Examine current issues facing the Wampanoag people, the Native people who welcomed and helped the Pilgrims only to have their ...
U.S. Indigenous boarding schools of the late 1800s and early 1900s resulted in generational trauma. The Weetumuw School in ...
The state recognition — the first granted to a tribe in 48 years — is expected to usher in a new era for the state and the ...
The Cape Cod Times has featured an assortment of news stories this past week, including controversy in Texas over a book ...
It was the year 1621, and the Massachusetts Plymouth colonists and the Wampanoag Indians shared an autumn harvest feast, ...
The third Thursday of November is the National Day of Mourning for some Indigenous peoples. They are fighting for ecological ...
While the 1621 feast wasn’t called “Thanksgiving” at the time, it set the stage for a holiday that would become a cornerstone ...
The pews at the Old Indian Meetinghouse were packed full on Saturday morning, November 23, as more than 70 community members ...
The fourth Thursday in November marks Thanksgiving Day for most Americans. But to some, it’s the “National Day of Mourning.” ...
The Thanksgiving myth. The Pilgrims and the Wampanoag DID NOT have the first Thanksgiving.
Author Linda Coombs was surprised to find out earlier this year that the book was moved to the fiction shelf of a Texas library when a five-member panel in Montgomery County voted for the move after a ...
Traditional "first Thanksgiving" stories taught in schools tend to erase the true history, and the Native American ...