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Dewey Beard or Wasú Máza ("Iron Hail", 1858–1955) was a Lakota who fought in the Battle of Little Bighorn as a teenager....
25/04/2024

Dewey Beard or Wasú Máza ("Iron Hail", 1858–1955) was a Lakota who fought in the Battle of Little Bighorn as a teenager. After George Armstrong Custer's defeat, Wasú Máza followed Sitting Bull into exile in Canada and then back to South Dakota where he lived on the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation.
Wasú Máza with his wife and granddaughter, Celane

Cherokee Women and Their Important Roles:Women in the Cherokee society were equal to men. They could earn the title of W...
24/04/2024

Cherokee Women and Their Important Roles:
Women in the Cherokee society were equal to men. They could earn the title of War Women and sit in councils as equals. This privilege led an Irishman named Adair who traded with the Cherokee from 1736-1743 to accuse the Cherokee of having a "petticoat government".
Clan kinship followed the mother's side of the family. The children grew up in the mother's house, and it was the duty of an uncle on the mother's side to teach the boys how to hunt, fish, and perform certain tribal duties. The women owned the houses and their furnishings. Marriages were carefully negotiated, but if a woman decided to divorce her spouse, she simply placed his belongings outside the house. Cherokee women also worked hard. They cared for the children, cooked, tended the house, tanned skins, wove baskets, and cultivated the fields. Men helped with some household chores like sewing, but they spent most of their time hunting.
Cherokee girls learned by example how to be warriors and healers. They learned to weave baskets, tell stories, trade, and dance. They became mothers and wives, and learned their heritage.

𝐖𝐞𝐬 𝐒𝐭𝐮𝐝𝐢 has had one long enjoyable acting career. He was raised in Nofire Hollow Oklahoma, speaking Cherokee only unti...
24/04/2024

𝐖𝐞𝐬 𝐒𝐭𝐮𝐝𝐢 has had one long enjoyable acting career. He was raised in Nofire Hollow Oklahoma, speaking Cherokee only until he started school. At 17 he joined the National Guard and later went to Vietnam. After his discharge, Studi became politically active in American Indian affairs. He participated in Wounded Knee at Pine Ridge Reservation in 1973. Wes is known for his roles as a fierce Native American warrior, such as the Pawnee warrior in Dances with Wolves. In the Last of the Mohicans he plays the Huron named Magua, which was his first major part. Soon after he got the lead role in Geronimo: An American Legend. He was in Skinwalkers, The Lone Ranger, and The Horse Whisperer. He played the Indian out in the desert in The Doors movie, and he was also in Avatar. Studi also plays bass and he and his wife are in a band called Firecat of Discord. Wes Studi also serves as honorary chair of the national endowment campaign, of the Indigenous Language Institute that's working to save Native Languages. He and his family live in Santa Fe New Mexico, and Wes has been in several other movies, TV shows and movies, and mini series. He also received an Academy Honorary Award, becoming the first Native American and the second North American Indigenous person to be honored by the Academy, the first was Buffy Sainte-Marie, a First Nations Canadian Indigenous musician.
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Geronimo was an Apache leader and medicine man best known for his fearlessness in resisting anyone–Mexican or American—w...
24/04/2024

