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All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life

All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life
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Manufacturer: South End Press
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This eagerly awaited non-fiction debut by acclaimed Native Environmental activist Winona LaDuke is a thoughtful and in-depth account of Native resistance to environmental and cultural degradation. LaDuke's unique understanding of Native ideas and people is born from long years of experience, and her analysis is deepened with inspiring testimonies by local Native activists sharing the struggle for survival. On each page of this volume, LaDuke speaks forcefully for self-determination and community. Hers is a beautiful and daring vision of political, spiritual, and ecological transformation. All Our Relations features chapters on the Seminoles, the Anishinaabeg, the Innu, the Northern Cheyenne, and the Mohawks, among others.

 

What Customers Say About All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life:

I ordered this book for my college students to read before we visited the Navajo Nation. The book was informative and gave the students good background into the current struggles of the Native American people. Students found the book easy to read and to comprehend key issues and concerns.

Because I've known many of the people involved in the essential work LaDuke describes in ALL OUR RELATIONS, it was a personal pleasure to read this book and catch up with what Susannah Santos and her cousins are doing on the Columbia River, be updated on Luana Busby and Melani Trask and the Hawaiian indigenous movement and to get the inside details of the complex political fight Winona's son's father and his people are up aqainst at St. What is most inpiring about LaDuke's writing and life is that she offers solutions. Since I met Winona when she was an economics student at Harvard, she has been at the heart of struggles and gains made by indigenous communities, always bringing a keen intellect, diligent research, unswerving commitment, and a broad vision of the whole circle to community and tribal issues. ALL OUR RELATIONS by Indigenous Activist Winona LaDuke is a must read for everyone who cares about our earth. Native Harvest and White Earth Land Recovery Project have reclaimed White Earth land and developed sustainable reservation businesses that employ and train White Earth tribal members. Winona is a mother who has no illusions about how the choices we make as consumers affect the earth and our communities' health.

LaDuke calls the work these tribal communities do to protect their people and landbase from pollution and corporate greed, "soul-retrieval." It is work that we all need to do whatever our ethnic background, since as LaDuke's reportage on the presence of PCBs in mother's breastmilk in the Northeast attests, everyone is affected by what we are doing to the earth.

James Bay.

Winona walks her talk.

LaDuke presents the state of the environment focusing on several land, treaty rights and toxic exposure struggles on reservations across North America and in Hawaii.

Each chapter not only outlines the problem, but it talks about solutions that are being implemented and suggests others that should be employed.

But this book will fascinate anyone who cares about our earth, families and communities.

It is one to read from end to end, then keep around to re-read again and again.

LaDuke has been a strong proponent of wind energy and has worked to engage major corporations like Ben & Jerry in developing wind energy projects on Indian Reservations in South Dakota.

Winona LaDuke would be a great President because she is the only public figure who has a sensible plan for economic self-sufficiency, the clarity to explain it to the American people, and the discipline and steadfastness to enact it.

These lands are also subject to divebombings from military jets. Even if people have the illusion that they can occupy land as territory (because of treaties, as an example) does not mean that it is ever their to keep. If I could, I would thank Winonah LaDuke in person for writing such an important, informative and engaging book on the travesty that is the North American government's view of native land and those who inhabit it. I couldn't agree more. We need to face the damage done before more of it goes unacknowledged. These are illegal decibel levels that drive those within hearing range to points of mental instability, as well as potential hearing loss. How can one possibly put a price on something that can't truly be owned by anyone and is its own autonomous entity.

We can't continue to pollute, abuse and neglect land without paying a price environmentally or in terms of human quality of life and mortaiity. The numerous tribes who make the land their home are forced to co-exist with the insensitive, selfish and literally toxic decisions made by government and corporations who dump tons upon tons of toxic pesticides in their water and on "abandoned" land. LaDuke makes several strong examples of this in the book. One of the most important quotes from this book that I remember (since I read this book a couple of years ago in a Native/African-American Women's Studies course) was from a Seminole leader who said, "Selling your land for a price is like selling a piece of your mother." [I paraphrase this]. When I remember that quote, I think about all of the animals, vegetation and tribes (consisting of families and friends) who have lived off of the land of the United States, as well as Canada. I believe everyone should read this book, regardless of occupation, national origin or territorial location. Thank you, Winonah.

Spoon-fed news by large media corps, few were aware that Winona LaDuke ran for the vice presidency under Ralph Nader in the 2000 elections. Although LaDuke has specifically focused on Native American communities, the stories are engaging and instructive for Americans in general. Even fewer know that she is also a Native American eco-philosopher with a critical perspective on the health and future prosperity of America. All Our Relations is particularly instructive, in that LaDuke surveys the entire American landscape (and by landscape, I am not merely referring to the political landscape), showing the deep connections that exist between local cultures, their environments, and the corporate-governmental giants that often compromise their health. Informative, powerful, and transformative, LaDuke here provides an antidote for our increasing alienation from the land and biota that sustain us. A must read for any conscious American.

Reading this book you will feel sorrow, and be inspired to action. Winona Laduke ran as vice president alongside Ralph Nader. It is my hope that some day she will be our vice president (or president). These are our forests, these are our ancestors."(p.5), by Ted Strong, "If this nation has a long way to go before all of our people are truly created equally without regard to race, religion, or national origin, it has even further to go before achieving anything that remotely resembles equal treatment for other creatures who called this land home before humans ever set foot upon it."(p.5), and by Katsi Cook, "Why is it we must change our lives, our way of life, to accommodate the corporations, and they are allowed to continue without changing any of their behavior."(p.12). She tells the stories of many Native American Tribes throughout North America (Canada and the United States, including a chapter on Hawaii). Her views on the environment and its effect upon animals and people (particularly babies, children and pregnant/nursing mothers) are exactly how I feel.

I can not recommend this book enough. It would be truly amazing if this woman had become our vice president (for many reasons). Most of what was said in this book I already knew a little about, but through this book I understood the depth and complexity of all the factors. She expresses these views eloquently in these quotes by Lil'wat grandmother Loretta Pascal, "Where did you get your right to destroy these forests. How does your right supercede my rights. She tells the truth of our world with a powerful clarity.

She ends the book with the optimism that it is possible for us to make change, but it is up to us.

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