We didn’t leave anything behind, we brought our people,” said Jana Jolynn Roth. “That’s how important our culture is to us.
Native Americans watched the shuttered government on Friday and braced for damage to their health care, education and infrastructure.
Like Murkowski, Sen. Cynthia Lummis, a Wyoming Republican, speculated that tribes may have more of a shield due to their ...
Indian Country Today indigenous affairs reporter Amelia Schafer discusses how the shutdown is affecting services that Native ...
The sequel to the bestselling "Blood Sisters" focuses on stolen skeletal remains uncovered in Narragansett and a missing ...
As Congress mulls potentially massive cuts to federal Medicaid funding, health centers that serve Native American communities, such as the Oneida Community Health Center near Green Bay, Wisconsin, are ...
Long before Mormons settled at the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in Genoa or Mexican trader Antonio Armijo coined the term “Las Vegas” en route to Los Angeles, Native tribes roamed the Silver State ...
The last battle in California The Modocs who had attacked peace commissioners were imprisoned at Fort Klamath, where they ...
The Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians will host California-style Native American singing, dancing, food, and games at the ...
A state rep, whose district includes Philadelphia, is reintroducing legislation for the fifth time to ban Native American ...
Fewer university, college and high school athletic teams compete as the “Indians” these days than in the past, and ...
Marking Indigenous Peoples' Day, tribes are calling on Congress to swiftly pass the infrastructure bill — which they say would begin to address historical inequities in Indian Country. Native American ...