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Navajo man gets back on Utah ballot after judge s ruling
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Tribal members call on Biden to protect Bears Ears
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Why is this totem pole traveling across America? National Geographic Staff © Photograph by Elaine Thompson, AP Photo A nearly 25-foot totem pole, to be gifted from the tribe to the administration of President Joe Biden, sits horizontally on a truck bed in view of Bellingham Bay and Mount Baker, background, shortly after being moved from a carving shed Monday, April 19, 2021, on the Lummi Reservation, near Bellingham, Wash. The pole, carved from a 400-year old red cedar, will make a journey from the reservation past sacred indigenous sites, before arriving in Washington, D.C., in early June. Organizers said that the totem pole is a reminder to leaders to honor the rights of Indigenous people and their sacred sites.
For Native American activists crossing the nation with a totem pole, sacred lands are their Notre Dame Marco della Cava, USA TODAY
Wildfire hits tribal lands in Pacific Northwest
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Two dozen Native American activists in 10 cars towing one totem pole across the country.
While this protest caravan may seem small, its message to Congress is outsized: Give Indigenous peoples a say before granting access to land that tribes consider sacred. The opposing argument: public lands are for everyone and the nation’s energy needs can’t be ignored.
Nowhere is that debate more heated than at Bears Ears National Monument in southeastern Utah, a striking archaeological and natural wonder that activists will reach Saturday.