Enbridge Line 3 pipeline: What to know about the Minnesota protests jsonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jsonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
For Ojibwe, sugarbush time brings tasty food, life lessons
MARY ANNETTE PEMBER, Indian Country Today
May 5, 2021
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1of5The Maday family boils maple sap into syrup on March 19, 2021, in their front yard on the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa reservation in Wisconsin. As with most Ojibwe traditional ways, tapping trees in the early spring and gathering sap for syrup and sugar cakes not only provides tasty food but offers lessons for life. (Mary Annette Pember/Indian Country Today via AP)Mary Annette Pember/APShow MoreShow Less
2of5Nate Ante, a member of the Maskiiziibii Youth Services team carries maple sap out of the forest on March 20, 2021, on the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa reservation in Wisconsin. As with most Ojibwe traditional ways, tapping trees in the early spring and gathering sap for syrup and sugar cakes not only provides tasty food but offers lessons for life. (Mary Annette Pember/Indian Country Today via AP)Ma
Warriors who change the world
On this weekend edition of Indian Country Today, weâll hear from warriors changing the world in different ways.
Author:
Apr 23, 2021
First Nations Development Institute president and CEO Michael Roberts is on the show discussing investing in Native communities.
Paul DeMain, the retired editor of News from Indian Country joins us to talk Great Lakes treaty rights.
Bull riders are a particular kind of warrior and Dakota Louis, who is on the show today, is at the top of his game.
A slice of our Indigenous world
First lady Jill Biden is wrapping up her trip to the Navajo Nation today.
Register here for this online event: https://www.mobilize.us/ourrevolution/event/376888Extraction industries are destroying people and planet for the profit of a few. Whether it’s Enbridge’s Line 3 and Line 5 to carry dirty tar sands oil across Wisconsin for export or the Back Forty metallic sulfide mine that threatens the Menominee River, extraction is running rampant in our state with little to no oversight.But the people, led by indigenous groups, are fighting back. In this event, Our Wisconsin Revolution and the Sustainable Saturday Night team will present a town hall on Indigenous-Led Resistance to Extraction Industries.Join us at 6 p.m. CT for the first half hour to hear original music about Line 3 from singer-songwriter Larry Long, as well as testimony from a recent visitor to a Line 3 resistance camp: Justice Peche (Oneida), OWR board member.Then our panel discussion will get underway at 6:30 p.m. with a lineup of speakers that includes: