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Yes this need to be heard !! Teach our history !!
24/05/2026

Yes this need to be heard !!
Teach our history !!

A'HO
23/05/2026

A'HO

𝐖𝐞 𝐧𝐞𝐞𝐝 𝟏,𝟎𝟎𝟎 𝐡𝐞𝐥𝐥𝐨'𝐬 𝐟𝐫𝐨𝐦 native forever 𝐋𝐨𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐬.
23/05/2026

𝐖𝐞 𝐧𝐞𝐞𝐝 𝟏,𝟎𝟎𝟎 𝐡𝐞𝐥𝐥𝐨'𝐬 𝐟𝐫𝐨𝐦 native forever 𝐋𝐨𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐬.

**Native Americans – The First People of America**Native Americans are the original people of North and South America, l...
23/05/2026

**Native Americans – The First People of America**
Native Americans are the original people of North and South America, long before any outsiders arrived. In what is now the United States, they belong to many unique tribes and cultures — some still live today as proud, independent nations.
Most experts believe Native Americans came from Asia over 13,000 years ago, crossing a land bridge during the Ice Age. Some even say they arrived 40,000 years ago! Over time, these early people spread across the land, creating hundreds of different cultures.
The word “Indian” came from Christopher Columbus, who thought he had reached India. But even before him, Norse explorers had reached North America around 500 years earlier. Many Native tribes believe they’ve always lived here, as told through their creation stories.
When Europeans arrived in the 1400s, over **50 million people** already lived in the Americas — including about **10 million** in the area that is now the U.S. What followed were years of change, struggle, and survival.
Today, Native Americans make up about **1.5% of the U.S. population**, proudly keeping their traditions, music, stories, and ceremonies alive.

**“LISTEN TO THE WIND. IT TALKS.”— A NATIVE AMERICAN WAY OF KNOWING**❤️👉 Get this T-shirt and hoodie here:👇https://www.n...
23/05/2026

**“LISTEN TO THE WIND. IT TALKS.”
— A NATIVE AMERICAN WAY OF KNOWING**
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For Native American peoples, knowledge has never come from books alone.
It comes from listening — to the land, to the sky, to silence, and to the heart.
Long before borders were drawn, Native nations understood that the world is alive. The wind carries messages. The earth remembers footsteps. Silence is never empty — it is filled with meaning.
This wisdom lives in the teaching:
“Listen to the wind. It talks.
Listen to the silence. It speaks.
Listen to your heart. It knows.”
THE WIND AS A TEACHER
In many Native traditions, the wind is more than air in motion.
It is a messenger.
The wind carries prayers upward, brings warnings of change, and reminds people that nothing stands alone. To listen to the wind is to acknowledge that humans are not above nature — they are part of it.
Hunters listened to the wind to survive.
Ceremonies listened to the wind to stay in balance.
Elders listened to the wind to understand what was coming.
SILENCE HOLDS VOICE
Silence is sacred in Native cultures.
It is where truth gathers strength.
In silence, one hears the ancestors.
In silence, the mind stops arguing.
In silence, wisdom rises.
Colonization tried to replace silence with commands, rules, and noise — but Native silence endured. It protected language, ceremony, and memory when speaking openly was dangerous.
THE HEART REMEMBERS WHAT HISTORY TRIED TO ERASE
For Native peoples, the heart is not separate from the mind.
It is a place of knowing.
Even after forced removals, broken treaties, boarding schools, and bans on ceremony, the heart remembered what laws tried to destroy. The heart carried identity when names were changed. The heart carried songs when voices were taken away.
The heart knew who the people were — even when the world refused to listen.
A TEACHING FOR TODAY
In a modern world filled with noise, speed, and distraction, Native wisdom offers another way forward.
Slow down.
Listen deeper.
Trust what is older than fear.
The wind still talks.
Silence still speaks.
And the heart still knows.
❤️I think you will be proud to wear this T-shirt"👇👇
👉 Get this T-shirt and hoodie here:👇
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My Native Zodiac Sign is A Woodpecker
22/05/2026

My Native Zodiac Sign is A Woodpecker

Mukwa Bear, a skilled First Nations tracker in Canada, has found 10 missing Indigenous people since 2019 after police se...
22/05/2026

