Category Archives: New York City

Two Row Campaign at Judson Memorial Church

Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign at Judson Memorial Church
55 Washington Square South
New York, New York
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Starting Sunday January 27th,11:00am, Judson will be hosting a series of Native American Testimonies on the last Sunday of every month, as part of the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign.  The first guest speakers will offer poetry and information on the campaign.
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Firewolf Bizahaloni-Wong is Dine’ (Navajo & Apache) and her clans are Bitter Water born for Red Clay.  Her father, Jimmie Bidziil Bizahaloni, was a member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) and Indians of All Nations that took over Alcatraz Island in 1969.  A lifelong activist, Firewolf became a member of AIM as a teenager, has been part of the Black Mesa Coalition since it’s inception, and is a co-founder of Native Resistance Network.
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Sally Bermanzohn, an ally of Indigenous rights, is active in the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign, and a member of Native Resistance Network.  Now retired, she taught social movements and Native American Studies at Brooklyn College, and wrote Through Survivors’ Eyes, and coauthored Violence and Politics: Globalization’s Paradox.
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The Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign:
A partnership between the Onondaga Nation and Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation (NOON) is developing a broad alliance between the Haudenosaunee and their allies in New York and throughout the world. This statewide advocacy and educational campaign seeks to achieve justice by polishing the chain of friendship established in the first treaty between the Haudenosaunee and Dutch immigrants. Environmental cleanup and preservation, and opposition to hydro-fracking are the core components of the campaign.

Two Row History:
The Two Row Wampum belt is the symbolic record of the first agreement between Europeans and American Indian Nations on Turtle Island/North America. 2013 will mark the 400th anniversary of this first covenant, which forms the basis for the covenant chain of subsequent treaty relationships made by the Haudenosaunee and other Native Nations with settlers on this continent. The agreement outlines a mutual, three-part commitment to friendship, peace between peoples, and living in parallel forever (as long as the grass is green, as long as the rivers flow downhill and as long as the sun rises in the east and sets in the west). Throughout the years, the Haudenosaunee have sought to honor this mutual vision and have increasingly emphasized that ecological stewardship is a fundamental prerequisite for this continuing friendship.

Symbolic Enactment:
A focal point of the year-long educational and advocacy Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign will be a symbolic “enactment” of the treaty in the summer of 2013. It will bring the treaty to life with Haudenosaunee and other Native People paddling side-by-side with allies and supporters down the Hudson River from Albany to New York City. These two equal, but separate rows will demonstrate the wise, yet simple concept of the Two Row Wampum Treaty.

International Day of Solidarity

Update February 8, 2013:
THIS EVENT HAS BEEN POSTPONED DUE TO A MAJOR STORM AND UNCERTAINTY ABOUT WHETHER OR NOT RIVERSIDE CHURCH WILL BE OPEN.
.Part1 copyRiverside Church
91Claremont Avenue, New York, NY
Room 10T
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Film “Warrior: The Life of Leonard Peltier”
Produced and Directed by Suzie Baer
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The shocking true story of Leonard Peltier, American Indian leader locked away for life, convicted of the alleged murder of two FBI agents during a bloody shoot-out on the Pine Ridge Reservation in 1975.  Around the world, his trial and conviction have been denounced as a sham.  Amnesty International, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Desmond Tutu, and many others have appealed for a new trial for the man who has come to symbolize the continued oppression of America’s indigenous peoples.  To understand Peltier’s story, Warrior takes us back to the violent confrontations at Pine Ridge and Wounded Knee in the Seventies, and then to today’s Indian reservations, where the government’s plans for uranium mining and waste dumping are still being resisted by Native activists.  The heart of the film, though, is a detailed painstaking account of Peltier’s harrowing odyssey through the American justice system.
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The Wachamchick Warrior Society Drum Group
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Light Refreshments                                 Donation at Door
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Sponsored by
The Riverside Church Prison Ministry
NYCLPDOC
and NYC Jericho Movement
For more information: nyclpdoc@gmail.com
nycjericho@gmail.com  646 429-2059

In Solidarity and Support of Idle No More

stand-up-united-native-nations

In Solidarity and Support of Idle No More ! ! !

