Let the people rest in Peace
In order to respect the living, one must first respect the past and
those who have gone on before. Throughout America Indigenous peoples
do not even have the basic right to "rest in peace"
In Florida Indigenous cemeteries are routinely looted, desecrated,
and robbed by grave robbers with degree's and those without, with
impunity. Despite a state law prohibiting the desecration or looting
of Indigenous cemeteries irrespective of whether the sites are
marked or not, there hasn't been a single arrest or a single
prosecution. Not one in the sixteen (16) years since the passage of
Florida's Unmarked Human Burial act. Not when looters are caught
red-handed by Park Service police as in the case of Mr. Goodrich who
removed human skeletal remains from the Cape Canaveral national
seashore. Florida declined to prosecute Goodrich for that. Nor when
John Rabe was caught on videotape looting skeletal remains from the
Reedy Mound in New Port Richey. In that case video, and four (4)
eyewitness affidavits were not enough evidence for Pinellas-Pasco
prosecutors to arrest or prosecute Rabe. These cases instead of
being isolated can be seen throughout Florida repeatedly. Yet when
non-Indigenous cemeteries are desecrated, such as one recently in
Pompano Beach, this brings a swift response from Governor Jeb Bush,
the Attorney General, and local authorities.
The so-called Indian Mound Station Indigenous cemetery has suffered
looting and desecration since the 1870's. Recently Mr. Mark Stephans
desecrated the site on at least one (1) occasion removing human
skeletal remains. Mr. Stephans brazenly attempted to loot further
from the site during a clean up of the site sponsored by Keep
Brevard Beautiful. Only through the intervention of KBB and Brevard
AIM Support Group members was Mr. Stephans prevented from
desecrating the site. Stephans again attempted to loot the site
during a meeting with Brevard County Sheriffs deputies, who
prevented him from digging further. Stephans and other
archaeologists have attempted to claim the only way to "preserve"
the mound and "protect the resource" is to desecrate and rob the
mound.
Florida AIM demands these Indigenous peoples be allowed the respect
and dignity of resting in peace. We will tolerate nothing less. We
know the dominant society would demand the same for their relatives
and ancestors. Florida AIM will use any means necessary to protect
this site and insure the sanctity of this Indigenous cemetery. We
call upon all human beings to contact Norm Wolfinger, Brevard County
State Attorney, and demand the investigation of Mark Stephans and
others who have looted the Indian Mound Station Cemetery and
prosecute them for violations of Florida's Unmarked Human Burial
Site. The time has come to give Indigenous peoples past and
present-simple human respect and afford Indigenous peoples simple
human dignity.
Please send letters, and fax's to Wolfinger at Titusville Branch
Office
400 South Street Titusville, Florida 32780
(321) 264-6933 fax 321-617-7542
Email to us and we will fax to his office.
For More Information contact
AMERICAN INDIAN MOVEMENTY OF FLORIDA
136 4th Street North Saint Petersburg, FL 33701
(727) 826-6960 Fax (727) 550-2207
Email AIMFL@aol.com
Web site
http://Hometown.aol.com/AIMFL
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The American Indian Movement of Florida (Florida AIM) will hold a protest in front of the Orange Bowl Stadium (at NW 3rd St and 15th Ave main entrance) in Miami, FL Saturday October 12th beginning at 10AM.
Florida AIM has demanded since 1992 that FSU respect the Seminole Nation by requesting permission to use the name from ALL the legitimate traditional and Indian Reorganization Act tribal governments in Florida and Oklahoma. Since they began using the Seminole mascot 55 years ago, they have neglected to take that respectful step-and abiding by the decisions.
Florida AIM has also demanded that FSU halt using racist and stereotypical depictions of Native people. There current mascot far more closely resembles a Hollywood Apache who got lost in a Hollywood Lakota dressing room riding a Hollywood Nez Perce Horse than anything Seminole.
We wil continue to demand respect for Native peoples and a halt to the use of American Indians as sports mascots for Amerika's fun and games.
