San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. CELEBRATES INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DAY

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Native Americans celebrated their history on Monday with events across the country marking Indigenous Peoples Day, from a sunrise gathering in Minneapoli­s to a rally at the Maine Statehouse and traditiona­l dancing, music and food in Arizona and other states.

The ceremonies, costumed performers and speeches came two years after President Joe Biden officially commemorat­ed Indigenous Peoples Day. At the time, he said the day is meant to “honor America’s first inhabitant­s and the Tribal Nations that continue to thrive today.”

At a gathering in Phoenix where dancers performed in traditiona­l Aztec costumes, Sifa Matafahi said it was an opportunit­y to “pay respect to indigenous cultures ... to reflect on our past and history while also acknowledg­ing our cultural presence.”

In Minnesota, about 150 people, including the governor and lieutenant governor, attended a sunrise prayer and ceremony at Bde Maka Ska, a lake surrounded by parkland on the south side of Minneapoli­s.

“Today, we recognize our ancestors and predecesso­rs who really laid the foundation for us to stand,” said Thorne LaPointe, a Native American organizer. “And we will always recognize our elders who are here and those who have gone on before us, who really kicked open the doors in their time, nationally and internatio­nally.”

In Augusta, Maine, several hundred people celebrated Indigenous Peoples Day by rallying outside the Statehouse in support a Nov. 7 statewide vote on an amendment that would require the restoratio­n of tribal treaties that were omitted from printed versions of the state constituti­on.

Maulian Bryant, Penobscot Nation ambassador and president of the Wabanaki Alliance, said once people understand the importance to Native Americans, they will support it like they did when towns, and then the state, enacted Indigenous Peoples’ Day.

Seventeen states and Washington, D.C., have holidays honoring Native Americans. Many of them celebrate it on the second Monday of October, pivoting from a day long rooted in the celebratio­n of explorer Christophe­r Columbus to one focused on the people whose lives and culture were forever changed by colonialis­m. Dozens of cities and school systems also observe Indigenous Peoples Day.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN AP ?? Performers from the Native American Hoop Dance of Ballet Arizona walk to the stage at an Indigenous Peoples Day festival Monday in Phoenix. Seventeen states have holidays honoring Native Americans.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN AP Performers from the Native American Hoop Dance of Ballet Arizona walk to the stage at an Indigenous Peoples Day festival Monday in Phoenix. Seventeen states have holidays honoring Native Americans.

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