“Before every competition, I would kneel down and pray with my medicine bag,” said Anderson ... was the way he used his status as a Native American role model to organize and conduct dozens ...
Eighteen years ago, on a steep snow slope high in the French Alps, on skis nearly eight feet long, Ross Anderson of Durango set the American speed skiing record that still stands: 154 mph. Across a ...
One of those stories included the Oglala Lakota daughter of Chief Charging Shield by one of our freelancers. These stories are never easy but they need to be told. One of the bigger stories that our ...
These new laws include rules involving Native American tribes ... which trains dogs to inspect passenger bags, cargo, mailed packages and vehicles to detect pests and diseases that could threaten ...
Four states now allow government-run insurance programs to cover Native American healing practices. In October, the Biden ...
The Cheyenne who have lived in the Northern Plains for hundreds of years, call Bear Butte, Noahvose, or Where the Cheyenne ...
Lakota West High School head football coach Tom Bolden has been named the winner of the 2024 Paul Brown Excellence in Coaching Award.Presented annually by the Cincinnati Bengals, the award honors ...
That was, until she started going to the Native American Medicine Garden (NAMG), a sacred space near the Bell Museum in St. Paul. Now, with the resignation of Cânté Sütá Francis Bettelyoun, NAMG’s ...
She carried this plant back to Apache medicine men and elders who meditated and prayed with it, said Primeaux. He believes the Native American Church and what would become the Peyote Way of Life ...
Thousands of people from throughout the area are in Rapid City for the 47th annual Lakota Nation Invitational at The Monument. Four straight days of basketball are on tap in the Barnett Fieldhouse ...
Given the unique hurdles and historic struggles that Native American people have endured, it’s vital for these communities to know what resources exist to assist them. In the United States ...
Looking back at the massacre at the end of his life, survivor and Lakota medicine man Black Elk remembered: “When I look back from this high hill of my old age, I can still see the butchered women and ...