New Memorial Planned

Design Selected for National Native American Veterans Memorial
Tue, Jun 26, 2018 7:17 am
NMAI | National Museum of the American Indian (nmai-news@smithsonianonline.org)To:you Details
National Native American Veterans Memorial
Design Selected for Smithsonian’s National Native American Veterans Memorial

Harvey Pratt—Cheyenne and Arapaho, Marine Corps Veteran, Forensic Artist—Submitted “Warriors’ Circle of Honor”

Pratt Memorial Design

The jury for the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, National Native American Veterans Memorial has unanimously selected the design concept submitted by Harvey Pratt (Cheyenne/Arapaho) titled, “Warriors’ Circle of Honor.” Groundbreaking for the memorial is slated for September 21, 2019. It is slated to open late 2020.

“Through meeting thousands of Native American veterans, I learned most of all about the commitment these veterans have to the well-being of the United States,” said Kevin Gover (Pawnee), director of the museum. “These veterans are perfectly aware that they are serving a country that had not kept its commitments to Native people, and yet they chose—and are still choosing—to serve. This reflects a very deep kind of patriotism. I can think of no finer example of service to the United States and the promise it holds.”

Native Americans serve at a higher rate per capita than any other population group. Few outside the military and American Indian Nations know that Native people have served in the U.S. armed forces since the American Revolution and continue to serve today. The nation’s capital is known for its grand monuments and solemn memorials, including many honoring the nation’s veterans. Yet no national landmark in Washington, D.C., focuses on the contributions of American Indians, Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians who have served in the military since colonial times.

Pratt is a multimedia artist and recently retired forensic artist, as well as a Marine Corps Vietnam veteran. His design concept is a multisensory memorial. An elevated stainless steel circle rests on an intricately carved stone drum. Listen to Pratt describe his design concept in detail. The selected design will undergo further development in partnership with the museum.


Congress commissioned the museum to build a National Native American Veterans Memorial that gives “all Americans the opportunity to learn of the proud and courageous tradition of service of Native Americans in the Armed Forces of the United States.”

The museum worked with the National Congress of American Indians and other Native organizations to create an advisory committee composed of tribal leaders, Native veterans and their family members from across the country who assisted with outreach to Native American communities and veterans. The advisory committee and the museum conducted 35 community consultations across the nation to seek input and support for the memorial. These events resulted in a shared vision and set of design principles for the National Native American Veterans Memorial.

The National Museum of the American Indian conducted an international competition to select design concepts for the National Native American Veterans Memorial. Don Stastny, an architect and urban designer, oversaw the competition. The design was selected through a juried, two-stage process. The jury members are:

  • Larry Ulaaq Ahvakana (Inupiaq), artist, Ahvakana Fine Art
  • Stephanie Birdwell (Cherokee), director, Veterans Affairs, Office of Tribal Government Relations
  • Johnnetta Betsch Cole, director emerita, Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art
  • Edwin Fountain, general counsel, American Battle Monuments Commission
  • Mark Kawika McKeague (Native Hawaiian), director of Cultural Planning, Group 70 International Inc.
  • Brian McCormack (Nez Perce), Principal Landscape Architect, McCormack Landscape Architecture
  • Lillian Pitt (Wasco/Yakima/Warm Springs), artist
  • Herman Viola, curator emeritus, Smithsonian
  • Kevin Gover (Pawnee), alternate juror, director of the National Museum of the American Indian

More information on the competition regulations and process is available in the Design Competition Manual: https://nmai.us.fluidreview.com/res/p/regulations/. For more information about the memorial, visit AmericanIndian.si.edu/NNAVM.

This project is made possible by the generous support of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians; Bank of America; Northrop Grumman; the Citizen Potawatomi Nation; the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians; Hobbs, Straus, Dean & Walker LLP; General Motors; Lee Ann and Marshall Hunt; the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community; and the Sullivan Insurance Agency of Oklahoma.

AdChoices

Update from Lakota People’s Law Project

Lakota Law
 

View the Video

Spring means renewal. Over this past month, as the sun starts to shine more on Standing Rock, we’ve taken many crucial steps toward a new way of thinking and living on the rez. Each day, we get closer to using the mighty power of our sun, and the sweeping winds across our plains, to establish our energy independence.

Your support (nearly 20,000 people have now signed our petition to #GreenTheRez!) has helped propel forward our effort to bring renewables to Standing Rock. Led by my colleague, Phyllis Young, in cooperation with our tribal leadership, this effort has vast potential to benefit not just those of us who live here, but the earth we share.

