Chief Sitting Bull

Chief Sitting Bull Welcome to our community! Thank you for following our Native American fanpage. Let's explore the beauty of indigenous culture together! 🌿🌟

Deborah Turner, daughter of Carl Roberts, returned a Cheyenne Warbonnet of the Northern Plains to the Cheyenne and Arapa...
07/13/2024

Deborah Turner, daughter of Carl Roberts, returned a Cheyenne Warbonnet of the Northern Plains to the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes. The bonnet, over a century old, was originally in possession of Roberts who had it for over 40 years. Roberts told his daughter to return it back to the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes. Gordon Yellowman, director of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes Culture Program retrieved the warbonnet. Yellowman said an official receiving ceremony will be held in the future and the program will plan to put the bonnet on display at a location for people to see itā¤ļø

Picturesque Elbow River Camp from across the Elbow River.
07/13/2024

Picturesque Elbow River Camp from across the Elbow River.

The reflection looks like an Eagle flying. šŸ¦…
07/12/2024

The reflection looks like an Eagle flying. šŸ¦…

In Native American culture, colors have special significance.Red is the color of war, violence.Black, an inauspicious co...
07/12/2024

In Native American culture, colors have special significance.
Red is the color of war, violence.
Black, an inauspicious color (for most cultures) represents the "living" and is worn on the face during war.
White is the color of peace.
Green, when worn under the eyes, empowers the individual with a night vision.
Yellow is the most adverse color, representing death (the color of "old bones") and when a person is mourning. Also, yellow means a person has lived their life and will fight to the finish. Native tribes maintain their own culture and unique way of face painting.

"Aho''
07/11/2024

"Aho''

"We Indians know about silence. We are not afraid of it. In fact, for us, silence is more powerful than words. Our elder...
07/11/2024

"We Indians know about silence. We are not afraid of it. In fact, for us, silence is more powerful than words. Our elders were trained in the ways of silence, and they handed over this knowledge to us. Observe, listen, and then act, they would tell us. That was the manner of living.
With you, it is just the opposite. You learn by talking. You reward the children that talk the most at school. In your parties, you all try to talk at the same time. In your work, you are always having meetings in which everybody interrupts everybody and all talk five, ten or a hundred times. And you call that ā€˜solving a problem’. When you are in a room and there is silence, you get nervous. You must fill the space with sounds. So you talk compulsorily, even before you know what you are going to say.
White people love to discuss. They don’t even allow the other person to finish a sentence. They always interrupt. For us Indians, this looks like bad manners or even stupidity. If you start talking, I’m not going to interrupt you. I will listen. Maybe I’ll stop listening if I don’t like what you are saying, but I won’t interrupt you.
When you finish speaking, I’ll make up my mind about what you said, but I will not tell you I don’t agree unless it is important. Otherwise, I’ll just keep quiet and I’ll go away. You have told me all I need to know. There is no more to be said. But this is not enough for the majority of white people.
People should regard their words as seeds. They should sow them, and then allow them to grow in silence. Our elders taught us that the earth is always talking to us, but we should keep silent in order to hear her.
There are many voices besides ours. Many voicesā€¦ā€
-Ella Deloria

Alissa Katelina Pili (born June 8, 2001) is a basketball player residing in the United States, with roots from Indigenou...
07/10/2024

Alissa Katelina Pili (born June 8, 2001) is a basketball player residing in the United States, with roots from Indigenous and Samoan descent. She currently plays for the Utah Utes basketball team of the Pac-12 Conference. Previously, she played for the USC Trojans.
Pili was born in Anchorage, Alaska, to Heather and Billy Pili and is of Samoan and Alaska Native descent. Her older brother, Brandon, played football for USC as a defensive lineman, and currently plays for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League. She played football as a lineman from third to eighth grade as the only girl in her league and started playing organized basketball at age eight. She played for Dimond High School in Anchorage. As a freshman, Pili helped her team to a runner-up finish at the Class 4A state tournament. She led Dimond to two state championships, set the Class 4A all-time scoring record and was a three-time Alaska Gatorade Player of the Year. Pili won 13 state titles across all sports at Dimond, including four in volleyball, four in shot put, two in discus and one in wrestling. In her final two years of high school, she was named MaxPreps Female High School Athlete of the Year for her success in multiple sports, joining Missy Franklin as the only two-time recipients of the award. Rated a five-star recruit by ESPN, she committed to playing college basketball for USC.
Alissa Katelina Pili is not only a prominent basketball player but also a role model and advocate for both Indigenous and Samoan communities. She regularly participates in charitable activities and cultural events representing both of her heritage. Pili utilizes her influence to honor and preserve cultures while promoting the development and progress of Indigenous and Samoan communities.
Beyond her athletic career, Pili is actively involved in educational programs and health advocacy for children and adolescents in her community. She has become an ideal role model for young people, encouraging them to engage in physical activities and pursue their dreams.
Alissa Katelina Pili's influence and contributions extend beyond the realm of sports into other aspects of life and culture, making her a multimedia icon and a positive role model for future generations.

These four Chiefs were Chief Joseph, Sitting Bull, Geronimo and Red Cloud. Each of these forefathers played an important...
07/10/2024

These four Chiefs were Chief Joseph, Sitting Bull, Geronimo and Red Cloud. Each of these forefathers played an important role in shaping their tribe's customs and history. Because of their influence over the shaping of Native American history, they are often referred to as the real founding fathers.!
Left-Right : Chief Joseph, Sitting Bull, Geronimo, and Red Cloud.