Mukwa Bear, a skilled First Nations tracker in Canada, has found 10 missing Indigenous people since 2019 after police searches couldn't locate them.
Raised on traplines and deeply immersed in his culture and traditions, Bear developed exceptional tracking skills through traditional hunting practices and deep connection to the land.
In December 2023, Bear gained wider recognition for his volunteer work across multiple Canadian provinces including Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia.
Over four years, he participated in more than 15 searches, successfully locating 10 missing individuals and providing desperately needed closure to grieving families.
Bear often responds when families feel official search efforts have fallen short. His approach combines traditional knowledge with modern search techniques, allowing him to notice subtle environmental clues others might miss.
"I use my knowledge of the land and tracking to help families get closure," Bear explains. "Sometimes I'm the last hope they have."
Families praise his compassionate approach and cultural understanding, noting his ability to connect with communities in ways official agencies sometimes cannot.
Bear's work highlights both his remarkable individual commitment and the broader need for culturally informed search techniques when Indigenous people go missing.
Sources: Global News Canada, Indigenous community leaders

I hope I get wishes, today is my birthdayProud to be Native American
22/05/2026

I hope I get wishes, today is my birthdayProud to be Native American

Happy 56th Birthday to Moses Brings Plenty, our unforgettable Mo from Yellowstone!
21/05/2026

Happy 56th Birthday to Moses Brings Plenty, our unforgettable Mo from Yellowstone!

Why Isn’t This Map in the History BooksBy the age of 10, most children in the United States have been taught all 50 stat...
21/05/2026

Why Isn’t This Map in the History Books
By the age of 10, most children in the United States have been taught all 50 states that make up the country. But centuries ago, the land that is now the United States was a very different place. Over 20 million Native Americans dispersed across over 1,000 distinct tribes, bands, and ethnic groups populated the territory.
The ancestors of living Native Americans arrived in North America about 15 thousand years ago. As a result, a wide diversity of communities, societies, and cultures finally developed on the continent over the millennia.The population figure for Indigenous peoples in the Americas before the 1492 voyage of Christopher Columbus was 70 million or more.
About 562 tribes inhabited the contiguous U.S. territory. Ten largest North American Indian tribes: Arikara, Cherokee, Iroquois, Pawnee, Sioux, Apache, Eskimo, Comanche, Choctaw, Cree, Ojibwa, Mohawk, Cheyenne, Navajo, Seminole, Hope, Shoshone, Mohican, Shawnee, Mi’kmaq, Paiute, Wampanoag, Ho-Chunk, Chumash, Haida.
Below is the tribal map of Pre-European North America.
The old map below gives a Native American perspective by placing the tribes in full flower ~ the “Glory Days.” It is pre-contact from across the eastern sea or, at least, before that contact seriously affected change. Stretching over 400 years, the time of contact was quite different from tribe to tribe. For instance, the “Glory Days” of the Maya and Aztec came to an end very long before the interior tribes of other areas, with some still resisting almost until the 20th Century.
At one time, numbering in the millions, the native peoples spoke close to 4,000 languages.
The Americas’ European conquest, which began in 1492, ended in a sharp drop in the Native American population through epidemics, hostilities, ethnic cleansing, and slavery.
When the United States was founded, established Native American tribes were viewed as semi-independent nations, as they commonly lived in communities separate from white immigrants

"The Church Without Walls"They asked me once, "Where is your church?"❤️👉 Get this T-shirt and hoodie here: 👇 https://www...
21/05/2026

"The Church Without Walls"
They asked me once, "Where is your church?"

❤️👉 Get this T-shirt and hoodie here: 👇 https://www.nativepridestores.com/tee399

I smiled and pointed to the horizon.

“To the east, where the sun rises and paints the sky with fire—there, I begin my prayers.
To the north, where the winds carry the wisdom of the ancestors—I listen and learn.
To the west, where the sun dies gently each day—I give thanks for the lessons.
To the south, where life grows and renews—I find healing and hope.”

My church does not have doors, but it welcomes all.
Its roof is the sky, sometimes fierce with storms, sometimes calm with stars.
Its walls are made of pine and river, stone and silence.
And its teachings are written in birdsong, in paw prints, in the way the water moves over stone.

Nature is not something I worship.
It is something I belong to.

I carry no book, for the Earth writes stories in every leaf and every breath.
I follow no preacher, but I follow the wolf, the crow, the cedar tree.
They have never lied to me.

So no, I don’t need a building to find my spirit.
I just need to stand barefoot in the soil and remember:

The Earth is my church.
And nature is my religion.

❤️I think you will be proud to wear this T-shirt"👇👇
👉 Get this T-shirt and hoodie here:👇
https://www.nativepridestores.com/tee399

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