Geronimo was an Apache leader and medicine man best known for his fearlessness in resisting anyone–Mexican or American—who attempted to remove his people from their tribal lands. He repeatedly evaded capture and life on a reservation, and during his final escape, a full quarter of the U.S. standing army pursued him and his followers. Here are some interesting facts about Geronimo that you may not know:
1. The origins of his name are disputed. The man who would become the most feared Indian leader of the 19th century was born sometime in the 1820s into the Bedonkohe, the smallest band of the Chiricahua Apache tribe that inhabited what is now New Mexico and Arizona. His given name was Goyahkla (“The One Who Yawns”), but as a young man he earned the moniker “Geronimo” after distinguishing himself in Apache raids against the Mexicans. The source of the name remains the subject of debate. Some historians believed it arose from frightened Mexican soldiers invoking the Catholic St. Jerome when facing the warrior in battle, while others argue that it was simply a Mexican nickname or a mispronunciation of “Goyahkla.”
2. Geronimo’s wife and children were murdered when he was a young man. Geronimo came of age during a period of bitter conflict between the Chiricahua Apaches and the Mexicans. In response to the Apaches’ penchant for staging raids to gather horses and provisions, the Mexican government had begun ambushing Apache settlements and offering lucrative bounties for their scalps. In 1851, while Geronimo and several other warriors were in the town of Janos on a trading mission, Colonel Jose Maria Carrasco and a detachment of around 400 Mexican soldiers ransacked his Bedonkohe encampment and slaughtered many of its inhabitants. When Geronimo returned later that night, he found that his mother, his wife and his three young children had all been murdered.
3. He broke out of U.S. Indian reservations on three different occasions. In the 1840s and 1850s, the Mexican-American War and the Gadsden Purchase placed the Chiricahua Apaches’ domain within the boundaries of the expanding United States. Geronimo and the Apaches violently resisted the influx of white settlers, but following several years of war with the U.S. Army, they reluctantly negotiated a peace. By 1876, most of the Chiricahuas had been shipped to San Carlos, an arid and inhospitable reservation located in Arizona. Geronimo avoided the reservation until 1877, when he was captured by Indian agents and brought to San Carlos in chains.
4. He was an accomplished artist who sold paintings to tourists late in life.
5. He was also an accomplished horseman who could ride standing up on two horses at once.
6. He died at Fort Sill, Oklahoma on February 17th, 1909.

𝐋𝐢𝐭𝐭𝐥𝐞 𝐂𝐫𝐨𝐰🪶🪶🪶Little Crow (Dakota: Thaóyate Dúta; ca. 1810–July 3, 1863) was a chief of the Mdewakanton Dakota people. H...
23/04/2024

𝐋𝐢𝐭𝐭𝐥𝐞 𝐂𝐫𝐨𝐰🪶🪶🪶
Little Crow (Dakota: Thaóyate Dúta; ca. 1810–July 3, 1863) was a chief of the Mdewakanton Dakota people. His given name translates as "His Red Nation," (Thaóyate Dúta) but he was known as Little Crow because of his grandfather's name, Čhetáŋ Wakhúwa Máni, (literally, "Hawk that chases/hunts walking") which was mistranslated.
Little Crow is notable for his role in the negotiation of the Treaties of Traverse des Sioux and Mendota of 1851, in which he agreed to the movement of his band of the Dakota to a reservation near the Minnesota River in exchange for goods and certain other rights. However, the government reneged on its promises to provide food and annuities to the tribe, and Little Crow was forced to support the decision of a Dakota war council in 1862 to pursue war to drive out the whites from Minnesota. Little Crow participated in the Dakota War of 1862, but retreated in September 1862 before the war's conclusion in December 1862.
Little Crow was shot and killed on July 3, 1863 by a settler.

❤️GRAHAM GREENE - Born June 22, 1952, on the Six Nations Reserve in Ohsweken, Ontario, Mr. Greene is a 68 year old FIRST...
23/04/2024

❤️GRAHAM GREENE - Born June 22, 1952, on the Six Nations Reserve in Ohsweken, Ontario, Mr. Greene is a 68 year old FIRST NATIONS Canadian actor who belongs to the ONEIDA tribe. He has worked on stage, in film, and in TV productions in Canada, the U.K., and the U.S. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his 1990 performance in "Dances with Wolves". Other films you may have seen him in include Thunderheart, Maverick, Die Hard with a Vengeance, the Green Mile, and Wind River. Graham Greene graduated from the Centre for Indigenous Theatre in 1974 & immediately began performing in professional theatre in Toronto and England, while also working as an audio technician for area rock bands. His TV debut was in 1979 and his screen debut in 1983. His acting career has now spanned over 4 decades & he remains as busy as ever. In addition to the Academy Award nomination for Dance with Wolves, he has been consistently recognized for his work, and also received nominations in 1994, 2000, 2004, 2006, and 2016. Graham Greene lives in Toronto, Canada, married since 1994, and has 1 adult daughter.
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 for you to erase or destroy.
🧡I think you will be proud to wear this T-shirt👇
https://www.welcomenativeculture.com/tee86

First called the Pima by exploring Spaniards in the 1600s, they called themselves “Akimel O’odham,” meaning the River Pe...
23/04/2024

First called the Pima by exploring Spaniards in the 1600s, they called themselves “Akimel O’odham,” meaning the River People. The Piman peoples, who live in the Sonoran Desert region, are descendants of the prehistoric Hohokam Culture.
[photo: Pima Indians by Carlo Gentile, 1870]

If you're young and follow the wrong people, the road will be bumpy and lead to the same sadness and hardships as them.I...
22/04/2024

If you're young and follow the wrong people, the road will be bumpy and lead to the same sadness and hardships as them.