Beautiful adorable baby
07/09/2024

Beautiful adorable baby

Lily Gladstone (born August 2, 1986) is an American actress. Raised on the Blackfeet Reservation, Gladstone is of Piegan...
07/09/2024

Lily Gladstone (born August 2, 1986) is an American actress. Raised on the Blackfeet Reservation, Gladstone is of Piegan Blackfeet, Nez Perce, and European heritage. She earned critical acclaim for portraying Mollie Kyle, an Osage woman who survived the Osage Indian murders, in Martin Scorsese's crime drama film Killers of the Flower Moon (2023), receiving several accolades. She became the first Native American to win the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama and be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress.
Gladstone made her feature film debut in Jimmy P: Psychotherapy of a Plains Indian (2012), and collaborated with filmmaker Kelly Reichardt on the independent films Certain Women (2016) and First Cow (2019). She also appeared in episodes of HBO's Room 104 (2017–2020), Showtime's Billions (2016–2023), and FX's Reservation Dogs (2021–2023).
Early life and education
Gladstone was born on August 2, 1986, in Kalispell, Montana. Raised on the Blackfeet Reservation in Browning, Montana, she is of Piegan Blackfeet (Siksikaitsitapi), Nez Perce (NimĆ­ipuu), and European heritage. Her mother is white and her father is Blackfeet and Nez Perce. She is descended from the first cousin of British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone. One of her paternal great-great-grandfathers was Kainai Nation chief Red Crow.
Gladstone's desire to portray an Ewok after watching Return of the Jedi at the age of five inspired her to become an actress. One of Gladstone's first acting experiences as a child was when Missoula Children's Theatre came to her East Glacier, Montana, hometown and cast her as an evil step-sister in Cinderella. Gladstone's family moved to the Seattle area during her middle school years to be closer to her grandmother. There she enrolled in Stone Soup Theatre, a non profit educational theatre company for the Seattle youth, starring in student films and theses.
In 2004 she graduated from Mountlake Terrace High School in Mountlake Terrace, Washington. In 2008 she graduated from the University of Montana with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Acting/Directing and a Native American Studies minor. At the University of Montana, she became interested in Theatre of the Oppressed. At UM, she performed in Riders to the Sea (2006), Richard III (2006), Miss Julie (2007) and Coyote on a Fence (2008). Upon graduating, she taught acting classes and workshops in her native community. She taught an image theatre acting method she called a "sculpture garden" as violence prevention sponsored by the National Indigenous Women's Resource Center. In 2010, she performed in The Frybread Queen, a co-production by Native Voices at the Autry, the UM School of Theatre and Dance and The Montana Repertory Theatre.
Career
Early work and breakthrough (2012–2022)
Gladstone made her film debut in Jimmy P: Psychotherapy of a Plains Indian (2012). She then acted in Winter in the Blood (2012) and Buster's Mal Heart (2016) before making her career breakthrough as Jamie, a rancher, in Kelly Reichardt's film Certain Women (2016). The role earned Gladstone the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress and the Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress. She also received nominations for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Female and Gotham Independent Film Award for Breakthrough Actor.
Gladstone performed the role of Kate Keller in the 2014 Montana Repertory Theatre's national touring production of The Miracle Worker. Gladstone was in the Oregon Shakespeare Festival acting company in 2017 and starred in the Yale Repertory Theatre production of Mary Kathryn Nagle's Manahatta in 2020.
In 2017, Gladstone hosted a series on the educational YouTube channel Crash Course about film production.
Gladstone had a small role in Reichardt's 2019 film First Cow[7] before starring in the 2022 film The Unknown Country, directed by Morrisa Maltz, for which she received the Gotham Independent Film Award for Outstanding Lead Performance.
Awards success (2023–present)
Gladstone was cast in the lead role of Mollie Kyle in Martin Scorsese's 2023 feature film Killers of the Flower Moon, which was released theatrically in October 2023. Her performance received critical acclaim and was described as a highlight of the film. Critic Josh Spiegel of /Film said that she "brought [Mollie] to life with incredible passion". In January 2024, she won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama; she was the first Indigenous (Native American) woman to be nominated for, and win, an acting Golden Globe. She is the fourth Indigenous and first Native American woman to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress.[39] In February 2024, Gladstone became the first Indigenous actor to win the Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Female Actor for her performance in Killers of the Flower Moon. Earlier in 2023, Gladstone starred in Fancy Dance which premiered at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival to critical acclaim and will be distributed worldwide by Apple TV+.
Gladstone will next star in the crime drama series Under the Bridge, about the murder of Reena Virk. Following Killers of the Flower Moon, she was cast in The Memory Police, written by Charlie Kaufman and directed by Reed Morano. Gladstone will also costar in Jazzy, written and directed by Maltz.
Personal life
Gladstone goes by both she and they pronouns. She explained in 2023, "In most Native languages, most Indigenous languages, Blackfeet included, there are no gendered pronouns. There is no he/she, there's only they... my pronoun use is partly a way of decolonizing gender for myself." Gladstone identifies as "middle-gendered" and a member of the LGBTQ community.

Perfectly said!
07/08/2024

Perfectly said!

This just applies to the ancestral land of the Bible’s Chosen People!
07/08/2024

This just applies to the ancestral land of the Bible’s Chosen People!

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5950 Pelican Bay Plaza South, Miami Beach, FL, United States
Orlando, FL
10001

Telephone

+18132637365

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