Monday, June 11

An "Urban Indian" Finds His Culture and His Career


"My family moved here in the 50's after WWII," said Michael Wise, who grew up in Los Angeles. They didn't talk about their Cherokee culture. He only knew his mom was French and English, and that his dad came from New Mexico after leaving Oklahoma. "Dad's side didn't really pay too much attention to their heritage, possibly because if you did say you were Indian you would be pushed aside or worse. I didn't really know anything until my grandmother came and lived with us and told us that we were Indian. I was about 12. She shared the culture with my two brothers and myself," Michael remembered.

"We all sat around and listened to our grandmother tell stories, but she didn't know too much because her family wasn't from the reservation either, she was born in 1890 so everything was pretty messed up around then. Most of my Cherokee heritage was all kind of scattered and broken up, it wasn't like I came off the reservation. The Trail of Tears just sort of blew everybody to the wind, as far as my personal ancestry goes."

Full story

Wednesday, June 6

Coalition to appeal judge's decision on Mount Graham: Says power line will desecrate sacred mountain

06-06-2001
Indian Country Today (Lakota Times)

Coalition to appeal judge's decision on Mount Graham: Says power line will
desecrate sacred mountain

By Suzanne Westerly
TODAY CORRESPONDENT AND TODAY STAFF

TUCSON, Ariz.-A judge's refusal to block construction of a 23-mile
underground power line at the University of Arizona's Mount Graham
International Observatory near Safford, will be appealed by
environmentalists and American Indian groups.

Judge Alfredo Marquez ruled May 15 that the "balance of harms favors the
university; (meaning) their harm is worse than what is going to happen to
the Apaches and the red squirrels potentially," said Michael Nixon, one of
the attorneys for Apaches ...