Us Departments of Arts and Culure How to Honor Native Land

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Laurels Native Land

Marchers carry a red banner that reads "Defend the Sacred"

Marchers at Standing Rock 2016; Photo by Nicholas Ward

The Distraction is grateful to the U.S. Department of Arts and Civilization (USDAC), and to all contributing individuals and organizations, for their creation ofHonor Native Country: A Guide and Phone call to Acknowledgment.

As an organization dedicated to providing space for artists from many cultural backgrounds, we want to admit that the edifice where The Lark is located, in which we gather to share stories, is on the traditional lands of the Lenape People. We pay our respect to the Lenape and other Indigenous caretakers of these lands and waters; and to their elders who accept lived here, who alive here now, and who will live here in the future. We extend that respect to all Indigenous people who bring together us for programming at The Lark.


HONOR NATIVE Country: A GUIDE AND Call TO Acknowledgment

In countries such as New Zealand, Australia, Canada, and among Tribal Nations in the U.Due south., is is commonplace, fifty-fifty policy, to open events and gatherings past acknowledging the traditional Indigenous inhabitants of that land. While some individuals and cultural and educational institutions in the United States have adopted this custom, the vast majority have non. Together, nosotros can spark a move to change that.

Nosotros Phone call ON ALL INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS TO Open PUBLIC EVENTS AND GATHERINGS WITH ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF THE TRADITIONAL NATIVE INHABITANTS OF THE Country.

Acquittance is a simple, powerful way of showing respect and a step toward correcting the stories and practices that erase Indigenous people's history and civilization and toward inviting and honoring the truth. Imagine this practice widely adopted: imagine cultural venues, classrooms, briefing settings, places of worship, sports stadiums, and town halls, acknowledging traditional lands. Millions would be exposed—many for the first fourth dimension—to the names of the traditional Indigenous inhabitants of the lands they are on, inspiring them to ongoing sensation and action.

For more than v hundred years, Native communities across the Americas have demonstrated resilience and resistance in the face of violent efforts to separate them from their land, civilization, and each other. They remain at the forefront of movements to protect Female parent Earth and the life it sustains. Today, corporate greed and federal policy button agendas to excerpt wealth from the earth, degrading sacred state in breathy disregard of treaty rights. Acknowledgment is a critical public intervention, a necessary step toward honoring Native communities and enacting the much larger project of decolonization and reconciliation. Join united states in adopting, calling for, and spreading this do.

Download the Guide:Created in partnership with Native allies and organizations, the Guide offers context about the practice of acknowledgment, gives step-past-step instructions for how to begin wherever y'all are, and provides tips for moving beyond acknowledgment into action.

WHY Introduce THE Exercise OF LAND Acquittance?

  • Offer recognition and respect.
  • Counter the "doctrine of discovery" with the true story of the people who were already here.
  • Create a broader public awareness of the history that has led to this moment.
  • Brainstorm to repair relationships with Native communities and with the land.
  • Support larger truth-telling and reconciliation efforts.
  • Remind people that colonization an ongoing procedure, with Native lands still occupied due to deceptive and broken treaties.
  • Take a cue from Indigenous protocol, opening up space with reverence and respect.
  • Inspire ongoing activity and human relationship.

Acknowledgment by itself is a small gesture. Information technology becomes meaningful when coupled with authentic relationship and informed action. Only this offset tin be an opening to greater public consciousness of Native sovereignty and cultural rights, a step toward equitable human relationship and reconciliation.


This Guide and Call was originally posted by the U.South. Department of Arts and Culture. For more than information, and to download the consummate guide, visit www.usdac.us/nativeland.

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Source: https://www.larktheatre.org/blog/honor-native-land-guide-and-call-acknowledgement/

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