We ask all human beings to join us. Directions follow. Anyone needing transportation from the Tampa Bay, or Jacksonville area's contact the Florida AIM State Office.
FROM JACKSONVILLE
TAKE onto I-95 S.
12: Take the SR-70/OKEECHOBEE RD exit- exit number 65.
13: Keep RIGHT at the fork in the ramp.
14: Merge onto FL-70 W.
15: Turn LEFT.
16: Take the FLORIDA'S TURNPIKE SOUTH ramp towards MIAMI.
17: Merge onto FLORIDA'S TURNPIKE S (Portions toll).
18: FLORIDA'S TURNPIKE S becomes I-95 S.
19: Take the SR-836 W exit- exit number 6- towards AIRPORT/MEDICAL/CIVIC CTR..
20: Merge onto FL-836 W.
21: Take the SR-933/NW 12TH AVE exit towards MEDICAL/CIVIC CTR.
22: Keep LEFT at the fork in the ramp.
23: Turn LEFT onto NW 12TH AVE/FL-933 S.
Turn RIGHT onto NW 3RD ST.
FROM ORLANDO
3: Merge onto I-4 W.
4: Take the FLORIDA'S TURNPIKE exit- exit number 31- towards MIAMI/WILDWOOD.
5: Keep LEFT at the fork in the ramp.
6: Merge onto FLORIDA'S TURNPIKE S (Portions toll).
7: FLORIDA'S TURNPIKE S becomes I-95 S.
8: Take the SR-836 W exit- exit number 6- towards AIRPORT/MEDICAL/CIVIC CTR..
9: Merge onto FL-836 W.
10: Take the SR-933/NW 12TH AVE exit towards MEDICAL/CIVIC CTR.
11: Keep LEFT at the fork in the ramp.
12: Turn LEFT onto NW 12TH AVE/FL-933 S.
Turn RIGHT onto NW 3RD ST.
FROM TAMPA AREA
Merge onto I-75 S (Portions toll).
Take the SR-826 S/PALMETTO EXPY exit- exit number 1A- towards MIAMI.
11: Merge onto PALMETTO EXWY.
12: PALMETTO EXWY becomes FL-826 S.
13: Take the SR-836 E/SR-836 W exit towards AIRPORT/MIAMI/TURNPIKE.
14: Keep LEFT at the fork in the ramp.
15: Merge onto FL-836 E (Portions toll).
16: Take the N.W. 17TH AVE. SOUTH exit towards ORANGE BOWL.
17: Merge onto NW 17TH AVE.
18: Turn LEFT onto NW 3RD ST.
FROM MIAMI AIRPORT - Take Exit marked Coral Gables/LeJeune Rd. Exit onto LeJeune and just past the overpass turn right to enter onto Highway 836 East. Immediately after the toll gate (25 cents), take the first exit, NW 17th Ave., South. Turn left on NW 3rd St. for Press Parking, which is only accessible with a parking pass. FROM DOWNTOWN & I-95 - Take I-95 to 836 West. Take the first exit, NW 12th Ave. Turn left and go across the bridge. Turn right onto NW 7th, 6th, 5th, 4th, or 3rd streets to the Orange Bowl (NW 3rd St. will lead to Press Parking, which is only accessible with a parking pass.)
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Florida AIM files complaints of police harassment
at FSU protests
Tallahassee,FL The American Indian Movement today
filed complaints with the Second Judicial District State Attorney for
Leon County (FL), United States Department of Justice Office of Civil
Rights, and the Florida Attorney General's Office of Civil Rights
regarding outrageous and undue harassment by Leon County Sheriffs
Deputies (LCSO) and Florida State University Police (FSUPD).
On September 21, 2002 Florida AIM held a protest of FSU's use of
American Indian peoples as a sports team mascot. Following the protest,
as Florida AIM has done since it began protesting the FSU mascot in
1992, it closed the demonstration with a prayer and the burning of sage.
This was disrupted on September 21st by uniformed officers of the Leon
County Sheriffs Office and Florida State University Police Department
who crassly alleged that the sage was marijuana and inquired if "Y'all
are performing a(n) Injun ceremony." The LCSO deputy demanded to
inspect the sage alleging loudly that the AIM and AIM Support Group
members were "getting the fans in the west end (of the stadium)
stoned".
