properties listed in the National Register,
National Register publications, and National Park units. Join
the National Register in paying powerful tribute to the spirit
of American Indians and Alaska Natives, and their
contributions to our history.
Tribes on the Plains, Mississippi and the Ohio River
Valley
.
Find out about Haida totem poles, village life in Hidatsa and
Mandan tribes on the plains, sacred ceremonial sites for the
Yoeme (Yaqui) people, daily life of the Pueblo Indians, mounds
of Mississippi and the Ohio River Valley, and more.
The American Virgin Islands
Tainos, Carib Indians who lived in the U.S.Caribbean Islands
HAWAIIANS
The first settlers of Hawai'i.
Literature
American Indians in Children's Literature! Debbie Reese
I am tribally enrolled at Nambe Pueblo in northern New Mexico.
I'm from the Upper Village (Yates family). A former school
teacher, I currently teach in UIUC's American Indian Studies
program.
Books
For children, baby to pre-kindergarten
Douglas Wood, Lisa Desimini (illus.), Northwoods Cradle Song:
From a Menominee Lullaby
For children, K-4 grade
Joseph Bruchac, Thomas Locker (illus.), Between Earth &
Sky: Legends of Native American Sacred Places
Maria Williams, Felix Vigil (illus.), How Raven Stole the Sun
(Tales of the People)
Joseph Bruchac, Thomas Locker (illus.), Thirteen Moons on
Turtle's Back
For children, 3-8 grade
Sally M. Hunter, Joe Allen (illus.), Four Seasons of Corn
Gordon Regguinti, Dale Kakkak (illus.), The Sacred Harvest
Sandra King, Catherine Whipple (photographer), Shannon
Susan Braine (Photographer), Drumbeat . . . Heartbeat: A
Celebration of the Powwow (We Are Still Here: Native Americans
Today)
Joseph Bruchac, Code Talker: A Novel About the Navajo Marines
of World War II
Robert Lipsyte, Jim Thorpe: 20th Century Jock (Superstar
Lineup)
Maria Campbell, Douglas Tait (illus.), Shannon Twofeathers
(illus.), People of the Buffalo: How the Plains Indians Lived
Edward F. Rivinus, Bob Masheris (illus.), Jim Thorpe: Sauk and
Fox Native American Indian Stories (Raintree-Rivilo American
Indian Stories)
For young adults
Gloria Whelan, Leslie Bowman (illus), Night Of The Full Moon
Irwin, Hadley. We are Mesquakie, We Are One
For adults
Tara Browner, Heartbeat of the People: Music and Dance of the
Northern Pow-wow
Julia C. White, The Pow Wow Trail: Understanding and Enjoying
the Native American Pow Wow
William Thomas Hagan, The Sac and Fox Indians (Civilization of
the American Indian Series)
R. David Edmunds, Joseph L. Peyser, The Fox Wars
Hawk, Donald Dean Jackson, Donald Jackson (Editor), Black Hawk
Black Hawk, Milo Milton Quaife (Editor), Life of Black Hawk
Black Hawk, Life of MA-KA-TAI-ME-SHE-KIA-KIAK or Black Hawk
(American Biography Series)
Crawford B. Thayer, Hunting a Shadow: The Search for Black
Hawk
Nels Bruseth, Indian Stories and Legends Of the Stillacuamish,
Sauks and Allied Tribes
William Jones, Ethnography of the Fox Indians (Bureau of
American Ethnology Bulletins Series)
Fred McTaggart, Wolf That I Am
Ray A. Young Bear, Meskwaki author of
Black Eagle Child: The Facepaint Narratives
The Invisible Musician
The Rock Island Hiking Club
Winter of the Salamander
Nancy Lobb, 16 Extraordinary Native Americans
Barry Moreno, We Came to American: The Native Americans
Douglas Spotted Eagle, Voices of Native America
Bryan Burton, Moving Within the Circle: Contemporary Native
American Music and Dance
Don Contreras and Diane Morris Bernstein, We Dance Because We
Can: People of the Powwow
John Bierhorst, A Cry from the Earth: Music of the North
American Indians
Rick Hill, Skywalkers
Film
The Monument of Chief Rolling Mountain Thunder
Sherman Alexie, "Smoke Signals"
"Lakota Woman: Siege at Wounded Knee,", the story of the
American Indian Movement, based on Mary Crow Dog's
autobiography.