#IdleNoMore Flash Mob Round Dance in NYC

this Friday, December 28th, 2012

3:00 p.m.

Washington Square Park (underneath the arch)

. . . . say hello to us NRN folks!

We didn’t organize this, but some of us will be there!

Image by Dwayne Bird – birdwiremedia.com

Whose Island Is This?

A WALK AND TALK ABOUT WHO OCCUPIED WALL STREET
BEFORE 1491 AND HOW NATIVE AMERICANS
CAME TO BE EVICTED FROM THEIR “ROCKY ISLAND”
With Evan T. Pritchard, author of Native New Yorkers, No Word For Time
and Henry Hudson and the Algonquins of New York


MONDAY, COLUMBUS DAY OCTOBER 8th, 11:00 A.M.

Join renowned author Professor Evan Pritchard (Vassar/Marist/Pace) as he explores the long and sometimes tragic history of lower Manhattan from a Native American perspective. Meeting at 477 FDR Drive (at Grand Street) at 11 AM, Columbus Day, Monday, October 8th, we will be drawn towards Corlears’ Hook as we discuss the massacre which occurred there, then traveling the Corlears’ Hook Trail we cross the famed Tulpehoken (“Turtle Island”) Trail (at Indian Overlook) and learn why it was the backbone of the Algonquin world. After a brief discussion of Algonquin whaling techniques at Fulton Street, we will speculate on whether or not the mastodons had a role in creating the Mohican Trail (now Broadway) as we walk to the place where the Dutch built a wall to keep the Kapsee Indians out of their own village, which the Dutch were occupying until the British invaded. We will learn how British subjects in 1775 captured and occupied City Hall at Wall Street (500 feet from Zuccotti Park) in protest of high taxes. Pritchard will discuss the significance of the First Peach War as we gaze upon the river landing where Hendrick Van Dyke shot a woman chief of the Munsee as she was eating a peach, starting a series of wars, the same site Henry Hudson had twice landed in 1609, 46 years earlier, now known as The World Trade Towers site. We will head back and conclude at 3 PM regardless of our location.

$25 per person, suggested donation, RSVP required.
Email evan.pritchard7@gmail.com, or kmandeville@webjogger.net.
Call Kathleen at (845)417-5430 or Evan at (845)266-9231 to register.

Indigenous Day of Remembrance – Honoring the Ancestors

Indigenous Day of Remembrance

“Honoring the Indigenous Ancestors”
Inter-Tribal Gathering
Sunday, October 7th 2012
12:00 noon – 3:00 p.m.

At Merchants Gate Central Park
59th Street & Central Park South
Sacred Ceremony of Unity and Peace
Guest Speakers
Indigenous Musical Performances
Activists
Please bring a chair or blanket

For more information: 646.648.9809 or iukibuel@gmail.com
http://indigenousdayofremembrance.webs.com/
A B C D or 1 Train to Columbus Circle
Public parking at Time Warner Building

New York Indian Council

New York Indian Council
Established to Serve the Needs of the American Indian CommunitySERVICES

Work Experience:
– We match program participants with employers who receive subsidized training.
– Program participants will receive hands on training by employers leading to employment.

Class Training:
– Client will receive assistance determined through assessment.

Supportive Services:
– Client will receive assistance determined through assessment.

 ELIGIBILITY

– Indian (Status card, tribal council letter, birth certificate, baptismal record, parent birth/death certificate, etc.)

– Birth Date Verification (Birth certificate, official document showing birth date, etc.)

– Social Security Verification (SS card or SS number on another official document)

– Income Verification (W-2, tax return, last pay stub, public assistance or unemployment letter, etc.)

– Address Verification (apartment lease, monthly bill, driver’s license, etc.)

– Selective Service Verification (U.S. and Canadian males ages 18-25)

– State issued photo (Passport, public assistance card, driver’s/non-driver’s license, school I.D., etc.)

New York Indian Council, Inc.
2024 Williamsbridge Road
Bronx, New York  10461
Serving Native Communities of New York and New Jersey
Telephone: 718.684.3993
Fax: 718.684.3994