Under Florida law the disruption of a prayer or religious assembly is a
criminal misdemeanor and religious discrimination is also a misdemeanor.
Florida AIM has demanded the Leon County State Attorney and Florida
Attorney General take swift and immediate action as the law requires.
However we realize that in a state that can not effectively take care of
the children in its care and has yet to successfully prosecute a police
officer for brutality or the murder of a person of color, the reality is
the state will likely not take action.
We have also filed complaints for discrimination and violations of
public accommodations laws with the United States Department of
Justice, another agency whose history of failing to act judiciously when
dealing with Native peoples is long, and consistent. However we believe
its important to call both the state of Florida and the United States on
their failing to enact or live up to their lofty promises. Recognizing
reality, Florida AIM is reviewing its options to take this grotesque act
of disrespect to civil court. We believe this vile incident shows the
proof that there is no intention in using Indian people as a sports
mascot to honor, but that the intent and purpose is to defame,
demoralize, and trivialize Native people as the two legged bacon who
called themselves law enforcement officers attempted to do on September
21st.
We will not tolerate, nor allow such continued disrespect. of Native
peoples by sports teams or by so-called law enforcement agencies.
.....posted 9/28/02
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Florida AIM to hold vigil against Mexico's
attack on Native peoples.
Miami,FL -- The American Indian Movement of Florida
(Florida AIM) Miami Support Group will hold a demonstration in front of
the Mexican Consulate(5975 SW 72Street Suites 101, Miami Fl.
33143) from 11am to 2pm Friday September 18, 2002 This event will be
held to show solidarity with the Zapatista and Indigenous communities in
Mexico who have recently suffered assassinations of its leadership, and
attacks and expulsions of Indigenous communities from various areas by
Mexican military and paramilitary forces specifically in the communities
of Tzotzil, Tseltah, Chol, and Tojobales.
As these violent events threaten Indigenous communities the Mexican
National Congress is upholding a watered down version of the Indigenous
rights law, which essentially is a no rights law for Indigenous peoples
land, culture and identity. This event will be held in solidarity with a
event planned in Albuquerque, NM by First Nations North and South on
September 19th as a day long fast and vigil in front of the Mexican
Consulate there.
Florida AIM has previously demonstrated in front of the Mexican
Consulate in Miami due to Mexico's attacks on Indigenous communities and
will continue to do so. We call on all human beings to demand justice
and an end to the displacements and killings of Indigenous peoples
anywhere, but in this case in Mexico.
Let the Miami Consul General know how you feel by emailing at conmxmia@bellsouth.net
And we ask you join the Miami AIM SG in this rally tomorrow, and if it
continues by joining us again in a mass demonstration in front of this
colonial settler states consulate.
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Tampa meeting:
The monthly meeting of the Tampa Bay Region (Tampa,
Saint Pete, Pasco, Sarasota) AIM and AIMSG's will be Saturday September
28th at 1 pm at the Florida AIM State Office 136 4th Street N.
Among agenda items will be
Circus McGurkis
Fundraising
FSU protests
Columbus Day
Day of Mourning
Counter-Chasco campaign
Crazy Horse Saloon protests
and more.
For directions and transportation assistance email AIMFL@aol.com
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Greetings:
The American Indian Movement of Florida will hold its
second demonstration of the year against FSU's use of American Indian
peoples as a sports team mascot on SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 21st beginning at
5PM in front of Gate D of Doak Campbell Stadium.
Those needing directions or transportation assistance please contact
AIMFL@aol.com.
No drugs, alcohol or weapons.
Thank You.
The
American Indian Movement of Florida (Florida AIM) asks all human beings
to join us AUGUST 24th at 6:30 P.M. for a demonstration against the vile
use of American Indian peoples as a sports team mascot by the team from
the United States of America's capitol-at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa
(email
for specific location information)
In
America today there is no team called the Blackskins, no team called the
Negro's, nor the WHITESKINS, or Honkies. No YELLOWSKINS or ASIANS. But
there is a team, interestingly enough, from the capitol of the
United States of America called the Redskins.
