The third Thursday of November is the National Day of Mourning for some Indigenous peoples. They are fighting for ecological ...
The National Day of Mourning began in 1970 and is held annually in Plymouth, Massachusetts. • Indigenous participants mourn ...
The fourth Thursday in November marks Thanksgiving Day for most Americans. But to some, it’s the “National Day of Mourning.” ...
For more than half a century, groups of Native Americans have been gathering on Thanksgiving to mark a National Day of ...
The ceremony dates back to 1970 when Kisha James‘ grandfather was invited to speak at a commemoration of the 350th ...
Hundreds of people marched in the rain on Thursday to "tear down settler mythologies." The post Indigenous people speak out ...
Since 1970, they have gathered in Plymouth to focus on the origins of Thanksgiving and to look at the issues that Native ...
But to some, it’s the “National Day of Mourning.” The National Day of Mourning (not to be confused with other remembrance events observed in the wake of significant tragedies or the deaths ...