Cherokee activist Ruth Muskrat Bronson took her campaign for Native rights all the way to the White House in the 1920s.
The Shinnecock Nation’s legacy lives on as the storied U.S. Open heads back to the Shinnecock Hills Golf Club starting June 18.
From Maine’s sovereignty debate to calls for polling places on tribal lands in South Carolina, Native candidates are seeking office as key issues face voters in June primaries.
“Religion, in fact, played a key role in some of the worst that America had to offer Native people…”
Indigenous leaders and residential school survivors are speaking out after Canada’s Senate rejected an amendment that would have made residential school denialism a hate crime.
The strongest storm of 2026 left a trail of destruction across the Pacific, and many Indigenous island communities are still struggling to recover weeks later.
A Sept. 16-18 event in North Dakota will celebrate the 10-year anniversary of the Standing Rock uprising and focus on renewable energy solutions in Indian Country. 🌱
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A first-of-its-kind totem pole carving program at a Washington correctional facility is helping incarcerated Indigenous men reconnect with culture, healing, and community.
Unlike many non-Native beauty salon owners, Bailey Skenandore, Oneida, understands the spiritual and cultural significance of Indigenous hair and has taken that understanding into her business near downtown Milwaukee.
ICT’s latest Indigenous A&E column highlights theater as art, art as theater and a film that sings 🎵
https://bit.ly/4vp61IC
The Cherokee activist took her campaign for Native rights all the way to the White House in the 1920s
A totem pole carving program at Cedar Creek Corrections Center supports healing for incarcerated individuals looking to connect with inter-tribal and intergenerational traditional practices.