Its better to find your own path sometimes using your internal GPS. Woicala! Wolakota!

When i was a youngster i struggled with this, i missed my friends and the lifestyle we lived, but after so much hardship i knew that wasn't the right path.

I thought i was going to be lonely walking by myself, and i was for a little while.
Then i realized i had tunkasila, my faith and beliefs, i had my family, they were with me the whole time. ❤️
We dig ourselves into a hole so deep we get stuck there for a long time, sometimes our whole life.
Being selfish means everything is about us.
When i accepted that this life wasn't only about me, a new road opened up before me.

I pray today we are able to see more then the bumpy road and have the courage to take the steps to a new one.

GRAHAM GREENE - Born June 22, 1952, on the Six Nations Reserve in Ohsweken, Ontario, Mr. Greene is a 68 year old FIRST N...
22/04/2024

GRAHAM GREENE - Born June 22, 1952, on the Six Nations Reserve in Ohsweken, Ontario, Mr. Greene is a 68 year old FIRST NATIONS Canadian actor who belongs to the ONEIDA tribe. He has worked on stage, in film, and in TV productions in Canada, the U.K., and the U.S. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his 1990 performance in "Dances with Wolves". Other films you may have seen him in include Thunderheart, Maverick, Die Hard with a Vengeance, the Green Mile, and Wind River. Graham Greene graduated from the Centre for Indigenous Theatre in 1974 & immediately began performing in professional theatre in Toronto and England, while also working as an audio technician for area rock bands. His TV debut was in 1979 and his screen debut in 1983. His acting career has now spanned over 4 decades & he remains as busy as ever. In addition to the Academy Award nomination for Dance with Wolves, he has been consistently recognized for his work, and also received nominations in 1994, 2000, 2004, 2006, and 2016. Graham Greene lives in Toronto, Canada, married since 1994, and has 1 adult daughter.
❤️I think you will be proud to wear this T-shirt 👇
https://www.welcomenativeculture.com/tee92

A woman from New York was driving through a remote part of Arizona when her car broke down. An American Indian on horseb...
22/04/2024

A woman from New York was driving through a remote part of Arizona when her car broke down. An American Indian on horseback came along and offered her a ride to a nearby town.
She climbed up behind him on the horse and they rode off. The ride was uneventful, except that every few minutes the Indian would let out a Ye-e-e-e-h-a-a-a-a!' so loud that it echoed from the surrounding hills and canyon walls.
When they arrived in town, he let her off at the local service station, yelled one final 'Ye-e-e-e-h-a-a-a-a!' and rode off.
"What did you do to get that Indian so excited?" asked the service-station attendant. "Nothing," the woman answered "I merely sat behind him on the horse, put my arms around his waist, and held onto the saddle horn so I wouldn't fall off."
"Lady," the attendant said, "Indians don't use saddles."

Northern Cheyenne CHIEF AMERICAN HORSE, circa 1910. He had participated in the 1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn. Julia ...
21/04/2024

Northern Cheyenne CHIEF AMERICAN HORSE, circa 1910. He had participated in the 1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn. Julia Tuell moved to Lame Deer, Montana, in 1906, where she took photographs on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation for six years. Later, 1913 - 1929, she photographed the Sioux on Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. (L.A. Huffman had photographed American Horse several times in earlier years.)
A long pipe was used in Native ceremonies. If using a PC, click photo to see the pipestone bowl at the pipe's end and to improve clarity. Julia Tuell's photographs were published in “Women and Warriors of the Plains” by Dan Aadland. NOTE: The subject was a Cheyenne Chief, and not the Oglala Sioux Chief known by the same name

GRAHAM GREENE - Born June 22, 1952, on the Six Nations Reserve in Ohsweken, Ontario, Mr. Greene is a 68 year old FIRST N...
21/04/2024