"Windtalkers," Navajo code-talkers of World War II, actors are
native, the linguistics of it are sound.
"Spirit of Crazy Horse," Documentary about AIM and the
struggle for Native American rights
Robert Redford, "Incident at Oglala: The Leonard Peltier
Story"
"Dances with Wolves"
"Soldier Blue," (Violent, NOT for children) Recreation of the
Sand Creek Massacre
Music
Smithsonian Folkways
Keith Secola "Circle" (CD)
Robbie Robertson "Music for Native Americans - O.S.T." (CD)
Buffy Saint Marie, "Up Where We Belong" (CD)
Buffy Saint Marie, "The Best of Buffy Saint Marie, vol. 2"
(CD)
Black Lodge Singers, "Tribute to the Elders" (CD)
Black Lodge Singers, "Kids Pow-Wow Songs" (CD)
"Pow Wow Songs: Music of the Plains Indians" (CD)
"Gathering of Nations Pow-Wow 1999" (2001 GRAMMY WINNER) (CD)
Tsonakwa, "Echoes of the Night" (Abenaki storyteller) (CD)
Web Sites
Sac and Fox Culture, History, and Links
The University of Iowa - Museum of Natural History
Native American Books and Literature
Peacemaker Heroes - Chief Arvol Looking Horse
Iowa Roots: Everett Kapayou
Community: Chief Wilma Mankiller
RESOURCES: Where did the First Nation American Indians come from?
November is National American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month. Music, Dance, Language, Tlingits, Cree, Navajo, Cherokee,Literacy, Black First Nation People, Virgin Island, Hawaii Resources - CHINA
LANGUAGE Carvings link Chinese with American Indians Asians may have crossed Bering Strait BEIJING Carvings identical to ancient Chinese characters have been found in American Indian sites dating back thousands of years, the China Daily reported. They so closely resemble the 3,000-year-old Shang Dynasty characters for the sun, sky, rain, water, crops, trees and astronomy that if they had not been found in America, Chinese experts would have classified them automatically as pre-221 B.C. Chinese script, the newspaper said. American Indian and Chinese pictographs in 56 matching sets were shown to senior academics at a symposium in Anyang, former capital of the Shang Dynasty.
MAPS
Zheng He's Inheritance- Chinese Charts of the Americas from Ming back to Xia
Speech for Library of Congress 5/16/05 http://www.asiaticfathers.com/speech.htm
THE MAP
The Harris maps were printed from wood block. Most are on mulberry-bark paper and are written in classical Chinese. Although varying in ages they have only minimal differences. The oldest of the Harris maps are believed to be from the Ming dynasty. The map books themselves are Korean but the world map in each book is a Chinese map. The Korean name for that type map is Ch'onhado meaning “Chinese map.
Case for Other Pre-Columbian Voyagers
Dr. Davis advanced the hypothesis that the Zuni Indians of New Mexico were distinctive in language, culture and biology, compared with other Indians, partly because they may have come in contact with Japanese in the 13th century. She noted similarities between the Zuni and the Japanese in blood chemistry and some basic words. Even the Zuni migration stories, she said, were suggestive in their description of the trek of a distinctive people from the "ocean of the sunset world" in search of the true middle of the world.
"I'm not saying the Zuni are Japanese," Dr. Davis said, "but they may include influences from Japan at a particular time."
From the audience arose Joseph Dishta, head councilman of the Zuni tribe in New Mexico.
"We do not endorse this theory," Mr. Dishta said. "We have our own interpretation. We always feel we've been in that part of the country since time immemorial. We feel we emerged from the mother earth."
If the Japanese found their way to the Zuni, could Jewish refugees from the Roman Empire have made it to the eastern mountains of Tennessee in the second century? At least that is the meaning a few researchers read in an inscribed stone found a century ago with nine skeletons in a burial mound at Bat Creek in Tennessee.
For years, the inscription was interpreted as a message in Cherokee. When Dr. Cyrus H. Gordon, retired professor of Mediterranean studies at Brandeis University, had a look, he decided the engraving was actually in Hebrew and similar to writings found on Hebrew coins of the first and second centuries. Carbon dating shows the burial took place between the years 32 and 769.
At the conference, Dr. J. Huston McCulloch, an economist at Ohio State University who has become a leading exponent of the Jewish connection to Bat Creek, defended the stone's antiquity and the Jewish interpretation against recent attacks by professional anthropologists. He discounted the possibility of a hoax.