The
term's origins give a hint as to the racist, shameful, disgraceful and
disgusting use of human beings as a charm for a team. On November
3rd 1755 Sir James Williard of the Massachusetts Bay Colony proclaimed
that 40 pounds would be given to anyone (would translate into several
thousand dollars in today's money) who brought back the
"Redskins" as evidence of them having been killed of any
Native adult male. 20 pounds were offered for anyone who murdered and
brought back the "Redskins" of any Native adult woman and 10
pounds for anyone who murdered and brought back the "Redskin"
of any Native child. It is this sick, twisted legacy of hate crime that
is continually venerated and honored by those who cheer for, participate
with, play for and own the Washington NFL team.
It is the
height of racism and arrogance to proclaim to Indian peoples that they
should be honored by degradation of Indigenous culture, and spirituality
through a moniker referring to a genocidal hate crime. Imagine of the
Washington Jews and their mascot was doing the Torah Chop while dressed
as a Hassidic Jew, or the Washington Catholics whose mascot Pope did the
lambada with a mascot Nun while fans tossed communion wafers on the
field as they did a rendition of the Crucifix chop. Then add in the
offensive racism, and hate crime promotion and you may begin to
understand the offense this is to Indigenous peoples throughout the
world.
Last year
Indian Country Today, the largest American Indian newspaper conducted a
poll of Indian people living on the largest reservations and in the
cities with the highest concentration of Native people. An overwhelming
81% found the use of Indian mascots offensive to Native peoples. Every
single major American Indian organization in the United States,
including the National Congress of American Indians, National Indian
Youth Council, United Indian Tribal Youth, National Indian Education
Association, and the Morningstar Foundation have all announced their
firm opposition to the use of American Indian peoples, culture,
symbology, and spirituality as a sports mascot for athletic teams. Many
organizations and institutions in the US have joined with Native peoples
in the call for a halt to the use of Indian mascots. These include the
National Conference of Christians and Jews, United Church of Christ,
NAACP, National Education Association, Minnesota State Board of
Education, Wisconsin Education Association, LA Unified School District,
Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs, American Jewish Committee, and
the United States Civil Rights Commission.
Both the
American Indian Mental Health Association and the Society of Indian
Psychologists have determined the use of Indian peoples as a sports team
mascot derides the self esteem of American Indian children as they see
their traditional cultural, spiritual and historical symbols degraded
and trivialized in a circus like atmosphere at every sporting event in
America. Both cite the use of American Indian peoples, culture and
spirituality as a sports mascot as a contributing factor in the
disturbingly high suicide and suicide attempt rate by Native
adolescents.
The Time
has come to stop this disgusting behavior and respect each other as
human beings. We therefore ask the human beings to stand with us in
solidarity and support in showing that many believe AMERICAN INDIANS ARE
HUMAN BEINGS, NOT SPORTS MASCOTS FOR AMERICA'S FUN AND GAMES.
For more
information please contact our State Office at AIMFL@aol.com
NO Drugs/Alcohol or weapons at the protest site, please.
AMERICAN
INDIAN MOVEMENT OF FLORIDA
17th Florida AIM State Conference
Declaration of Lake Worth
We, the human beings gathered here in Lake Worth, FL this Labor Day
weekend of two thousand and two (2002) convened to commit to labor for a
future with social, economic and political justice along with recognition
of Indigenous peoples inherent and inalienable right to sovereignty and
self-determination.
We are the descendants of the peoples and Nations who have inhabited this
vast continent of Abya Yala, Great Turtle Island or Western Hemisphere
since time immemorial. We are the heirs of the original civilizations of
this land, which reached the highest levels of knowledge and community
doing so with respect and in harmony with the cosmos, Mother Earth and all
of creation.
