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  2. Powerful Quotes from Native Americans and Indigenous Peoples

    www.aol.com/powerful-quotes-native-americans...

    Celebrate Native American history month with these wise and inspirational quotes from Native Americans and Indigenous Peoples.

  3. 25 AANHPI Heritage Month quotes that will inspire you this May

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    25 inspirational quotes for AANHPI Heritage Month “My mother had a saying: ‘You may be the first to do many things, but make sure you’re not the last.’” — Kamala Harris, Vice President ...

  4. Pomo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomo

    Pomo basket weaving is still valued and honored today, not only by the Pomo Indians themselves, but also by amateur enthusiasts, buyers for curio dealers, and scientific collectors. The Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria are a federally recognized American Indian tribe of Coast Miwok and Southern Pomo Indians.

  5. Danielle Forward - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danielle_Forward

    Danielle Forward is a member of the Makahmo Pomo tribe and grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area in California. [1] Raised by a single mother, she witnessed the intergenerational trauma that many indigenous people experience today. Her experience inspired her to want to help other indigenous people. [2]

  6. Coyote Valley Reservation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coyote_Valley_Reservation

    The 70-acre (280,000 m 2) Coyote Valley Reservation in Redwood Valley, California is home to about 170 members of the Coyote Valley tribe of the Native American Pomo people, who descend from the Shodakai Pomo. They are a federally recognized tribe, who were formerly known as the Coyote Valley Band of Pomo Indians of California.

  7. Pomo religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomo_religion

    The Creation and Coyote Creates Sun and Moon, as published in North American Indian, Oral stories of Pomo Indians, 1907-1930s, Volume 14, pages 170–171. Barrett, S.A. Ceremonies of the Pomo Indians, published by University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnicity, July 6, 1917, 12:10, pages 397–441.

  8. Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habematolel_Pomo_of_Upper_Lake

    The Habematolel Pomo are indigenous to California's Clear Lake Basin. Artifacts made by early Native Americans in the Clear Lake Basin have been carbon-dated to 8,000 years ago, although tribal occupation probably extends back further in time. By 6,000 years ago the entire lake was used by tribes evenly settled around the lake shore. [2]

  9. A town's name recalls the massacre of Indigenous people. Will ...

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    It is said that the town takes its name from Andrew Kelsey, a notorious white settler who, with his business partner Charles Stone, brutalized Pomo villagers in the late 1840s — murdering men on ...