GRAHAM GREENE - Born June 22, 1952, on the Six Nations Reserve in Ohsweken, Ontario, Mr. Greene is a 68 year old FIRST NATIONS Canadian actor who belongs to the ONEIDA tribe. He has worked on stage, in film, and in TV productions in Canada, the U.K., and the U.S. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his 1990 performance in "Dances with Wolves". Other films you may have seen him in include Thunderheart, Maverick, Die Hard with a Vengeance, the Green Mile, and Wind River. Graham Greene graduated from the Centre for Indigenous Theatre in 1974 & immediately began performing in professional theatre in Toronto and England, while also working as an audio technician for area rock bands. His TV debut was in 1979 and his screen debut in 1983. His acting career has now spanned over 4 decades & he remains as busy as ever. In addition to the Academy Award nomination for Dance with Wolves, he has been consistently recognized for his work, and also received nominations in 1994, 2000, 2004, 2006, and 2016. Graham Greene lives in Toronto, Canada, married since 1994, and has 1 adult daughter.
❤️I think you will be proud to wear this T-shirt 👇
https://www.welcomenativeculture.com/tee88

Lucy Nicolar was born June 22, 1882, on Indian Island, Maine, the daughter of Joseph Nicolar and Elizabeth Joseph. Every...
21/04/2024

Lucy Nicolar was born June 22, 1882, on Indian Island, Maine, the daughter of Joseph Nicolar and Elizabeth Joseph. Every summer, her family traveled to the resort town of Kennebunkport to sell baskets. Lucy and her sister performed in Indian dress for the tourists. In her late teens she started performing at public events such as sportsman’s shows.
During those performances, she came to the attention of a Harvard administrator who hired her as his assistant. He took her into his household and gave her musical and educational opportunities in Boston and New York. In 1905, she married a doctor and moved to Washington, D.C. Eight years later they divorced, and Lucy moved to Chicago to study music.
Lucy Nicolar also toured as part of the Redpath Chatauqua Bureau, then the Keith vaudeville circuit. She married a lawyer who became her manager. He took all her money and fled to Mexico after the stock market crashed in 1929.
When vaudeville died, she returned to the Penobscot Indian Island Reservation with her husband Bruce Poolaw, a Kiowa entertainer from Oklahoma. They opened a gift shop — a teepee 24 feet in diameter — called it Poolaw’s Indian TeePee and sold traditional Indian crafts. They also continued to entertain locally.
Lucy and her sister Florence campaigned to improve life for their people on the reservation,. Their land stretched along the Penobscot River from Indian Island near Old Town to East Millinocket.
The sisters raised the educational standards for Penobscot children by gaining access to the public schools. And they persuaded the state to build a bridge to the island.
liberty-pole-old-town
Postcard of Indian Island before the bridge
Lucy and Florence also demanded the right to vote for their people. When the state extended suffrage to the Penobscots in 1955, Lucy Nicolar cast the first ballot.
The Old Town Enterprise reported “The princess has done much for the uplift of her people during her public career, both locally and nationally.”
Lucy Nicolar died at Indian Island on March 27, 1969, at the age of 87.

The Quechan (or Yuma) (Quechan: Kwatsáan 'those who descended') are an aboriginal American tribe who live on the Fort Yu...
20/04/2024

The Quechan (or Yuma) (Quechan: Kwatsáan 'those who descended') are an aboriginal American tribe who live on the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation on the lower Colorado River in Arizona and California just north of the Mexican border. Despite their name, they are not related to the Quechua people of the Andes. Members are enrolled into the Quechan Tribe of the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation. The federally recognized Quechan tribe's main office is located in Winterhaven, California. Its operations and the majority of its reservation land are located in California, United States.
The historic Yuman-speaking people in this region were skilled warriors and active traders, maintaining exchange networks with the Pima in southern Arizona, New Mexico, and with peoples of the Pacific coast.
The first significant contact of the Quechan with Europeans was with the Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza and his party in the winter of 1774. Relations were friendly. On Anza's return from his second trip to Alta California in 1776, the chief of the tribe and three of his men journeyed to Mexico City to petition the Viceroy of New Spain for the establishment of a mission. The chief Palma and his three companions were baptized in Mexico City on February 13, 1777. Palma was given the Spanish baptismal name Salvador Carlos Antonio.
Spanish settlement among the Quechan did not go smoothly; the tribe rebelled from July 17–19, 1781 and killed four priests and thirty soldiers. They also attacked and damaged the Spanish mission settlements of San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuñer and Puerto de Purísima Concepción, killing many. The following year, the Spanish retaliated with military action against the tribe.
After the United States annexed the territories after winning the Mexican–American War, it engaged in the Yuma War from 1850 to 1853 in response to a conflict between the Quechan and Jaeger's Ferry and the Glanton Gang, after the Quechan had established a rival ferry service on the Colorado River. During which, the historic Fort Yuma was built across the Colorado River from the present day Yuma, Arizona.
Pic: Quechan men in western Arizona - circa 1875

