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Pan-Tribal Activism in the Pacific Northwest - The Power of Indigenous Protest and the Birth of Daybreak Star Cultural Center (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,217
Discovery Miles 22 170
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Pan-Tribal Activism in the Pacific Northwest - The Power of Indigenous Protest and the Birth of Daybreak Star Cultural Center (Hardcover)
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On September 27, 1975, activist Bernie Whitebear (Sin Aikst) and
Seattle Mayor Wes Uhlman broke ground on former Fort Lawton lands,
just outside Seattle Washington, for the construction of the
Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center. The groundbreaking was the
culmination of years of negotiations and legal wrangling between
several government entities and the United Indians of All Tribes,
the group that occupied the Fort lands in 1970. The peaceful event
and sense of co-operation stood in marked contrast to the turbulent
and sometimes violent occupation of the lands years before. Native
Americans who joined the UIAT came from all parts of the Pacific
Northwest and beyond. Inspired by the Civil Rights and protest era
of the 1960s and 1970s, they squared off with local and federal
government to demand the protection of civil and political rights
and better social services. Both the scope and the purpose of this
book are manifold. The first purpose is to challenge the
predominant narrative of Anglo American colonization in the region
and re-assert self-determination by re-defining the relationship
between Pacific Northwest Native Americans, the larger population
of Washington State, and government itself. The second purpose is
to illustrate the growth in Pan-Indian/Pan-Tribal activism in the
second half of the twentieth century in an attempt to place the
Pacific Northwest Native American protests into a broader context
and to amend the scholarly and popular trope which characterizes
the Red Power movement of the 1960s as the creation of the American
Indian Movement (AIM). In this book, casual students of history as
well as academics will find that Fort Lawton represents the zone of
conflict and compromise occupied by Indigenous people of the
Pacific Northwest in their ongoing struggle with colonial society.
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