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7 Documents Found
![PFLP Interviews](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 11/1/1969Call Number: CE 400Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Interviews from members of the PFLP. Leila Khaled explains the PFLP strategy to target US imperialism by preventing tourism and weapons from entering occupied Palestine.
An unidentified PFLP member talks about the differences in ideology between the PDFLP and the PFLP.
![Lee Stradel and Fateh](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Call Number: CE 402Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Lee Stradel is the first Western journalist to interview the leadership of Fateh. Fateh distinguishes between Jews and Zionists, and explains that British imperialists began the aggression. The force of Fateh is growing since their victory in Karama, and Fateh joined forces with other guerilla movements for Palestinian liberation. Fateh expressed their support for other liberation movements in Latin America, Cuba, Vietnam and identify as part of the worldwide struggle against imperialism.
![Fateh Ideology and Interview](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Call Number: CE 403Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Speech about Fateh’s strategies after the victory at the Battle of Karama. Talks about the way to move forward in the revolution after this battle, and about Israeli mentality as motivation to continue making progress.
Interview with an unidentified American student who talks about Fateh’s coalitions with other guerilla movements. Fateh has specific spokespeople to talk with westerners.
![Lee Stradel Interview](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Call Number: CE 432Format: 1/4 3 3/4 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Lee Stradel is the first Western journalist to interview the leadership of Fateh. Focuses on recruitment and training as well as ideology.
![Ward Churchill - American Indian Movement of Pine Ridge: Siege by FBI and US Marshalls](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 3/23/1991Call Number: CE 484Format: Cass A & BProgram: Alternative RadioCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Ward Churchill, author, activist, and former professor, speaks about the 71-day siege at Wounded Knee in which 200 or so Oglala Lakota and members of the AIM occupied Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation responding to the failure of impeaching the tribal president and to expose inhumane and corrupt conditions on Pine Ridge by the US Federal government through the tribal government. Churchill gives a succinct history of Lakota/US relations, including details of treaties, and discusses the role of COINTELPRO in neutralizing the AIM.
![Winona LaDuke - From Genocide to Resistance: The Next 500 Years](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 4/21/1992Call Number: CE 485Format: Cass A & BProgram: Alternative RadioCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Winona LaDuke, Native American activist, environmentalist juxtaposes two concepts of Native American life (time is cyclical and reciprocity) with two concepts in industrial thinking (time as timeline and capitalism). She speaks in response to the quincentennial celebration of Columbus' arrival to the "new world." LaDuke calls for recognition of the "holocaust" of the Native American people and cites statistics relating to the mistreatment of indigenous populations, such as using their land as toxic waste dumps.
![Russell Means - For the World to Live, Columbus Must Die](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 4/27/1992Call Number: CE 486Format: Cass A & BProducers: KALWProgram: Alternative RadioCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Russell Means, Oglala Sioux activist, speaks in response to Andy Rooney's column on how it is "silly" for Native Americans to complain about professional sports team names.
Means discusses the image of Native Americans, as opposed to Blacks in America. He combats the claim that Native Americans have no great culture and complicates the idea of Native American contribution. He discusses the effects of nuclear waste on Indian Reservations, or what he calls "concentration camps." He puts responsibility on the white citizens of America to see to it that the US government follows its own laws, and to curb the waste it produces.
For things to change, people must "Kill Columbus - kill his legacy."
7 Documents Found