Ancestors in this photo survived Wounded Knee Massacre 1890 by fighting back with their bare hands the military who had ...
20/04/2024

Ancestors in this photo survived Wounded Knee Massacre 1890 by fighting back with their bare hands the military who had guns. They threw themselves in the line of fire to hopefully save the women and children. They were shot several times over, still bleeding they were able to fight guns away and keep protecting the innocent.
True Tokala Ohitikapi.
These are my heros, period! Learn your history and the people who lived and died back then.
Left-right. Dewey Beard, George Running Hawk, Jonah Long, James High Hawk, Harry Bkack Bird Tail, George Blue Legs, Johnson Black Bird Tail.
Sept, 1951 Rapid City Journal.

Actor, film director, film producer and musician Keanu Charles Reeves (Keanu Charles Reeves),❤️I think you will be proud...
19/04/2024

Actor, film director, film producer and musician Keanu Charles Reeves (Keanu Charles Reeves),
❤️I think you will be proud to wear this T-shirt 👇
https://www.welcomenativeculture.com/tee89
Missed the first 20 minutes of the party dedicated to the end of filming of his new film in one of the clubs in New York.
He waited patiently in the rain to be let in.
No one recognized him.
The club owner said: "I didn't even know Keanu was standing in the rain waiting to be let in - he didn't say anything to anyone."
"He travels by public transport".
"He easily communicates with homeless people on the street and helps them".
- He is only 58 years old (September 2, 1964)
- He can just eat a hot dog in the park, sitting between ordinary people.
- After filming one of the "Matrix", he gave all the stuntmen a new motorcycle - in recognition of their skill.
- He gave up most of the fee for the salaries of costume designers and computer scientists who draw special effects in "The Matrix" - decided that their share of participation in the budget of the film was underestimated.
- He reduced his fee in the film The Devil's Advocate" to have enough money to invite Al Pacino.
- Almost at the same time his best friend died; his girlfriend lost a child and soon died in a car accident, and his sister fell ill with leukemia.
Keanu did not break: he donated $5 million to the clinic that treated his sister, refused to shoot (to be with her), and created the Leukemia Foundation, donating significant sums from each fee for the film.
You can be born a man, but to remain one..
Also Read About Keanu
Keanu Reeves’ father is of Native Hawaiian descent...
❤️Visit the store to support Native American products 👇
https://www.welcomenativeculture.com/tee89

Cherokee SpiritualityAmong the Cherokee, spirituality was embedded into everyday life and was not seen as something apar...
19/04/2024

Cherokee Spirituality
Among the Cherokee, spirituality was embedded into everyday life and was not seen as something apart.
In This World, human beings do not have dominion over plants, animals, and the rest of creation. Instead, they live with creation, attempting to maintain balance within This World. Spiritual power can be found throughout creation. Thus plants and animals have spiritual power, as do rivers, caves, mountains, and other land forms.
Among the Cherokees, the fire and the sun were viewed as Grandmothers. Out of respect, the fire was fed a portion of each meal, for if she were neglected she might take vengeance on them.
While the sacred fire represents the sun and the Upper World, water (especially water in springs and rivers) represents the Under World. Among the Cherokee, it is important to keep these two elements apart and therefore water is never poured on the sacred fire.
The sacred fires are fed with the wood from the seven sacred trees: beech, birch, hickory, locust, maple, oak, and sourwood.
An important concept in Cherokee spirituality is that of purity. Maintaining purity involves the avoidance of pollution. Pollution occurs when things from two different categories – such as fire and water – are allowed to physically mix. Thus the maintenance of purity involves the separation of opposing forces or items.

