Smithsonian’s new African-American museum explores artistic, pop-culture and military accomplishments of black Americans
Anti-Black Racism in Indian Country: Jim Crow-Feather Lives Cedric Sunray • December 7, 2013 Article from www.indiancountrymedianetwork.com Over the years I have visited and fellowshipped with a …
One of the Native American Indian at 2015 'Gateway to Nations' Powwow in Brooklyn, New York.
In 2016, Black Lives Matter activists descended upon Standing Rock reservation, vividly displaying their support in Native American defiance against a pipeline that was set to run through their…
Native American And African American Cowboys, circa 1865. Images Of Indian Cowboys Are Rare.
: History of the California Blacks Nation Califians (Khalifians) The First Americans . Click to read more about on EURweb .
Are you into paranormal events and scary things that lurk in the night? then you have come to the right place. heres a list of Top 10 scary native American Urban Legends, make sure to smudge yourself after this because its going to get creepy. At number 10 is the Wendigo. The wendigo is a man-eating […]
Choctaw Tribe The Choctaw were first noted by Europeans in French written records of 1675. Their mother mound is Nanih Waiya, a great earthwork platform...
” You have to battle every day to reach your higher conscious” Egyptian concept Kemet or ‘km.t’ is an Ancient Egyptian word which translates to the “black land” …
During the mid-nineteenth century, people of color lived in relative freedom and safety in border regions on the outskirts of the Mexican territory or in sparsely settled areas of U.S. territory. Spanish-speaking communities composed of black people, Native Americans, and Native people from Mexico intermarried and created a culture that combined various traditions.
The tens of millions of Black Americans, or rather Indians, who ‘disappeared’ after 1492 did not all die in the ‘holocaust’ inflicted within America. Hundreds of thousands w…
Thank you INFO for this thread pham. This thread give me power when I see this stuff and reminds of what our ancestors went thru to get me to this...
"I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted."
Mary Edmonia Lewis, also known as “Wildfire,” was the first African-American and Native American sculptor to achieve national and then international prominence.