Winona LaDuke Visit to Mid-Michigan

From the Midland Daily News:

Sustainable living with Winona LaDuke
By Noel Lyn Smith

Winona LaDuke spoke about sustainable living and shared examples of how that is being used on her home land of the White Earth reservation in Minnesota.

LaDuke, a Native American rights activist and environmentalist, spoke at Central Michigan University Monday as part of the monthlong series celebrating Native America Heritage Month.
She is an Anishinaabekwe (Ojibwe) enrolled member of the Mississippi Band Anishinaabeg from the Mukwa Dodem (Bear clan) and is the founding director of the White Earth Land Recovery Project. She ran on the Green Party ticket as vice presidential candidate alongside Ralph Nader in the 1996 and 2000 elections.
“It is possible to have a world view outside an empire,” LaDuke said to the audience before beginning her speech.
She presented an indigenous view on sustainability and how that view centers on living within the “creator’s law,” which is the highest law, and that all living beings are related.
LaDuke told a story about herding buffalo at Yellowstone National Park, which is the last place buffalo freely roam.
In the winter, buffalo leave the protected boundaries of the park and some are shot when they enter cattle rancher’s private property. LaDuke said she skiied back and forth, trying to keep the buffalo inside the park.
She said that buffalo are vital to the land because they eat prairie grass in the winter by searching underneath the snow, which provides a natural churning of the land. Cattle, however, must be fed during the winter, using large amounts of fuel to transport feed.
That does not reflect sustainable living, she said.
She also talked about the projects the White Earth Land Recovery Project is managing. These projects range from growing native foods to reintroducing traditional animals to the area.
Utilization of alternative power sources is gaining notice on the White Earth reservation. Solar heating panels are used to keep homes warm in the winter, which also reduces heating expenses for families, she said, and the tribe is looking into wind turbines.
The 1983 Mercedes she owns was modified to run on biodiesel and is the first vehicle on the reservation to use this energy.
“It is the first fry bread power Mercedes Benz,” she said.
One of the tribal members asked LaDuke for more information about using biodiesel.
“He called me up and said, ‘I’m going to have to go out of business because of the price of fuel. How’s the grease, Winona?'” she said.

Winona LaDuke to Visit Ann Arbor — Nov. 12

Sponsored by: The Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs and the Trotter Multicultural Center as part of

Native American Heritage Month

 

Winona LaDuke

 

United Nations Declaration on Rights of Indigenous People

 

November 12, 2007

7:00-8:30PM

 

Trotter Multicultural Center, Lounge

1443 Washtenaw Ave.

(10 minute walk from Diag)

 

Winona LaDuke is an Ojibwe activist, environmentalist, economist and writer. In 1994, Time Magazine named LaDuke one of the nation’s 50 most promising leaders under the age of 40.

LaDuke was named Woman of the Year by Ms. Magazine in 1997 and won the Reebok Human Rights Award in 1998. Additionally, she ran as the Green Party’s vice presidential candidate in 1996 and 2000 with Ralph Nader.

At the age of 18, she addressed the United Nations for the first time and we are fortunate enough to have her with us as she offers some of her thoughts on the significance of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

 

The flyer is here: Winona LaDuke Flyer

Squaxin Island: 4th Annual Tribal Water Rights Conference – Climate Change: Impacts to Water, Fish, Cultures, Economies, and Rights

4th Annual Tribal Water Rights Conference – Climate Change: Impacts to Water, Fish, Cultures, Economies, and Rights

When:  October 24-25, 2007

Where:  Squaxin Island Tribe’s Little Creek Casino Resort, Shelton

Agenda and Registration:  http://www.wateradvocacy.org

The Center for Water Advocacy, the Squaxin Island Tribe, and the Indian Law Sections of the Washington and Oregon State Bars are sponsoring the Fourth Annual Northwest Tribal Water Rights Conference to take place at the Squaxin Island Tribe’s Little Creek Casino Resort in Shelton. The conference will address a broad range of areas relating to the impact of climate change on the reduction of stream flows and how such reductions impact tribal interests in the Pacific Northwest.

With your participation, we expect to create a regional dialogue to address an urgent need communicated by tribes to become more united in confronting global warming and protecting tribal fisheries, instream flows, treaty rights, and water quality. This year, we will focus not only on recent information suggesting that climate change is proceeding more rapidly than anticipated, but also on strategies for addressing these issues.

As part of the conference, please join us for a reception and complimentary refreshments hosted by the Squaxin Island Tribe on Wednesday, October 24, at the Squaxin Island Museum Library and Research Center in Shelton from 5:00-7:00 pm. We have invited Winona LaDuke, executive director of Honor the Earth, to be our special guest at the reception.

For questions regarding the conference, please contact: Terry Shepherd, conference coordinator, nepatalk@uci.net or 970-420-9148.

Cost:  $275

Approved for 9.5 CLE credits (includes 1.0 ethics)