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    haudenosaunee

    Explore "haudenosaunee" with insightful episodes like "De Ouija Bord Moord", "De Ouija Bord Moord", "Oneida Realities: A Holistic Approach for a Vibrant Future", "Read to Me from… The Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address (2019)" and "Covered With Night" from podcasts like ""Moord Podcast", "Moord Podcast", "Indigenous 150+", "READ TO ME with Becky Karush" and "Bedrosian Bookclub Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (13)

    De Ouija Bord Moord

    De Ouija Bord Moord

    op 6 maart 1930 opent de jonge Henri Marchand jr de deur van het huis waar hij met zijn ouders woont aan 576 Riley Street in Buffalo, in de staat New York in Amerika. Er is iets vreemds aan de hand in huis. de anders zo keurig opgeruimde woonkamer is een puinhoop. er is een tafel omver gevallen, de radio ligt op de grond, er zijn dingen op de grond gegoioid . net alsof er flink gevochten is. Maar door wie? Dan vindt hij zijn 53jarige moeder Clothilde Marchand onderaan de trap, in een poel bloed….  

    De politie arresteert al snel een verdachte, een inheems Amerikaanse genezeres. Ze bekent al snel dat ze Clothilde had vermoord omdat haar man haar had opgedragen om dat te doen. Haar vorig jaar overleden man, die contact op had genomen via een ouija bord....

    Luisteren dus!

    En wat niet iedereen weet is dat mijn boek De moord op mr. Jacques Wijsman is inmiddels te koop bij alle grote jongens zoals bruna en bol.com, maar natuurlijk ook bij je lokale boekhandel! Die kunnen alle steun goed gebruiken. Wil je mij in levende lijve zien? Dat kan! Op 10 september is de boekpresentatie, op het Centraal Station in Amsterdam in Restaurant 1e Klas, van 16.00 tot 17.00. 

    #ouijabord #ouija #geestenoproepen #moordpodcast #lizluyben #demoordopmrwijsman #jacqueswijsman #waargebeurdemisdaad #waargebeurd #nederlandsepodcast

     

     

     

    De Ouija Bord Moord

    De Ouija Bord Moord

    op 6 maart 1930 opent de jonge Henri Marchand jr de deur van het huis waar hij met zijn ouders woont aan 576 Riley Street in Buffalo, in de staat New York in Amerika. Er is iets vreemds aan de hand in huis. de anders zo keurig opgeruimde woonkamer is een puinhoop. er is een tafel omver gevallen, de radio ligt op de grond, er zijn dingen op de grond gegoioid . net alsof er flink gevochten is. Maar door wie? Dan vindt hij zijn 53jarige moeder Clothilde Marchand onderaan de trap, in een poel bloed….  

    De politie arresteert al snel een verdachte, een inheems Amerikaanse genezeres. Ze bekent al snel dat ze Clothilde had vermoord omdat haar man haar had opgedragen om dat te doen. Haar vorig jaar overleden man, die contact op had genomen via een ouija bord....

    Luisteren dus!

    En wat niet iedereen weet is dat mijn boek De moord op mr. Jacques Wijsman is inmiddels te koop bij alle grote jongens zoals bruna en bol.com, maar natuurlijk ook bij je lokale boekhandel! Die kunnen alle steun goed gebruiken. Wil je mij in levende lijve zien? Dat kan! Op 10 september is de boekpresentatie, op het Centraal Station in Amsterdam in Restaurant 1e Klas, van 16.00 tot 17.00. 

    #ouijabord #ouija #geestenoproepen #moordpodcast #lizluyben #demoordopmrwijsman #jacqueswijsman #waargebeurdemisdaad #waargebeurd #nederlandsepodcast

     

     

     

    Oneida Realities: A Holistic Approach for a Vibrant Future

    Oneida Realities: A Holistic Approach for a Vibrant Future
    Brandon Doxtator, community leader and environmental advocate in the role of environmental and consultation coordinator for the Oneida Nation of the Thames speaks with his real life cuz and host Kathleen Doxtator. They discuss challenges facing the Oneida Nation, including their 3-year boiled water advisory, and restoring quality of life through holistic and 7 generation approaches to both small scale and large scale needs. They also get into how institutions and non-Indigenous people can meaningfully support the well-being of local Indigenous communities. 
     
    You can find Brandon in the bush, or follow him on Facebook
     
    Follow Brandon on Instagram
     
    Follow Kathleen (@yakotshanuni) on Tiktok and Instagram

    To listen to and follow Kathleen's new podcast:  Divine Rezolutions 

    This episode was developed in the Intro to Digital Storytelling Program led by Good Influence Films in partnership with RBC Emerging Artists Project, Inspirit Foundation and the Mastercard Foundation.

    To join our community and learn more about our events and training programs: https://goodinfluencefilms.com/podsubscribe
     
    Additional Resources:

    Read to Me from… The Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address (2019)

    Read to Me from… The Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address (2019)

    On Read to Me, we practice the essential, joyous skill inside great writing — listening. We listen for what we love in the work, and then put words to why it's so, so good

    Today, we revisit a 2019 episode on the Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address: Greetings to the Natural World, also called, in Mohawk, Ohénten Kariwatékwen: Words Before All Else.