Zuni
Why does Zunian have no known affiliation to any other language in North America? How did the blood allele B get to this puebloand not others? Why is the religious system so highly integrated and complex? The Zuni culture is one of the ten most-documented cultures of the world, yet these and numerous other questions persist.14 Indeed, the complexities of the social, religious, and political system have "occupied scholars and defied interpretation by them since the 1890s,"
The twenty contemporary Pueblo groups of the American Southwest stand out as distinctive clusters of communities derived from at least seven different language groups, sharing many characteristics, but continuing individual local traditions in pottery, jewelry, and ceremonies. Unlike the nomadic Navaho and Apache who arrived in the area much later—perhaps as late as the sixteenth century—and who live in households quite separated from each other, Pueblo peoples live in consolidated villages and have long been agriculturalists. In Chapter 9, I speculate on the possibility that the Pueblo groups as a whole share a common link to the Anasazi civilization, which may have incorporated influences from Asia at an earlier time than the one considered here for the Zuni.
see: Prehistoric American Indians Zuni Prehistory
The archeological record in the Zuni area indicates that a flurry of new pueblos was built between 1250 and 1300, but the Pueblo of Zuni in its exact present location may be quite new—perhaps as recent as A.D. 1692, after the Pueblo rebellion against Spanish and Catholic intrusion.
"Why do the Zunis and the Japanese share a rare kidney disease?
Their language, religion, and blood type are startlingly different from all other tribes. Most puzzling, the Zuni appear to have much in common with the people of Japan.
In a book with ground breaking implications, Dr. Nancy Yaw Davis examines the evidence underscoring the Zuni enigma and suggests the circumstances that may have led Japanese on a religious quest -- searching for the legendary "middle world" of Buddhism -- across the Pacific to the American Southwest more than seven hundred years ago.
TOTEM POLES China Sources: Kim, Taegon. "A Study on the Rite of Changsung, Korea's Totem Pole." Korea Journal. p.4-19 March 1983.
communication with Timothy Tangherlini, specialist in Korean Folkloristics at the University of California, Los Angeles
American Indian Totem poles are an ancient tradition of the Indian tribes of the Pacific Northwest Coast--Washington state in the USA, British Columbia in Canada--and some of the Athabaskan tribes of southern Alaska.
Pictures of Totem Poles
Various Dong People Pictures/
We went to the Hong Feng Lake. The drum tower by the lakeshore can be reached by boat,
the folksongs similar to the ones we heard.
The Dong ethnic group at Chinese New Year Eve's CCTV Gala in 1994.
Dong Ethnic Song - Song of Cicadas
DRUM TOWER
Dominating the landscape of a Dong village is the drum tower with its superb formation of multi-storied pagoda-like roofs,constructed to the unique architecture of the Dong Ethnic.The lower pavilion of each tower is where villagers congregate during festivals and special meetings. People often gather there in the evenings, to listen to traditional folk songs. After harvests, young people hold festive dances on the grounds surrounding the drum tower.
The drum tower is the highest and most revered structure in the village. A giant drum within the tower served in the past as a warning device against invasions. In ancient times, villagers assembled at the tower with their weapons to await orders from the head of their clan. Drum towers are a specialty and symbol of the Dong nationality. They first appeared in villages along the Yellow River during the Northern Dynasties (386-581 A.D). the oldest standing drum towers date from the Shunzhi period (1644-1661 A.D) of the Qing Dynasty. A typical large village consists of from 500 to 600 families, and a small one, of about 50 families. As a rule, one village is said to contain families of one or two surnames. Each drum tower signifies one surname; some villages have two or three drum towers, therefore indicating that two or three surnames dominate the village. The outline of a Dong drum tower resembles a fir tree, a sacred tree in Dong culture. Some anthropologists have suggested that the Dong people used to be tree dwellers, since they are believed to be a branch of the ancient Yue people, a tree dwelling tribe.
TRUE OR FALSE? Many American Indians are the ones who work on bridiges in the US - are not afraid of the height.
TIMELINE
china people are american indian first nation people
U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Indian Affairs
U.S. Indian Tribes - Index by State Get contact information for tribes.
Land and Treaty Rights A link site providing information on Native American rights
Native American Megasites This has every link a teacher will probably need.
Native American Resource Guide
Native American Website for Children
Native Web Huge data base on most tribes