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Native News Network This page serves as a resource for finding information about Native issues, events and videos in one place.

03/12/2025
03/12/2025

Thank you to the Delaware Tribe of Indians for standing tall and supporting all the other Federally recognized nations standing firm on this issue! These Tribal Nations fighting this fight are protecting the sovereignty, trust responsibility and treaty rights of every single Federally Recognized Tribal community by opposing unvetted groups lobbying congress for recognition while trying to avoid the Office of Federal Acknowledgement. The Pamunkey Tribe had no problem proving their legitimacy as an American Indian community to the Office of Federal Acknowledgement. They have one of the longest histories of contact with Europeans on the east coast. If they can prove to the OFA their legitimacy, then any other group claiming to be an American Indian community on the eastern seaboard should be able to do so as well.

03/12/2025

The school’s requirement is a rejection of who he is and a demand that he sacrifice his culture and heritage to conform to baseless and unfair rules.

30/11/2025
30/11/2025
27/11/2025
21/11/2025
21/11/2025

Last Saturday, Oklahoma's own Joy Harjo—former U.S. Poet Laureate and our 14th Oklahoma Cultural Treasure—was presented with a 2025 Portrait of a Nation Award by the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. Harjo (first row, far right) is seated next to Oscar-winning film director Steven Spielberg who was also one of the four honorees. The Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery tells the story of the United States through the individuals who have shaped American culture. Congratulations to Joy Harjo on this much-deserved recognition.

18/11/2025

Activist and scholar Debbie Reese explains how censorship harms our diverse democracy and emphasizes the importance of representation for Native American young people.

“Our children are Native every day. But in far too many places, books by Native writers are only brought into the classroom in November [during Native American Heritage month]. We are who we are, all year long. Use the books, all year round. Bring those possible selves into the classroom as a matter of course so that Native children’s identities are affirmed, every day.”

Revisit this Q&A article: https://lfj.pub/debbie-reese

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