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By Claudio Hernandez (Na Ñuu Savi/Mixtec)
 
February 1

Black History Month begins in the United States. Like Native American Heritage Month (November), Oaxacan Heritage Month (July/August), and Indigenous Peoples’ Day (October), I celebrate the awareness those months and that day bring about Black and Indigenous Peoples and histories, the steps it has taken for our respective and intersecting histories to be recognized by the same nation that inflicts its violence on us. 

By Phoebe Farris (Powhatan-Pamunkey)

“Developing Stories: Native Photographers in the Field,” featuring essays and images of Native American photographers, is on exhibit at the New York City branch of the National Museum of the American Indian until March 12, 2023 and features the work of photojournalists Donovan Quintero (Navajo), Tailyr Irvine (Salish and Kootenai), and Russel Albert Daniels (Dine’ descent and Ho-Chunk descent).

February 21 is International Mother Language Day. Cultural Survival’s work to promote cultures and languages has been a priority since our founding and is reflected across all of our programs. Supporting cultural and language diversity and revitalization directly supports biological diversity. The language comes from the land and allows us to communicate our history, cosmovisions, spirituality, values, and knowledge systems.

February 11 marks the International Day of Women and Girls in Science, a day to celebrate the contributions that Indigenous women and girls make to the fields of science and technology. It is also a movement that aims to promote the full and equal participation of women and girls in the scientific community. Integral to this movement are Indigenous women who are the holders of generations of Traditional Knowledge and the best stewards of biodiversity.

En Kapsokwony, situado en el condado de Bungoma (Kenia), vive Emmanuel Kiplimo (ogiek), un joven Indígena preocupado por la falta de acceso de su comunidad a la educación y los servicios sanitarios. Emmanuel recibió la Beca a Jóvenes Indígenas de Cultural Survival y su proyecto se centró en la producción de radio comunitaria para promover la salud, la educación y la inclusión de género. Su preocupación radicaba en la falta de respuesta del gobierno hacia los servicios sanitarios y educativos estatales que no llegan a su comunidad. 

Cultural Survival condena la exportación irregular de piezas arqueológicas Mayas por parte del gobierno de Guatemala, con el propósito declarado de restaurarlas y exhibirlas en el Museo Metropolitano de Arte (MET) de la ciudad Nueva York, así como la Iniciativa de Ley No. 59-23 del Rescate del Patrimonio Prehispánico que pretende restaurar, proteger y preservar sitios arqueológicos junto con la iniciativa privada.

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