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7 Documents Found
![The Road to Wounded Knee IV](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
SAME AS CD 170.
Events on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota regarding Wounded Knee. Hour 4 of 5 hour program. Hour 4: An interview with Crow Dog, the chief spiritual advisor to AIM and the Independent Oglala Nation. Topics discussed: the red man philosophy of life, need for human recognition by the white man, spiritual and political leadership of AIM, situation and poverty of Indian People today, the Indian Way of Life, broken promises, white man brings sickness to western hemisphere, red man fighting for unborn generation, militancy as reaction to white man discrimination, Ghost Dance, reincarnation, “relation” concept as core of life, and Crazy Horse as savior.
![Real Dragon](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 9/23/1971Call Number: RD 005Producers: Lincoln BergmanProgram: Real DragonCollection: “The Real Dragon” a news magazine including music and poetry
Richard Oakes shot and killed by Michael Morgan. He was active in the native American Resistance whereby the "Proclamation of Alcatraz" reads that the Indians will purchase Alcatraz for $24- the same price whites paid when they bought Manhattan.
A poet from Laos draws parallels between Indians in America and those in Indochina.
A Vietnam resolution is yet to be approved by the Senate. North Vietnam ministry reports U.S. bombing of 11 provinces; 33, 000 Saigon troops are deserted in provinces.
President Marcos of the Phillippenes imposes Martial law to save the country from a communist revolution.
Israel invades Lebanon.
![Mobile Lynching, John Trudell Speech](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 3/28/1981Call Number: FI 148Producers: Lincoln Bergman, Barbara Lubinski, Heber DreherProgram: Freedom Is A Constant StruggleCollection: Freedom is a Constant Struggle
Reports on US Department of Defense plan for war casualties, a lynching in Mobile, Alabama, strong speech by Native activist John Trudell, on overcoming capitalist materialism and living in harmony with Mother Earth.
![Indigenous Resistance 1](images/thumbnails/MP3.jpg)
Collection: Indigenous Struggles
Buffy Saint Marie - My Country Tis of Thy People You’re Dying – about boarding schools and falsified history.
Joanne Tall – about the ongoing genocidal impact of boarding schools, how religion forces assimilation, the 1973 Liberation of Wounded Knee and how it impacted her and her people.
![Indigenous Resistance - Part 2 from Roots of Resistance](images/thumbnails/MP3.jpg)
Chant in resistance to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (the BIA), by Native-American activists
“Radio Free Alcatraz” broadcast by the Indians of All Tribes on Alcatraz in 1969 – John Trudell, Richard Oakes and Don Cooney.
Wounded Knee mix with sounds of the American Indian Movement (AIM) – occupation, shots, FBI radio messages, and the voices of Dennis Banks and Carter Camp. Wounded Knee was also the site of an 1890 genocidal massacre of the Sioux Nation by the US cavalry.
![Ward Churchill COINTELPRO 101 Extra Footage](images/thumbnails//8547.jpg)
Call Number: C 10 131Collection: COINTELPRO 101 Raw Materials
Ward Churchill is a prolific American Indian scholar/activist, Ward Churchill is a founding member of the Rainbow Council of Elders, and longtime member of the leadership council of the American Indian Movement of Colorado.
In addition to his numerous works on Indigenous history, he has written extensively on U.S. foreign policy and the repression of political dissent, including the FBI’s COINTELPRO operations against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement.
![Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz COINTELPRO 101 Extra Footage](images/thumbnails//8548.jpg)
Call Number: C 10 132Collection: COINTELPRO 101 Raw Materials
Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz grew up in rural Oklahoma, daughter of a landless farmer and half-Indian mother. Her paternal grandfather, a white settler, farmer, and veterinarian, had been a labor activist and Socialist in Oklahoma with the Industrial Workers of the World in the first two decades of the twentieth century. The stories of her grandfather inspired her to lifelong social justice activism.
From 1967 to 1972, she was a full time activist living in various parts of the United States, traveling to Europe, Mexico, and Cuba.
In 1974, she became active in the American Indian Movement (AIM) and the International Indian Treaty Council, beginning a lifelong commitment to international human rights.
7 Documents Found