In Vermont, a Call to End Logging in the Green Mountain National Forest
“…with the US Forest Service now planning to substantially increase logging in the Green Mountain National Forest — across areas that amount to more than 10 percent of the federally managed land — local climate activists have been staging protests, arguing the agency is defying Biden’s executive order and acting hypocritically.”
UVM Paper Covers Trustees’ Adoption of Land Acknowledgement
The full board of trustees meeting approved a land acknowledgement statement for official University use as well as a consent agenda containing several updates for UVM on Oct. 29. The acknowledgement statement, created by the Division of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, and members and leaders of the four recognized Abenaki tribes of Vermont and the Vermont Commission for Native American affairs, is intended to recognize UVM’s historical acts of land usage, said Amer Ahmed, vice provost of the Division of DEI.
UVM Board of Trustees Adopts Land Acknowledgement
From the webpage of the University of Vermont’s Division of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, this announcement was posted yesterday - October 29, 2022 - following the Board’s regular meeting. We welcome this step toward building and affirming community relationships here in this landscape, led by the Division’s Amer Ahmed and Sherwood Smith and the Office of Provost Patricia Prelock.
Abenaki, Mi’kmaq and Mohawk Oppose Endangered Listing of Black Ash
Abenaki, Mi’kmaq and Mohawk Nations in Quebec don’t want the federal government to list the black ash tree as an endangered species — even though it’s central to some of their cultural practices, mainly basket-weaving.
Pope Brings Healing? Canadian Consul Sows Seeds of Hatred
Inexplicably, promoting reconciliation with Indigenous populations seems to end at the U.S. border. On this side of that boundary, Canada has actively sown seeds of hatred and attempted to undermine, indeed to reverse, Vermont’s own attempts at reconciliation with its Indigenous population, the Abenaki.
Dawnland Winters: Decolonizing One Season’s History
Seasonal knowledge has been central to Wabanaki sovereignty and to collective well-being in Dawnland, but a “vernal bias” has prevented scholars from fully comprehending the importance of winters in the Native Northeast. Snowshoe trails connected Indigenous nations long before Europeans ever wintered on the continent, and winter has long been a season for education and storytelling in the region.
Duane Sherwood: Indian Enough
A poem by friend and ally Duane Sherwood, published in the Commentary section of VTDigger on June 27, 2022.
Two Stories and Two Rivers, A Shared Presence
People are increasingly recognizing the history and culture of Indigenous people, Elnu Abenaki leaders said Thursday at a celebration of a National Park Service grant that will allow Rockingham and an Abenaki organization to re-evaluate the importance of the petroglyphs at Kchi Pontegok, or The Great Falls.
VT Country Magazine: Joining Forces to Preserve Great Falls Petroglyphs
The town of Rockingham and the Elnu Abenaki tribe joined forces to apply for a National Park Service grant for underrepresented communities, which would correct and expand the 1980s official record, with a more accurate and sensitive description of the petroglyphs and their role in the region
Prof. David Massell Spoke Differently Less Than Three Years Ago
It is enlightening to look back at the words of Canadian Studies Professor David Massell from the podium that day, who more recently has been speaking from a very different place, the aegis of which is still under discussion. Such an about-face begs many questions, especially given his comments not very long ago.
Federal Grant Approved for Study of Abenaki Carvings in Bellows Falls
The town of Rockingham, which includes the village of Bellows Falls, in collaboration with the Elnu Abenaki, received a nearly $37,000 underrepresented communities grant from the National Park Service to support two years of research around the site, beginning this fall.
Roger Longtoe Sheehan, Chief of the Elnu Abenaki, said he hopes the project will increase awareness about the Abenaki and the landscape they traditionally inhabited.
New Cultural Center Proposed at Kchi Pôntegok
The hope and focus of the group is now the establishment of a Kchi Pôntegok Cultural Center. They state that the purpose of the center is, “To teach the community about a culture through use of events, festivals, and workshops.” Jones says the exact shape, size, and location of the center itself is still in the visionary and planning stages, but some funding sources have been identified.
Hallsmith in the Herald: Tribal Territorialism at UVM
Given the central role the University of Vermont played in the eugenics movement of the last century, one would think they might be wise to be very, very cautious when wading into international tribal politics. Apparently, that wisdom was lost on them when they decided to host a group of people claiming Indigenous legitimacy to denounce Vermont Native Americans without offering the tribes here an opportunity to speak up at the same event.
History of Abenaki Site in Vermont to be Retold by Native Community
Research into the history of a petroglyph site along the Connecticut River in Bellows Falls will be getting underway thanks to a grant from the National Park Service. The hope is to share a story of Indigenous people that has not yet been told.
The island in Bellows Falls is sacred Abenaki land. It was a fishing spot for native Americans thousands of years ago and soon that history will be told from a new perspective. “There has not been a native voice informing this and that is the source, it’s why it’s here,” [Elnu] Abenaki Cultural Relations Officer Rich Holschuh said.
Rockingham, Abenaki Get National Park Service Grant to Document Petroglyphs
The town of Rockingham and the Elnu Tribe have been awarded a national grant for underrepresented communities to expand and correct the official record about the Indigenous petroglyphs at The Great Falls, considered a sacred site to the Abenaki.
Swanton Public Library Receives 2022 ALSC/Candlewick Press "Light the Way" Grant
The Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC), a division of the American Library Association (ALA), has announced that Swanton Public Library (SPL) in Swanton, VT is the recipient of the 2022 ALSC/Candlewick Press "Light the Way: Outreach to the Underserved" Grant. As recipient of the grant, the library will receive $3,000 to engage and uplift the voices of their Native American community, which accounts for approximately 1.5% of the Swanton, Vermont population.
With this grant, the Swanton Public Library will highlight and support local Native American populations through a multidisciplinary mix of programming and activities focused on breaking down long-standing racial prejudice.
Kchi Pôntegok - Revisiting the Historic Landscape of the Bellows Falls Petroglyphs: NPS Awards an URC Grant
Some very good news today: The US National Park Service has awarded an Underrepresented Communities Grant (from the Historic Preservation Fund) to the Town of Rockingham, VT (Village of Bellows Falls) for a proposal entitled "Kchi Pôntegok - Revisiting the Historic Landscape of the Bellows Falls Petroglyphs".
VT House Favors Truth & Reconciliation Commission Task Force Bill
The Vermont House voted Wednesday in favor of establishing a state commission to study the history of racism, discrimination and eugenics in Vermont statutes.
H.96, which was approved 109-30 in an initial vote, builds on last year’s Joint House Resolution 2 — a four-page, unanimously supported apology for a 1931 law that legalized eugenics via sterilization in Vermont.
VT Digger’s Vermont Conversation: Does Vermont Need a Truth Commission?
In 2021, the Vermont Legislature issued a long overdue apology for Vermont’s early 20th century state-sanctioned eugenics movement, which targeted Indigenous people and other groups…The apology left unspoken how to undo the harm. Now, a bill in the Vermont House, H.96, proposes that Vermont establish a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to examine what happened and possible reparations. This interview catches up with where that process is in the Vermont legislature right now.
Gail Golec: Interpreting Historical Landscapes in the Upper Connecticut River Valley
Now posted online: the video recording for archaeologist Gail Golec's informative presentation of last Wednesday (02-16-22) entitled "Interpreting Historical Landscapes in the Upper Connecticut River Valley", sponsored by Rockingham Free Public Library and the Rockingham Historic Preservation Commission.