KIOWA CHIEF AHPEAHTONE (Wooden -Lance), 1856-1931.Ahpeahtone (Wooden-Lance) (1856-1931) was the last traditional chief o...
19/04/2024

KIOWA CHIEF AHPEAHTONE (Wooden -Lance), 1856-1931.
Ahpeahtone (Wooden-Lance) (1856-1931) was the last traditional chief of the Kiowa. Ahpeahtone was born near Medicine Lodge, KS and was related by blood to Red Cloud, the Oglala Lakota chief; Lone Wolf, the Kiowa chief; and was the son of Red Otter.
The Ghost Dance religion was popular during his time as chief.
The religion foretold a prophecy of the return of old ways within Native American cultures and the removal of Americans of European descent.
Ahpeahtone went to the Arapahos and Paiutes to investigate, but thought the religion to be a fraud and didn't want anything to do with it.
He was a member of the Native American Church, known for incorporating Native culture into Christianity, such as the use of pe**te cactus.
The chief enjoyed composing dance songs and dancing to them at the Gourd Dance. In his later years he converted to Methodism and established the Kiowa Indian Hospital in Lawton, OK.
The chief introduced democracy to the tribe and promoted business and education, all the while not accepting pay for his work, believing that he earned enough.
Apart from leading the tribe, his family were also farmers. Ahpeahtone died in 1931.
A town in Cotton County Oklahoma bears his name and he was inducted into the National Hall of Fame for Famous American Indians in 1996.

Chief Running RabbitAatsista-Mahkan or Running Rabbit (c. 1833 – probably 24 January 1911) was a chief of the Siksika Fi...
18/04/2024

Chief Running Rabbit
Aatsista-Mahkan or Running Rabbit (c. 1833 – probably 24 January 1911) was a chief of the Siksika First Nation. He was the son of Akamukai (Many Swans), chief of the Biters band, and following the death of his father in 1871, Aatsista-Mahkan took control of the band. He was known for his generosity and kindness, and for his loyal protection of his family.
In 1877 , he was a signatory to Treaty 7, but he and his people continued to follow the bison until 1881, when he and his people were designated to settle on a reserve, 60 miles east of today's Calgary, Alberta.
Running Rabbit was born into a prominent family. His older brother Many Swans, who took their father's name, was chief of Biters band of Siksikas to which they belonged. As a teenager and young warrior, Running Rabbit had not performed any great deeds worthy of recognition until his brother lent him an amulet said to have spiritual powers made from a mirror decorated with eagle feathers, ermine skins, and magpie feathers. Running Rabbit was successful during his first ever raid as a warrior, gaining himself two enemy horses which he captured and gifted to Many Swans. Similar success during following expeditions resulted in Many Swans giving Running Rabbit the amulet as a gift. Word of Running Rabbit's success spread throughout the Biters band and many referred to him as the "young chief" before he earned or was appointed any leadership position in the band.

Actor, film director, film producer and musician Keanu Charles Reeves (Keanu Charles Reeves),❤️I think you will be proud...
18/04/2024

Actor, film director, film producer and musician Keanu Charles Reeves (Keanu Charles Reeves),
❤️I think you will be proud to wear this T-shirt 👇
https://www.welcomenativeculture.com/tee88
Missed the first 20 minutes of the party dedicated to the end of filming of his new film in one of the clubs in New York.
He waited patiently in the rain to be let in.
No one recognized him.
The club owner said: "I didn't even know Keanu was standing in the rain waiting to be let in - he didn't say anything to anyone."
"He travels by public transport".
"He easily communicates with homeless people on the street and helps them".
- He is only 58 years old (September 2, 1964)
- He can just eat a hot dog in the park, sitting between ordinary people.
- After filming one of the "Matrix", he gave all the stuntmen a new motorcycle - in recognition of their skill.
- He gave up most of the fee for the salaries of costume designers and computer scientists who draw special effects in "The Matrix" - decided that their share of participation in the budget of the film was underestimated.
- He reduced his fee in the film The Devil's Advocate" to have enough money to invite Al Pacino.
- Almost at the same time his best friend died; his girlfriend lost a child and soon died in a car accident, and his sister fell ill with leukemia.
Keanu did not break: he donated $5 million to the clinic that treated his sister, refused to shoot (to be with her), and created the Leukemia Foundation, donating significant sums from each fee for the film.
You can be born a man, but to remain one..
Also Read About Keanu
Keanu Reeves’ father is of Native Hawaiian descent...
❤️Visit the store to support Native American products 👇
https://www.welcomenativeculture.com/tee88

Yellow Eyes, photo by Frank Fiske 1906.Yellow Eyes was an informant for Sitting Bull. She joined Sitting Bull at the Bat...
18/04/2024

Yellow Eyes, photo by Frank Fiske 1906.
Yellow Eyes was an informant for Sitting Bull. She joined Sitting Bull at the Battle of Little Bighorn, escaped with him to Canada in 1877 and later returned and surrendered with him in 1881.
She was living on the Standing Rock Sioux Resevation from 1886 until her death in 1905 or 1906. She left Canada when Sitting Bull surrendered in 1881 but went to Fort Peck with some of the warriors, possibly her sons and husband.