The Standing Rock Tribal Council has now endorsed this work, and our tribal and school board chairman, Mike Faith, has signaled his support to retrofit the rez’s schools. We’re also in talks with the general manager of Grand River Casino, and we will do an assessment there soon. It’s not an overstatement to say that the potential carbon savings from Standing Rock’s two casinos is massive.

That’s not all. As Phyllis and I mention in our new video, we’ve accomplished energy efficiency and solar assessments in the four largest of Standing Rock’s eight districts, and we’ve also assessed the tribal headquarters, where we have a plan to cut energy use by 75%.

Phyllis has been a model of activism for 40 years, and I’m honored to be working in concert with her to make all this happen. Her $10,000 fellowship from MIT Solve to green the rez brings with it invaluable support. As I write you today, Phyllis has traveled to MIT, where she’s conferencing with dozens of political, technological, philanthropic, and industrial luminaries. In August, MIT will join us again at Standing Rock for our second renewable energy summit. We aren’t slowing down!

I can’t thank you enough for your participation and generosity. It’s been and will continue to be a year of change. As my trial draws nearer, my heart is lifted knowing that both my landmark defense and our efforts to make Standing Rock renewable will create lasting, positive impacts for my relatives and for all people.

Pilamaya — My sincere thanks to you for your advocacy and compassion!

Chase Iron Eyes
Lead Counsel
Lakota People’s Law Project

News Update: April 2018

Lakota People's Law Project
https://www.lakotalaw.org/resources/legal-update-from-chase-iron-eyes-attorneys

Chase Iron Eyes and Family

Thank you for your support throughout what has been both an exciting and a trying year. After yesterday, we have much reason for optimism. Yesterday was a good energy day. I am now absolutely sure we can win this fight in the end, and we are winning this fight now.

Ruling on several important issues in court yesterday, Judge Lee Christofferson admonished prosecutors for withholding key evidence, set deadlines for them to furnish that evidence to my legal team, reaffirmed our right to collect additional evidence from militarized DAPL security firm TigerSwan, and extended the timeline of my trial to November. This is all tremendous news and my heart is filled with hope.

My case, and HolyElk’s, are truly unique. No other water protectors have been granted the right to pursue this scope of evidence. We aren’t playing it safe, but I wouldn’t have it any other way. You can watch the video to see our legal team discuss yesterday’s hearing’s monumental outcomes.

I will be clear that, even with all the positive outcomes, our fight is not without serious challenges. The forces mobilized against us continue to stand their ground more strongly than ever, as evidenced by Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier’s testimony yesterday, under oath, denying TigerSwan’s influence over the policing at Standing Rock.

Even so, we had a great moment in court when, under cross examination by our chief counsel, Daniel Sheehan, Sheriff Kirchmeier admitted that attendance records of law enforcement meetings not only exist, but show that three TigerSwan employees (whose names he conveniently forgot) attended those meetings regularly.

With our now-confirmed ability to aggressively pursue these records, and with the judge’s stern warning to prosecution and the sheriff that he will “vigorously enforce” our right to them, the pieces are falling into place. The sheriff has until May 1 to give us all we’ve asked for.

Our beautiful battle began in the camps of Standing Rock and now echoes in the courtrooms of North Dakota. We’ll prove that law enforcement colluded with TigerSwan and pipeline parent company Energy Transfer Partners. We’ll show that they ran a violent, racist, no-holds-barred campaign against our prayerful circle.

The coming months promise much hard work as our team collects evidence and builds our landmark defense that can protect our rights to free speech and protest into the future. I ask that you continue to stand with us by sharing our exciting news with your friends and relatives. Let’s keep the circle strong. We have much to do.

Pilamaya – Thank you for standing with us!

Chase Iron Eyes
Lead Counsel
Lakota People’s Law Project

Lakota People's Law Project

Lakota People’s law Project
Romero Institute
210 High Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
United States

The Lakota People’s law Project is part of the 501(c)(3) Romero Institute, an interfaith law and policy center. All donations are tax-deductible

 

 

News From Lakota People’s Law Project

 

Winning Justice at Standing Rock

Trial dates are set, and it’s a critical hour for our legal efforts. On August 13, Chase Iron Eyes will walk into a North Dakota courtroom and face prosecution for his alleged crimes. The charges? Trespassing on the Lakota’s own sacred land and inciting a riot — when a group of 74 unarmed water protectors peacefully withstood a raid of Last Child’s Camp and subsequent arrest at the hands of fully armed law enforcement officials.

