Native american people

Native american people Wellcome to my page

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11/28/2024

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❤️❤️❤️I am not proud to be native,I am honored 🙏
11/27/2024

❤️❤️❤️
I am not proud to be native,
I am honored 🙏

Happy birthday my grandma!❤️🎉🎉 Need a blessing from you guys
11/27/2024

Happy birthday my grandma!❤️🎉🎉 Need a blessing from you guys

Good wordsHistory is not there for you to like or dislike. it is there for you to learn from it. And if it offends you, ...
11/15/2024

Good words
History is not there for you to like or dislike. it is there for you to learn from it. And if it offends you, even better. Because then you are less likely to repeat it. It's not yours to erase. It belongs to all of us.

In 1847, amidst the devastation of the Great Irish Famine, the Choctaw Nation of Native Americans demonstrated an extrao...
10/12/2024

In 1847, amidst the devastation of the Great Irish Famine, the Choctaw Nation of Native Americans demonstrated an extraordinary act of compassion and solidarity. Despite facing their own hardships, having been forcibly removed from their ancestral lands in the southeastern United States just 16 years earlier during the Trail of Tears, the Choctaws collected $170 to aid famine relief efforts in Ireland.
The Choctaws, who had endured immense suffering and loss during their forced relocation to present-day Oklahoma, empathized with the plight of the Irish people. They recognized the parallels between their own experiences of hunger, disease, and displacement and the suffering of the Irish during the famine.
In a remarkable display of generosity, the Choctaw people pooled their resources, with many individuals contributing what little they could spare. The funds were sent to the Irish relief committee, providing much-needed assistance to those affected by the famine.
This act of kindness forged a lasting bond between the Choctaw Nation and the people of Ireland. The Irish have never forgotten the compassion shown to them during their darkest hour, and the gesture has been commemorated and celebrated by both communities in the years since.

These are the one's who discovered AmericaAnd should be taught in our history booksNot the false storyline they give abo...
10/09/2024

These are the one's who discovered America
And should be taught in our history books
Not the false storyline they give about Columbus discovery America

Native Americans And HorsesThe story of the relationship of Native peoples and horses is one of the great sagas of human...
10/01/2024

Native Americans And HorsesThe story of the relationship of Native peoples and horses is one of the great sagas of human contact with the animal world.
Native peoples have traditionally regarded the animals in our lives as fellow creatures with which a common destiny is shared.
When American Indians encountered horses—which some tribes call the Horse Nation—they found an ally, inspiring and useful in times of peace, and intrepid in times of war.
Horses transformed Native life and became a central part of many tribal cultures.
By the 1800s, American Indian horsemanship was legendary, and the survival of many Native peoples, especially on the Great Plains, depended on horses.
Native peoples paid homage to horses by incorporating them into their cultural and spiritual lives, and by creating art that honored the bravery and grace of the horse.
The glory days of the horse culture were brilliant but brief, lasting just over a century. The bond between American Indians and the Horse Nation, however, has remained strong through the generations.
“A Song for the Horse Nation” Gallops into Washington
The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., presents a major exhibition that explores one of the greatest sagas of human contact with the animal world—American Indians and horses.
“When American Indians encountered horses—which some tribes call the Horse Nation.
they found an ally, inspiring and useful in times of peace, and intrepid in times of war,” said Kevin Gover (Pawnee), director of the museum.
“The exhibition shows how these majestic creatures came to represent courage and freedom to many tribes across North America.”
The critically acclaimed exhibition, first shown at the museum’s George Gustav Heye Center in New York (Nov. 14, 2009-July 10, 2011), doubles its exhibition space at the flagship museum on the National Mall to 9,500 square feet and includes 15 major additional objects.
Among them is a 19th-century, 16-foot-tall, 38-foot-circumference Lakota tipi, in which 110 hand-painted horses, some with riders, all at a full gallop, cover the entire surface in rich reds, turquoise blues and golds as vivid and fresh as the day they were created.
These battle and horse-raiding scenes proclaim the heroic deeds of the warrior who once lived in the tipi.
The exhibition shows how Native horse traditions continue today like the Nimiipuu (Nez Perce) Young Horsemen’s Program, which seeks to preserve the Appaloosa horse breed made famous by their ancestors.
Horse traditions thrive on the Crow Indian Reservation—their annual fair in southeastern Montana typically includes more than 2,000 horses and features elaborate parades and “giveaways” in which members of the tribe give away horses to relatives and friends as a gesture of generosity and honor.
A similar gesture among the Lakota is the tribe’s annual trek on horseback called the Oomaka Tokatakiya
(Future Generations Ride) in South Dakota, which evolved from an annual healing journey to honor those who died at Wounded Knee.
During the two-week, 300-mile journey, riders experience some of the hardships their ancestors endured as a physical, spiritual and intellectual remembrance.
“For some Native peoples, the horse still is an essential part of daily life,” said Emil
Her Many Horses (Oglala Lakota), curator of the exhibition.
“For others, the horse will always remain an element of our identity and our history.
The Horse Nation continues to inspire, and Native artists continue to celebrate the horse in our songs, our stories and our works of art.”

Crow group. Early 1900s. Montana. Photo by N.A. Forsyth. Source - Montana Historical Society.
09/01/2024

Crow group. Early 1900s. Montana. Photo by N.A. Forsyth. Source - Montana Historical Society.

"The only thing the world really needs is for every child to grow up in happiness."- Chief Dan George
08/25/2024

"The only thing the world really needs is for every child to grow up in happiness."
- Chief Dan George

Southern Cheyenne girls in Oklahoma - circa 1890
08/16/2024

Southern Cheyenne girls in Oklahoma - circa 1890

The Six Grandfathers (Tȟuŋkášila Šákpe) before it was turned into Mt Rushmore, 1927.
08/16/2024

The Six Grandfathers (Tȟuŋkášila Šákpe) before it was turned into Mt Rushmore, 1927.

Today My Brithday No body wish me !😴
08/03/2024

Today My Brithday No body wish me !😴

Kindness is a language the deaf can hear and the blind can see.
08/03/2024

Kindness is a language the deaf can hear and the blind can see.

Today is our 16-year wedding anniversary, hoping to receive a big heart from you guys.
08/03/2024

Today is our 16-year wedding anniversary, hoping to receive a big heart from you guys.

TODAY IS MY GRANDMOTHER BIRTHDAY. DON'T EVEN GET HER A WISH 🎉🥰💖
08/02/2024

TODAY IS MY GRANDMOTHER BIRTHDAY. DON'T EVEN GET HER A WISH 🎉🥰💖

'Need a big YESS from true fan ❤️❤️❤️
08/02/2024

'Need a big YESS from true fan ❤️❤️❤️

Today is our 55th anniversary 🎉 don't forget to wish us😌
08/02/2024

Today is our 55th anniversary 🎉 don't forget to wish us😌

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