https://youtu.be/8Suu84khNGY
Fake Indians Rake in Millions in Contracts7/4/201933 CommentsIn a bombshell report, the LA Times revealed that white men in almost every state have been falsely identifying...
https://youtu.be/7hxTSL6bEdo
On May 18, 1998 New Jersey lost one of its most informed, dedicated and outspoken Native Americans. James "Lone Bear" Revey was a full blooded (3 parts Delaware, 1 part Cherokee) Indian and member of the Sand Hill Delaware...
https://vimeo.com/195206414
VINTAGE FILMS THAT REFLECT THE STRUGGLE WE HAVE ENDURED SINCE COLONIZATION
Coonskin is a 1975 American live action/animated crime film written and directed by Ralph Bakshi, about an African American rabbit, fox, and bear who rise to the top of...
Around and About New Jersey: The Lenape Indians
https://youtu.be/i5za3uuATbU
David Cohen
Published on Nov 4, 2015
John Kraft, the curator and guide of the Lenape Indian Village at Waterloo, explains how archaeologists learn about the past by digging in the ground and carefully...
Why is NJ Commission on Indian Affairs Committing Historical Genocide?
https://youtu.be/G6NsG_fgwy4
I am going to share a true NJ story. A story that encompasses over 400 years of tradition and rich history. A true story of New Jersey natives that...
Aaron Carapella, a Cherokee Indian, has taken it upon himself to create a map that shows the Tribal nations of the U.S. prior to European contact. The map is of the contiguous United States and displays the original native...
NEW AMSTERDAM
THE TRAGIC TALE OF THE LENAPE, THE ORIGINAL NATIVE NEW YORKERS
The story of the Lenape, the native people of New York Harbor region, and their experiences with the first European arrivals — the explorers, the fur traders, the...
https://youtu.be/LDFrjxH1K6I
NPS Park Ranger, Jerry Bransford, as he led a walk entitled The Enslaved Leaders of Mammoth Cave, on February 27, 2016 as part of the celebration of Black History Month. He donned period clothing and reenacted in character the...
Native American New Year Commemorations
The start of the New Year is honored by many Native Americans, although many tribes have selected different dates as the last day of the year. In North American Indigenous cultures, the New Year is...
Saponi Indians
by Michael D. Green, 2006
The Saponi Indians were a Siouan-speaking people who lived in the Virginia Piedmont near present-day Charlottesville. John Smith found them there, in a region he broadly labeled Monacan, in 1607. Sometime during the next...