Thankfully, Chase has a dedicated team in his corner. You are among a group thousands strong who stood with Standing Rock in its hour of need, who have followed this story to the courts, and who have taken repeated action to keep the fight for justice on track. Now, in order for that justice to be served, we need your financial support.

Our legal team must — and will — gather a staggering amount of evidence in the coming months. This includes more than 50 depositions, requiring travel to Texas and North Carolina to question, under oath, officials of Dakota Access pipeline parent company Energy Transfer Partners and their hired mercenary security firm, TigerSwan.

In preparation for this moment, the Lakota People’s Law Project staff has spent the past several decades combining investigation, litigation, education, and organizing to create solutions for social reform in the US. Once again, we’re ready to challenge injustice. This time, we are confronting racism and violations of the Federal Civil Rights Act and the Environmental Protection Act in support of our First Amendment rights under the Constitution.

There are several key distinctions about the Chase Iron Eyes case:

  • We are pursuing a potentially game-changing “necessity defense”;
  • 73 other water protectors can use the evidence we gather in their own defenses;
  • We successfully petitioned to replace an assigned judge with our preferred judge;

These landmark legal defenses can set precedents that will safeguard all future protectors of water and land, all those who stand in strength to tear down injustice. This case is being fought for all of us who care about indigenous rights, all of us who care about the First Amendment, and all of us who care about Mother Earth. Your support now can help Chase make history.

Wopila — we thank you!
Daniel Sheehan
Chief Counsel
Lakota People’s Law Project

P. S. The upcoming trials — and surrounding public education — will not only exonerate our clients; they will expose the injustices perpetrated by state-sponsored private military operations. We will continue to provide updates to you as the team uncovers the truth and explores the extent of the rights violations at Standing Rock. With your continued aid, we will turn the tide in this country at its darkest hour. With your support, we will prevail.

 

Lakota People’s Law Project
Romero Institute
210 High Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

The Lakota people’s Law Project is part of the 501(c)(3) Romero Institute, an interfaith law and policy center. All donations are tax-deductible.

March Events

The interview about the Wounded Knee Memorial can be seen at: https://virtualoutworlding.blogspot.com/2018/02/2018-edu-massacre-at-wounded-knee.html

Latest News Links:

https://nativenewsonline.net/

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/feb/13/standing-rock-sioux-tribe-sues-24-opioid-industry-/

New garbage from Hillary Clinton: Funny, I never saw her anywhere near Standing Rock…

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told an overseas audience this week that her 2016 election loss came at the hands of “backwards”-looking voters who “didn’t like black people getting rights” or women in the workplace.

Talk of FBI investigations and secret email servers was not on the agenda Monday in Mumbai, India, as the author of “What Happened” explained, once again, why President Trump occupies the White House.

Mrs. Clinton blamed racists and sexists with an acute hatred for black people. She also cited racism against Indians in her explanation to an Indian audience.

“His whole campaign: ‘Make America Great Again’ was looking backwards,” she told attendees at India Today: Conclave 2018. “You know, ‘You didn’t like black people getting rights? You don’t like women, you know, getting jobs? You don’t want to, you know, see that Indian American succeeding more than you are? Whatever your problem is — I’m going to solve it.”

The remarks were posted online by the GOP War Room YouTube channel and blasted as “dismissing America’s Heartland to a foreign audience.”

from: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/mar/12/hillary-clinton-overseas-trump-won-backwards-voter/

Wounded Knee Memorial

I have worked many months on the Wounded Knee Memorial in the virtual world. In doing the research I found all the ways that the past connects to current events. It occurs to me that nothing much has changed in terms of the relationship between the First Nation and the U.S. government, there is still the stealing of natural resources and land. On Saturday, February 10th at 1:30 pm PST, I will be hosting a discussion and interview event at the memorial. Please attend and explore how the virtual world can be used for education. This is a work in progress and will continue to expand.

The Memorial is located on the Kitely viewer at: https://www.kitely.com/virtual-world/maya-eight-2/Seaside-Dreams

Memorial Entry (3)

The State of the Union

Try to Google anything about the latest news on the Dakota Access Pipeline.

Screenshot-2018-1-29 Dakota Acess Pipeline Protest - Google Search

Interesting set of search words…

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/shailene-woodley-marie-claire-uk-interview_us_59a84ecee4b010ca289b3333?utm_hp_ref=dakota-access-pipeline

 

It is like the news stopped in 2017. Here is the most recent article I found.

https://www.aclu.org/blog/free-speech/rights-protesters/standing-rock-protest-groups-sued-dakota-access-pipeline-company