Native Americans Push for Inclusion Beyond Lessons About Thanksgiving
Many state curricula still don’t mention Indigenous people, or mention them only as part of history. But that’s changing.
Many state curricula still don’t mention Indigenous people, or mention them only as part of history. But that’s changing.
We look at a Texas church's COVID outbreak, the AME Church's response to LGBTQ members, and the Haitian president's assassination. Plus, hear from Jackie Hill Perry.
We look at Indian residential schools, a Hillsong docuseries, and pastors arrested for the Capitol insurrection. Hear from Dr. Anthea Butler.
There are at least two primary reasons for the absence of Native Americans in the historiography of the Underground Railroad.
A federal judge in Texas has struck down the Indian Child Welfare Act, a decades-old federal law aimed at keeping Native American families together.
The annual Sand Creek Massacre Spiritual Healing Run opens at the site of the Sand Creek Massacre near Eads, Colorado, with a sunrise ceremony honoring some 200 Arapaho and Cheyenne ...
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing the federal government over a law that seeks to keep Native American children from being separated from their families.
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