With us were the descendants of slaves who were brought here in chains
brought here from the great lands of Africa, where another Indigenous
peoples had a matrix of civilizations and human culture. With us were
human beings from all walks, and all cultures coming together from the
four colors of man to labor together for a future with social, economic
and political justice for all. With particular concern towards the
Indigenous peoples, nations and communities who have suffered since the
invasion of these lands more than five centuries ago.
We, who met in Lake Worth, come from the complex mix of the saps of
cultures of the peoples of this world.
We are unified by a past of many roots and varied nutrients made brothers
and sisters by a history marked by invasion and conquest, by plunder and
forced labor. Unified by the repression of our relatives and the constant
repression of our struggles for justice. We are unified those leading us
to today. Unified by the uncompromising ones, those who never accepted
defeat, or subjugation.
We gathered this Labor Day weekend in the lands of the Seminole Nation,
510 years after the invasion; massacres, oppression, theft and
mercilessness began in this hemisphere. Five centuries since the
irrational extraction of our resources, exploitation of our labor power,
forced attempts to change our spiritual and philosophical beliefs; efforts
to eradicate our languages, cultures, philosophies and spiritualities, and
efforts to force a historical amnesia on us and those around us, began.
Five hundred ten years after Indigenous peoples were condemned not to be,
not to count, not to be visible and not to exist, cannon fodder for the
colonial settler states army's for an independence that brought Native
peoples neither freedom, independence, nor justice. Yet today, after all
of this Indigenous peoples remain. Speaking the many varied languages,
praying in the ways of the ancestors. Refusing to go away quietly, a proud
resounding testament to the vibrance and strength of Indigenous peoples,
Indigenous thought and humanity.
We see the common struggle facing Indigenous peoples from the colonial
Settler State of Guatemala, where hundreds of thousands of Maya people
have been murdered with impunity to the lands of the Lakota Nation
where hate crime murders remain uninvestigated. We recognize the ethnic
cleansing of Native peoples by the colonial settler states knows no
colonial settler boundary.
We recognize that Native peoples from Canada to Chile have always
resisted, defending and rejecting submission refusing to give birth to
enslaved children without giving up.
We recognize that the new crusaders of neoliberal civilization speak to us
of democracy and development. We are resolute that we will stand with the
traditional governments of the Indigenous Nations of this hemisphere in
demanding these respective Nations are the sole and autonomous entities
that should decide questions of development within their ancestral lands.
Indigenous peoples remain, standing proudly from the Cree to the Mapuche
from the Maya to Tlinget from the Lakota to the Suma, from the Hmong to
the Sammi. Indigenous peoples remain asserting a human world view in the
face of a world in which plunder and the exploitation of other peoples
resources and work, and profit is the religion of an unending chain of
consumption divides the peoples of the world.
We know that in the America's the only right Indigenous peoples have today
is the right to remain silent. It is the one right we will reject
outright. We know that today from Canada to Chile Native people have not
even the right to rest in peace, as the cemeteries of Indigenous peoples
are desecrated for everything from science and development to just for the
fun of it for some sick ghouls. We know that the survival of Native
peoples is a testament to those who have gone before. From the hero's such
as Geronimo, Osceola, Quannah Parker, Teshunka Witko, Tatanka Iotanka,
Pizi to those from north and south who have continued the resistance in
recent times with demonstrations, marches, vigils, land takeovers and
recoveries.
Today, the American Indian Movement of Florida, (Florida AIM) proudly
extends its membership to those of the exiled Maya community in Florida.
We recognize that these Maya are not strangers from a foreign land, but
relatives who have undergone the same struggle that those Indigenous
Nations from the colonial settler states of North America have, and these
brothers and sisters have fled here so they may live. Florida AIM stands
resolutely in defense of their struggle to live and the common struggle to
have all Indigenous Nations inherent and inalienable right to
self-determination and sovereignty recognized by the recent colonial
settler states imposed upon the lands of the Western Hemisphere.
Florida AIM hereby reaffirms its commitment to the historic Twenty Points
Declaration of the American Indian Movement in 1972, the Continuing
Declaration of Independence issued by the First International Indian
Treaty Conference in 1974, the calls for justice of Native people made by
the I, II, and III Encuentro Continental de Resistencia Indigena and all
others who demand immediate justice, treaty rights, sovereignty and
self-determination for Indigenous peoples.
