
Turtle Island Project first Native American Roundtable came out strongly against racist location names in Minnesota and across the nation
Thomas Ivan Dahlheimer, director of the Rum River Name Change Organization Inc. in Wahkon, Minnesota, if fighting the distorted name of the Rum River - one of numerous places in the U.S. whose original American Indian names were perverted by racist whites.
Dahlheimer helped introduce a bill to change 14 derogatory geographic place names that are offensive to American Indians
Pictured above are shots of the beautiful river - whose dirty name "Rum River" was based on racism.
Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community Pow Wow. Jim Anderson, the Cultural Chair for the Mdewakanton Dakota community and a leading activist for Minnesota's Dakota people, asked Thomas Dahlheimer to set up a stand and display information about my work.
Anderson addressed the pow wow participants about the bill to change 14 derogatory location names across Minnesota including Rum River (Photos by Thomas Dahlheimer)
Inaugural Grand Island Conference in northern Michigan addressed derogatory location names, racism, poverty, teen suicide, and other issues; Centering prayer, Celtic spiritual issues discussed during Turtle Island Project conference
(Munising, Michigan) - Racism, poverty, teen suicide on reservations, the derogatory perversion of American Indian names on Minnesota rivers and other locations across the country, and learning respect for the environment from Earth-based cultures were among the topics discussed at a Native American Roundtable this weekend in northern Michigan.
Sponsored by the Turtle Island Project, a non-profit based in the Upper Peninsula, the conference was held at the Eden on the Bay Lutheran Church in Munising.
The perversion of the original Native American name of Minnesota's Rum River and similar derogatory names was placed on the agenda at the request of Thomas Dahlheimer, director of the Rum River Name Change Organization Inc. in Wahkon, Minnesota.
Minnesota State Rep. Mike Joros, D-Duluth, recently introduced a bill that would change 14 derogatory geographic place names that are offensive to American Indians.
The Rum River in Minnesota was named by whites referring to alcohol "spirits" instead of the original American Indian name that meant "Great Spirit."
"Two of these derogatory names were changed from the sacred Ojibwe name for their Great Spirit (Manido) to Devil, as was the custom throughout our nation," said Dahlheimer. "Racial hatred was why many geographic site names were changed from Native peoples' names for the Great Spirit to Devil."
Many faulty translations of Native American names were done out of racism and as a "deliberate insult and slur,” Dahlheimer said.
"These derogatory names remind Native people of the cultural genocide that is being perpetrated against them," Dahlheimer said. "Changing these names it will help in the healing process - but keeping the derogatory names would maintain a racist, derogatory characterization of Native peoples."
Dahlheimer said "heightened awareness of the catastrophic consequences caused by white settlers introducing and selling alcohol to Native Americans - may cause white Euro-Americans to offer all Native Americans their long overdue restitution justice."
Dahlheimer’s views were presented at the roundtable by a TIP volunteer, but organizers hope future events will include a internet camera so tribal officials from around the country can participate without traveling to northern Michigan.
The reasons for a shocking increase in teen suicides at American Indian reservations was discussed including the 600 attempts and 15 deaths over the past two years at the Lakota Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. The discussion included whether media coverage of the suicides would be different if the victims were white teenagers.
"I think one of the main reasons for suicide is loss of identity and hope and with that comes deep despair," said Pat Cornish-Hall, a Munising resident who is just discovering her mother's Native American heritage. “I do believe that poverty certainly has an effect on suicide.”
Counselor Joni Peffers of Gwinn said the media should report on the trends of teen suicides in their area but not give the individual details of each attempt or death.
"Each suicide should not be publicized for many reasons," said Peffers, owner of Celtic Cove Counseling at K.I. Sawyer.
While agreeing that Native American teen suicides are often overlooked by the media, Peffers said even trends in white teenage suicides and attempts are not reported citing several recent cases in Marquette County.
TIP co-founder Rev. Dr. Lynn Hubbard said wars across the globe have been started in the name of religion - but “that is not the case with Native Americans who fought over the theft of land or hunting rights, never over differences in religious belief.”
"Native American never started a war over religious ideology," said Rev. Hubbard, TIP director and pastor of Eden on the Bay Lutheran church. "We (whites) are the kind of people who fight wars over religious ideology.
Hubbard said one of the goals of the TIP is to "give Native Americans a venue in which their voices can be heard and listened to.”
Summary of Turtle Island Project & TV sites:
Turtle Island Project main website:
http://www.turtleislandproject.org
Turtle Island TV (blipTV)
http://turtleislandtv.blip.tv/
Turtle Island TV (youtube)
http://www.youtube.com/MunisingWhiteHorse
Turtle Island (myspace)
http://www.myspace.com/TurtleIslandProject
Turtle Island Project websites/Blogs:
http://groups.msn.com/WhisperingTurtle
http://turtleislandproject.wordpress.com/
email:
TurtleIslandProject@charter.net
----Contact info for people quoted in news release:
Turtle Island Project founder/Director:
Rev. Dr. Lynn Hubbard
Eden on the Bay Evangelical Lutheran Church
1150 M-28 West
Munising, MI.
49862
wk: 906-387-2520
cell: 906-202-0590
----
Rev. Dr. George Cairns, TIP founder/board chairman
1-219-3959347
Research Professor of Practical Theology and Spirituality at Chicago Theological Seminary
lives in Chesterton, Indiana
ordained minister in the United Church of Christ---The Iona Community - Worldwide:
http://www.iona-nwf.org---Rum River Name Change Organization Inc.
Thomas Dahlheimer, director
P.O. Box 24
Wahkon, Minnesota
56386 Call: 320-495-3874
Minnesota H.F. No. 2503 introduced 85th Legislative Session (2007-2008) on May 18, 2007.
A bill to change 14 derogatory geographic place names offensive to American Indians introduced by Rep. Mike Jaros, D-District O7B (Duluth):
http://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/bin/bldbill.php?bill=H2503.0.html&session=ls85
Related information:
TeePee & fliers at July 2007 Anoka County sesquicentennial:
http://www.towahkon.org/tepee.html
Combating White Racism Against Indigenous Peoples:
http://www.towahkon.org/SEED.html
Solving The Alcohol Abuse Epidemic:
http://www.towahkon.org/sae.html
http://www.aaanativearts.com/printout683.html
Thomas Ivan Dahlheimer's articles and letters to the editor:
http://www.towahkon.org/articles.html
History of the Anoka Dakota Unity Alliance:
http://www.towahkon.org/alliance.html
http://www.dakotahomecoming.org/g5-bin/client.cgi?G5button=9294
Minnesota Apology for the Explotation of Native Amercans:
http://www.towahkon.org/apologyresolution.html
Minnesota Indian Affairs Draft Resolution:
http://www.towahkon.org/MIACdraftresolution.htmlhttp://www.astate.edu/mascot/NDNAIM_Fwd_Minnesota_Indian_Affairs_Council.pdf


Post new comment