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Ancient Castle Ruins
New Guinea Tribesman
Man Viewing Field
Crowd of Natives
Bruce with Dog Beneath Driftwood
Blacksmith Smelting at Forge
Antique Jug
Yellow Flowers on Stone Wall
Woman at Bakery with Bread
Waterfall at Cliff
Village and Hillside
Trees and Field with Church Spire
The Chief Engine 62
Tall Palm Trees
Stone Wall with Stucco Spire
Stone Wall with Spire
Stone Cliffs and Mountain
Snow-Covered Village
Snow-Covered Village
Sam at Basketball Event
Rustic Village and Street
Rooftop Village View
Riverside Village with Bridge
River with Surrounding Village
Panoramic with Bridge and Mountain
Open Street Market
Once Upon a temple in Bali
Old Historical Passport Document
Monkey Batu
Mine Shaft Cart-way
MINE-Ne Prilazite Sign
Man with Smart-phone
Man Seated at Gravesite
Man in Field with Sheep
Lilacs in Snow
Life in Croatia Graffiti
Large Brown Dog
Historical Black and White Group Photo
Gravesite with Trees
Grassy Knoll With Spire
Giant Chess Game
Gateway Entrance Through Stone Arch
Garden and Forest
Field with Gardens
Dirt Road Beside Buildings and Field
Church Spire and Old Building
Church on Street
Catacomb at Graveyard
Cat Beside Wooden Fence
Bubbling Brook
Bruce Seated with Two Men
Bruce Seated for Lunch
Bruce in Front of a Temple
Bruce During Street-food Transaction
Black and White Men with Horses
Black and White Barn
Beekeper and Apiary
Apartment Complex with Field
Antique Monochrome Church Photo
Antique Jug
Antique Jug
Antique Jug
Antique Jug
Antique Jug
Ancient Stone Fortress
Ancient Church
A Brief History of the Attempted Genocide
Although the European invaders attempted a complete indigenous genocide they failed, and although many indigenous cultures, traditions, languages, and much wisdom has been lost, the fact is there are currently 574 federally “Recognized” tribes in the US as of 2024 as well as over 400 “unrecognized” tribes including the Herring Pond Tribe of southeastern MA. There are also approximately six million Indigenous tribal citizens now alive in the US. How odd that the best concise summary of the American Genocide of the Indigenous Peoples is to be found at The Ministry of Foreign Affairs website of the People’s Republic of China.

Soul’s Journey 2023
Grandmother’s Sendoff
“The first night I was ever completely alone in the forest I was already a grandmother. Later that night the heavens opened and the earth and the rooted ones drank the waters and I stepped out of my tent into the rain and mud barefooted and did my spinning jiggle dance. May that which I felt in those moments be with you in mind and in spirit on your travels among the living and the dead. May you be as one on your way with our blessing. Walk in beauty.” Author unknown.
SOUL’S JOURNEY 2023
Free Leonard Peltier
… and all other political prisoners who are unjustly held captive!
History of the Winged Free Leonard Peltier Spirit Mask and Puppet
The Winged Free Leonard Peltier Spirit Mask was created in 1992 for a cultural festival and parade in Jamaica Plain, Boston, at a time when many people were celebrating 500 years of Indigenous survival and trying to call attention to the ongoing oppression of Indigenous People and Indigenous leadership on Turtle Island. The actual puppet/mask was constructed and brought to life by creative artists and cultural revolutionaries associated with “Spontaneous Celebrations” a community empowerment through art organization in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston after Dennis Banks – who lived in Boston during the 1990s – visited the home of Spontaneous Celebrations and spoke about Leonard’s unjust incarceration and the history of the Massachusett People who lived around Jamaica Plain, which was named after a Massachusett sachem, Kuchamakin. In 1995, Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council President, Russell M.Peters, wrote of Spontaneous Celebrations that he was “particularly impressed with the attention paid to Native American issues … and to the Leonard Peltier puppet…”