Rick Mora (born January 22, 1975) is an American model and actor. He claims Apache and Yaqui descent.Rick was born in a ...
17/04/2024

Rick Mora (born January 22, 1975) is an American model and actor. He claims Apache and Yaqui descent.
Rick was born in a field of corn called Los Angeles but raised on a 100 acre farm with no electricity and a wood burning stove in Crescent City, California. He returned to the city at age 7. He obtained a Bachelors Degree from California State University, Northridge in communication. Acting and Modeling soon followed when he was discovered by legendary Male Super Model agent Omar Alberto. Mora then successfully shot with great photographers like Carlos Reynosa, Cliff Watts, and Matthew Rolston which allowed him to enter the American & European commercial & modeling market.
In addition to acting, Rick is an artist involved in the business of photography with over 9 commissioned pieces. He specializes in Landscapes but also shoots head shots, modeling portfolio, children and weddings. He photographs feature film as well as many high profile events. Also, one of Rick's passions is to provide shelter for and rescue Huskies.

A Chippewa Native American Allegedly Lived to be 137A Chippewa chief commonly referred to as “John Smith” lived to be an...
16/04/2024

A Chippewa Native American Allegedly Lived to be 137
A Chippewa chief commonly referred to as “John Smith” lived to be an incredibly ripe old age. If you eat a virtuous diet rich with sturgeon fresh from a lake, partake in vigorous regular exercise in the clear air of northern Minnesota, and stay sociable by getting married—eight times!—but never have the bother of raising children, how long might you count your years?
One man lived to the ripe old age of 137, according to reports at the time. Or maybe he was 100, or maybe 138. While his exact age remains in dispute, this much is certain: He sure looked pretty old.
The Chippewa Native American named Ga-Be-Nah-Gewn-Wonce —which translates to Sloughing Flesh or Wrinkled Meat, depending on your source—was called John Smith by white people, according to a February 8, 1922, front-page obituary in the Minneapolis (Morning) Star Tribune
Though John Smith had become blind in his last year, he’d been active—or as active as a centenarian+ can be—up until he contracted the pneumonia that claimed his life. He would walk out to wave to the trains passing through his area. His mind was reportedly, and remarkably, clear. At the end of his life, he lived with a nephew, whom he adopted as his son, Tom Smith, who took care of the old man.
While the day he left this Earth is indisputable, his birth date was also murky, especially at a time when records were scant, especially for non-whites. John Smith lived on Division Point at Cass Lake, in northern Minnesota, where he fished and rode horses, for all but a few years of his life. The Great Northern Railroad Company had a train turntable where they turned engines around at Division Point (hence its name).
John Smith would come out to the trains and sell pictures of himself for 5 cents on which he wrote his Indian name, his “white person” name, the location, and his age. In some of the pictures, he wears a traditional Indian headdress with feathers, poncho, and beads. In others, he wears a top hat or a jacket, vest, and cravat. On one picture from 1912, his age is cited as 128. A shock of white hair tumbles over his prominent nose and face, which is incredibly etched with deep wrinkles.
Smith told people that he’d been eight or nine years old “when the stars fell,” according to a University of Minnesota ethnographic biography of Paul Peter Buffalo, who’d been a child in John Smith’s circles. Some experts pin “when the stars fell” to the Leonid Meteor Showers of 1833, which would put Smith’s birthday in 1822 and make him 100-ish at the time of his death.
At the same time, he also claimed to have participated in the War of 1812, which makes his age in the 130-plus range more credible. A Federal Commissioner of Indian Enrollment, however, said Smith’s wrinkled face was due to a disease, not age. Paul Peter Buffalo reported that John Smith, whom he called “Grandpa John,” had been asked to become chieftan but had turned down the honor because he was “getting too old. He didn’t want to be responsible for anything
How old can a man really live? The oldest verified age validated by modern standards, which requires at least three official documents, belongs to Jiroemon Kimura of Japan, who died on June 12, 2013, at the age of 116 and 54 days!

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