There can be no peace or justice until the Indigenous cemeteries are
places where the ancestors can rest in eternal peace. There can be no
peace or justice until there is justice for those Indigenous peoples
murdered in hate crimes or in crimes of the state. There can be no peace
or justice until the sacred lands of Indigenous peoples are returned to
the care taking of the respective Indigenous Nation. There can be no peace
or justice until the autonomy, self-determination and sovereignty of each
and every Indigenous Nation on the planet from the colonial Settler State
holding the nations and their resources hostage is recognized. There can
be no peace and no justice until the human rights and human dignity of all
is not only recognized in words and rhetoric but in action and deed.
It has been said the only right Native people have is the right to remain
silent. We reject this. Florida AIM vows and commits itself to making a
noise in this world. We vow and commit ourselves to continuing to stand
and work stridently for the rights of Indigenous peoples under the guiding
principles of the American Indian Movement. We welcome our Maya relatives
living in exile in Florida and stand with them as well. We will not and
can not remain silent. We raise our voices in memory of the hero's and
martyrs not only of AIM, but also of all whom have come before in this
hemisphere to stand and refuse to tolerate injustice. We will continue
until justice, treaty rights, sovereignty and self-determination are a
reality for all of the Indigenous peoples of what is now called the
Western Hemisphere.
American Indian Movement of Florida
17th Anniversary State Conference
Lake Worth Friends Meeting House
Lake Worth, FL September 1, 2002
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Gabriel Provancial-Chairman
Sheridan Murphy
Jennifer Tweedie
Mark Madrid
David Narcomey
Ernest Riley
Ruby Beaulieu
George Garcia
Dorine Brown
Rose Kersey
Javier Del Sol
INVITATION
Greetings to all Indigenous Nations, respected Indigenous Elders,
Indigenous community leaders, AIM members, directors, board members,
national leadership, communities, organizations in solidarity and friends.
The American Indian Movement of Florida, Inc. (Florida AIM) cordially and
respectfully invites you to attend and participate in the 17th Anniversary
Conference of the American Indian Movement of Florida and the Florida
Indian Alliance to be held August 30th to September 1st, 2002 at the
Friends Meeting House in Lake Worth, FL.
This conference will focus on the struggles of the Maya Peoples in exile
and their struggles here in Florida and to secure sovereignty and
self-determination for the Maya Nation in its homeland. The struggles of
the traditional Independent Seminole Nation, the ongoing effort to
confront and eradicate the vile racism of the Chasco Fiesta; which
portrays the invading genocidal Conquistadors as heroes and the Native
victims of that genocide as vile barbaric heathen savages worthy of such
genocide; and the ongoing struggles of Native people throughout the world
will be an area of special concern for this years conference.
Finally of special significance this year will be concerns related to the
ongoing increased overt U.S. government attacks on free speech, civil
liberties and dissent in America. While Indigenous peoples have never
enjoyed justice as the American way, we know that when such an overt
public attack on the dominant societies civil liberties occur the
situation may become even more extreme for Indigenous peoples and we must
be prepared to respond to these attacks.
An emphasis on solidarity building and networking will be a focus of how
to respond to these continued and now overt attacks on dissent in America.
This conference will work to continue to build unity and strengthen
organizing efforts to focus attention on local, state, national and
international Indigenous issues in 2002 and 2003.
Florida AIM will utilize this conference to build its support group and
membership networks into a more cohesive statewide movement.
This conference will also work to build, solidify and strengthen Florida
AIM's ability to network with and ally with progressive movements, and
organizations in Florida and the southeastern United States.
The American Indian Movement of Florida is the state chapter of the
international Indigenous civil, human, treaty and sovereignty rights
movement founded in 1968. Florida AIM was founded in 1989 unifying several
Indigenous rights organizations that were part of the Florida Indian
Alliance, under the principles and leadership of AIM.