    This Address’s legacy is much bigger than the United States Thanksgiving tradition. People of the Haudenosaunee nations recite it before ceremonial and governmental meetings. Their civic life grows again and again from acknowledgment of the natural world, relationship to it, and gratitude for it.

    Is it ok for a white reader, which is me, to recite and explore the Address? Yes. There is ample documentation that the Haudenosaunee nations offer it broadly to the world.

    Thank you to the bevy of voices who helped me recite the Address in 2019. You remain magical.

    Covered With Night

    Covered With Night

    Now, in the tail end of 2021, discourse about restorative justice and public safety lack imagination. We tend to “do what we’ve always done.”

    NYU Historian Nicole Eustace brings us the story of the search for justice following the 1722 murder of a Native American man at the hands of two White men. Covered With Night is a detailed history of how the Pennyslvania colony leaders had to learn to restore the peace – or face war – with the Five Nations. in particular, we bear witness to how the colonists never truly understood the peoples of the Haudenosaunee Confederation.

    In this month’s book club, we read a deep history of the fallout of a murder in the Penn colony. In this history, we learn that our laws have been around shorter than we care to remember and see alternative ways of coming to justice that have existed and thrived. A powerful tail of how we, as peoples, can live together with more equity and justice – how restorative justice has worked in the world, how it could again. If only we can listen and learn.

    A Year At 1492 Land Back Lane

    A Year At 1492 Land Back Lane

    This episode features an interview with Skyler Williams of 1492 Land Back Lane, a land reclamation on the edge of the Six Nations of the Grand River reserve near Caledonia, Ontario. This week marks the one year anniversary of the camp which was reclaimed last July in response to plans to develop a subdivision on Six Nations Territory. Skyler speaks about a year spent at the camp, the recent announcement that the McKenzie Meadows subdivision has been cancelled by the developer because of Six Nations resistance, and what’s next for folks at Land Back Lane.

     

    Music in this show is all from artists who have performed at Land Back Lane: Six Nations singer-songwriters Derek Miller and Logan Staats, as well as Ottawa-based “powwow-step” group The Halluci Nation, formerly known as A Tribe Called Red.

    Episode 159. BEST IN CLIMATE: Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address, Greetings to the Natural World

    Episode 159. BEST IN CLIMATE: Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address, Greetings to the Natural World

    The Haudenosaunee Confederacy, comprised of the Mohawks, Oneida, Cayuga, Onandaga and Seneca Peoples, offer their Thanksgiving Address as a central prayer to the Natural World, thanking each life-sustaining force for the abundance it brings to all our lives.  This address speaks aloud mutual respect, conservation, love, generosity, and the responsibility to understand that what is done to one part of the Web of Life, we do to ourselves. 

    Episode 159. BEST IN CLIMATE: Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address, Greetings to the Natural World

    Episode 159. BEST IN CLIMATE: Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address, Greetings to the Natural World

    The Haudenosaunee Confederacy, comprised of the Mohawks, Oneida, Cayuga, Onandaga and Seneca Peoples, offer their Thanksgiving Address as a central prayer to the Natural World, thanking each life-sustaining force for the abundance it brings to all our lives.  This address speaks aloud mutual respect, conservation, love, generosity, and the responsibility to understand that what is done to one part of the Web of Life, we do to ourselves. 

    Nurturing Dreams, Building Pride: Asia Youngman’s journey to filmmaking

    Nurturing Dreams, Building Pride: Asia Youngman’s journey to filmmaking

    Award-winning Vancouver based filmmaker Asia Youngman, of Cree, Métis and Haudenosaunee descent shares the early opportunities that allowed her to find her passion, and feed her imagination, helping to build her confidence and career. Her success not with standing, this episode ends with a strong call to the media industry to better support female Indigenous talent both in front and behind the camera.
    Host: Kirsten Mathison

    184 Thundersticks: Firearms and the Violent Transformation of Native America

    184 Thundersticks: Firearms and the Violent Transformation of Native America

    Early North America was a place rife with violent conflict. Between the 17th and 19th centuries we see a lot of conflict between different Native American peoples, Native American peoples and colonists, colonists from one empire versus colonists from another empire, settlers from one state quarreling with settlers from another state, and in the 19th century, we also see strife between Americans, Canadians, and Mexicans.

    Today, we’re going to explore some of the causes of the violent conflict that took place in early America by looking specifically at Native America and the ways Native Americans used guns to shape their lives and the course of North American colonial and indigenous history.

    Our guide for this exploration is David J. Silverman, a professor of history at George Washington University and the author of Thundersticks: Firearms and the Violent Transformation of Native America.

    Show Notes: https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/184

     

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    Why the Leaves Change Color - A Traditional Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Native American) Story

    Why the Leaves Change Color - A Traditional Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Native American) Story
    This week we bring you the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Native American) story on why the leaves change color in the autumn. This beautiful story has been passed down through the oral tradition and we've interviewed multiple Haudenosaunee storytellers to bring you the same version members of the Haudenosaunee heard as children. Support the show at Patreon.com/stories! See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.