The Free Leonard Peltier mask has been to big Climate March demonstrations in New York and Massachusetts. Dennis Moynihan – then of NPR- took Leonard to the White House where he was photographed on the front lawn. For many years Leonard was carried during the Wake Up the Earth Festival in Boston and at Boston’s First Night Parade. Leonard’s Winged Spirit has traveled over 20,000 miles and has been to Pine Ridge, Wounded Knee, and Oak Flat. The mask also spent a week encamped at Standing Rock in 2016. Many repairs have been made to Leonard’s mask over the years. Most recently his face was repainted by the famed Uruguayan artist, Roberto Ciao.
Leonard’s allies in Massachusetts – including Spontaneous Celebrations and the Massachusetts Peace and Justice Community – hope at this time in Leonard’s life – Fall 2023 – to gift the Free Leonard Peltier mask/puppet/winged spirit to the Lakota People.
Free Palestine!
I find that this piece entitled “I will not look away” – with words which have been thoughtfully composed by Caitlin Johnstone and Tim Foley – is particularly powerful and inspiring. It is a brilliant piece of spoken word, which is delivered over an accompanying backdrop of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata which serves to further drive home the melancholy feeling for the tragic subject matter.

The Aquinnah Powwow on Noepe aka Martha’s Vineyard
In 2024 I again attended the annual powwow on Noepe, held by the Aquinnah Tribe of the Wampanoag Nation, occupants of Noepe probably for 1000’s of years before the Pilgrim’s occupation and conquest. I’m only hoping that the Great Spirit will grant my wish to attend again.


Indigenous Matters and the 2024 MA Legislative Agenda
It is important to the rebalancing that I imagine is possible that we acknowledge that we live on lands loved for millennia before us by people of the Massachusett, Mohican, Nauset, Nipmuc, Pawtucket, Pocumtuc, Seaconke, Pokanoket, Pocumtuk, Nipmuc, Abenaki, Wabanaki Confederacy and Wampanoag tribes and nations. I give thanks to the indigenous people who stewarded the land and waters of Massachusetts for more than 15,000 years. I acknowledge that I inhabit land seized and stolen from these indigenous people, whose descendants still live among us. I am committed to honoring their wishes for respect, restoration, and independence and invite you to join me.
The 2022 Massachusetts Legislative Agenda
You may think you know all about why to support the MA Indigenous Legislative Agenda but there is still much to learn if you … WATCH THIS POWERFUL ONE-HOUR VIDEO OF THE JANUARY 11 INDIGENOUS PANEL SPEAKING ABOUT THE NEED TO SUPPORT INDIGENOUS-CENTERED BILLS IN MASSACHUSETTS!
And if you don’t have the time to be further re-educated and inspired …THEN JUST TAKE THIS ACTION STEP:-Go to https://bit.ly/SupportIndigenousBills and send an automated letter to the members of the legislative committees where the bills are currently sitting, asking that the bills be reported out of committee favorably. You can customize the letter if you want. Please share and get your friends and organizations to write, too!-Learn more about the bills and get updates via http://maindigenousagenda.org/-Email for more information: info@MAIndigenousAgenda.org or info@uaine.org
Move our bills out of committee before the deadline!
The 2021-2022 Indigenous Legislative Agenda includes 5 priorities: Remove Racist Mascots, Honor Indigenous People’s Day, Celebrate and Teach Native American Culture & History, Protect Native American Heritage, and Support the Education and Futures of Native Youth.
Join us in calling for each of these bills to move out of committee!
An Act prohibiting the use of Native American mascots by public schools in the Commonwealth. (S.2493/H.581) Currently about 30 public high schools in the state use Native American mascots. This bill would task the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education with establishing regulations to prohibit Native American mascots in MA public schools.
An Act establishing an Indigenous Peoples Day. (S.2027/H.3191 ) This bill replaces Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day in the Massachusetts General Laws.
An act relative to celebrating Native American culture and history. (S.382/H.651) This bill addresses the lack of Indigenous curriculum in Massachusetts public schools.
An Act providing for the creation of a permanent commission relative to the education of American Indian and Alaska Native residents of the Commonwealth. (H.582) As a State Education Agency, the MA Department of Elementary and Secondary Education must engage in timely and meaningful consultation with stakeholders. Representatives of Indian tribes located in the state are explicitly identified as stakeholders.
An Act to protect Native American Heritage. (S.2239/H.3377 & S.2240/H.3385) This would ensure that Native American funerary objects, sacred objects, and objects of cultural patrimony (those of cultural, traditional or historical importance to their heritage) held in governmental, municipal or non-profit collections are not sold for profit.