The struggle of Indigenous peoples in Florida, America and throughout the
hemisphere continues at critical levels. Hate crime murders of Indigenous
peoples continue with impunity throughout the America's. Treaty rights,
fishing rights, land rights, religious freedom rights, basic civil rights,
self-determination, sovereign rights and in fact all rights except the
right to remain silent continue to be both denied and/or under blatant and
outrageous attacks from both governmental and anti-Indigenous groups.
Indigenous national sovereignty continues to come under both blatant and
covert attacks sometimes disguised through thinly veiled attacks on Indian
economic development.
Anti-Indian organizations continue to operate and attack Indigenous
national sovereignty throughout the United States and especially in
Florida. From Pine Island to Alaqua Bayou Indigenous cemeteries sites
continue be under relenting and state sponsored attack, threatened by
development, degreed and illegal grave robbers. Police brutality against
Indigenous peoples continues from Alaska to Hollywood, FL. From Cape Coral
Hospital's misdiagnosis of a Dakota man's illness because of their racist
perceptions to the Chasco Fiesta where traditional Indigenous people and
culture are depicted as "barbaric", "savage" and
"bloodthirsty". From the degrading use of Indigenous peoples as
a sports team mascots to deluded con-artists who sell "tribal
memberships" to unsuspecting confused people the gross stereotypes,
misperceptions of native peoples, cultures, and history continues and
continues to have a damaging effect on Indigenous peoples and issues.
Indigenous peoples from throughout the United States are expected to
participate in this conference. With their help, and the help of friends
and allies from liberation and justice movements we will share and develop
strategies responding to shared concerns and discuss developments
affecting Indigenous peoples lives and survival.
The 17th Florida AIM Conference will hold workshops which will help
develop and modify Florida AIM strategies and priorities on such critical
issues as Maya concerns, Indian Arts and Crafts Act, Treaty rights,
cemetery desecration, political prisoners, mercury contamination, Indian
Child Welfare Act, stereotypes/mascots, police brutality, new age culture
vulturing, attacks on our rights as human beings, and the struggles of
other peoples and how we can work with them.
Additionally this conference will include technical and educational
workshops on civil disobedience/direct action, media, legalities and more
to educate our members, supporters and others how to take effective
action. Presentations will be made covering AIM's work in the previous
year. The conference will emphasize the development of concrete strategies
for responding to the many problems and issues facing Indigenous peoples
in Florida.
We will seize upon this historic opportunity to further build and solidify
the American Indian Movement of Florida's alliance with the exiled Maya
community in Florida and build stronger networks of solidarity with
organizations and people of goodwill in Florida. Florida AIM members can
participate in the annual election for Florida AIM's State Board of
Directors, and general membership meeting. Florida AIM will present the
6th Annual David Goyette Memorial Human Rights Award and 3rd Annual Indian
Rights Award at the conference as well as other organizational awards for
extra effort and support in the past year.
Alcohol, Drugs and Weapons are strictly prohibited. For the health and
safety of all participants this will be strictly enforced by Florida AIM
Security which will patrol the campgrounds, conference sites and
conference hotel. There will be an official conference hotel that will
offer a discounted rate and there are a number of hotels in the Lake
Worth/Palm Beach area.
Additionally there will be information on campgrounds and other
accommodations available from the State Office and Lake Worth office of
Florida AIM. Enclosed please find a registration form.(For registration
form please contact AIM State Office or Conference Organizing Committe and
one will be postal mailed to you). Registration fee's are to attempt to
recoup the costs of the conference.
We sincerely hope you can attend, and participate in this gathering. If
you have any questions or concerns please feel free to contact the Florida
AIM State Conference Organizing Committee.
In solidarity
| Sheridan
G. Murphy, State Executive Director
Mark Madrid , State
Information Director
Javier Del Sol, South
Florida Regional Director
|
Gabriel
Provancial, State Chairman
George Garcia, State
Security Director
Jennifer L.
Tweedie, State Office
Conference Liaison. |
To all Former
Activists Remember it has been said if your not PART of the solution your
part of the Problem If you have never been part of the struggle
The TIME to JOIN IS NOW!!!