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         Indigenous Peoples Guatemala:     more books (48)
  1. The Tzutujil Mayas: Continuity and Change, 1250-1630 (Civilization of the American Indian Series) by Sandra L. Orellana, 1984-07
  2. Art and Society in a Highland Maya Community: The Altarpiece of Santiago Atitlán (The Linda Schele Series in Maya and Pre-Columbian Studies) by Allen J. Christenson, 2001-12-15
  3. Handbook to Life in the Ancient Maya World (Facts on File Library of World History) by Lynn V. Foster, 2002-01
  4. Maya Intellectual Renaissance: Identity, Representation, and Leadership (Linda Schele Series in Maya and Pre-Columbian Studies) by Victor D. Montejo, 2005-08-01
  5. Rituals of Sacrifice: Walking the Face of the Earth on the Sacred Path of the Sun by Vincent Stanzione, 2003-08-25
  6. Textile Traditions of Mesoamerica and the Andes: An Anthology

61. CIEPAC: Chiapas Al Día, No. 185
of the indigenous peoples and the second is the result of a gathering between theindigenous peoples of Chiapas and those of Ixcan, guatemala, regarding the
http://www.ciepac.org/bulletins/ingles/ing389.htm

CIEPAC

January 13, 2004 Declarations of the Indigenous Peoples THE INTERNATIONAL CANCUN DECLARATION OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
th th We, the international representatives of Indigenous Peoples, reunited here during the Fifth Ministerial Conference in Cancun, Mexico, from the 10 th to the 14 th of September, 2003, want to give our thanks to the Indigenous Peoples of Mexico, in particular the Indigenous Mayan People of Quintana Roo, for welcoming us.  We share the concerns of our Mexican indigenous brothers and sisters, as expressed in the Cancun Declaration of the National Indigenous Congress (CNI).  We add our voices to this International Declaration to those of the CNI, and to their conclusions and recommendations. We want to give special recognition and honour to our Korean brother, Mr. Lee-Kyung-Hae for his sacrifice carried out here in Cancun.  His act of self-immolation was an expression of cultural dignity which deeply reflects the daily reality of campesinos, peasants and the Indigenous peoples throughout the world, and the results of globalization and the free market.  We have come to Cancun to direct ourselves to the critical themes and the negative impacts of the WTO on our families, communities and nations. The growing impoverishment of indigenous and tribal coffee producers in the high summits of Guatemala, Mexico, Colombia, Vietnam, etc. due to the fall in the commodity prices for this product.

62. Indigenous Peoples
Menchu, R. (1984). I Rigoberta Menchu, an Indian Woman in guatemala. NewYork Verso. N. Nickel, JW (1994). Ethnocide and indigenous peoples.
http://www.gechs.uci.edu/Indeigenous.htm
Research Environmental Change Children at Risk Food Security ... Links
Indigenous Peoples References are listed in alphabetical order by author. If you have any other references to help build upon our current bibliographies please e-mail them to gechs@uci.edu Click on a letter of the alphabet to jump to the start of that section.
A
B C D ... Z
A
Anaya, James S. (1996). Indigenous Peoples in International Law . Oxford: University Press.
B
Brysk, A. (2000). From Tribal Village to Global Village: Indian Rights and International Relations in Latin America . Stanford: Stanford University Press
C
The Struggle for Land and the Fate of the Forests. The World Rainforest Movement; The Ecologist; Zed Books. Ecologists and ethical judgments . London: Chapman and Hall.
Cultural survival quarterly: World report on the rights of indigenous peoples and ethnic minorities is published by Cultural Survival, Inc., 46 Brattle St., Cambridge, MA 02138-3705. The summer 1996 issue features: Genes, people, and property. A furor erupts over genetic research on indigenous groups. Sample articles: Jean Christie, “Whose property, whose rights?”; Ruth Liloqula, “Value of life: Saving genes versus saving endangered peoples.”

63. CANCUN DECLARATION OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
for instance, under Plan Panama has destroyed ceremonial and sacred sites ofIndigenous peoples in the six States of Southern Mexico and in guatemala.
http://www.ifg.org/programs/indig/CancunDec.html
THE INTERNATIONAL CANCUN DECLARATION OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES th WTO Ministerial Conference - Cancun, Quintana Roo, Mexico, 12 September 2003 We, the international representatives of Indigenous Peoples gathered here during the 5 th WTO Ministerial Conference in Cancun, Mexico from 10-14 September 2003 wish to extend our thanks to the Indigenous Peoples of Mexico, particularly the Mayan Indigenous Peoples of Quintana Roo, for welcoming us. We share the concerns of our Indigenous brothers and sisters, as expressed in the Congreso Nacional Indigena Declaration of Cancun. We join our voices to this CNI Declaration and its conclusions and recommendations. We wish to especially recognize and honor the sacrifice of our Korean brother, Mr. Lee-Kyung-Hae, made here in Cancun. His act of self-immolation was a dignified cultural expression profoundly reflecting the daily reality of the effects of Globalization and liberalized trade on peasants and Indigenous Peoples throughout the world. We have come to Cancun to address critical issues and negative impacts of the WTO Trade Negotiations on our families, communities and nations. With the creation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and with the continuing imposition of the structural adjustment policies of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, our situation, as Indigenous Peoples, has turned from bad to worse. Corporations are given more rights and privileges at the expense of our rights. Our right to self-determination, which is to freely determine our political status and pursue our own economic, social and cultural development, and our rights to our territories and resources, to our indigenous knowledge, cultures and identities are grossly violated. Some of the prime examples of the adverse impacts of the WTO Agreements on us are the following:

64. Rights Speach
In guatemala, the indigenous Mayan peoples comprise the majority of the inhabitants,yet they are systematically excluded from government; and when they try to
http://www.yvwiiusdinvnohii.net/political/bosum.html

NLThomas
Indigenous Peoples' Rights
by Chief Abel Bosum
Ouje-Bougoumou Cree Nation Speech given on December 10th, 1994
at the Kennedy Library
Boston, Massachusettes
We like to think of the UN as a world government that is responsible for a kind of "universal sovereignty" laws that transcend the jurisdictions of individual States, or perhaps, law that cannot be entrusted to the single responsibility of individual States. In fact, if we examine the history of the UN, it is obvious that it was founded to establish and enforce a higher standard of ethical and moral behavior than individual States may practice. We all know that the establishment of the UN in San Francisco directly at the end of the Second World War, was in reaction to the horrors of the Nazi regime. The founding principle of the UN is that States do not have ultimate sovereignty with regard to the basic human rights and fundamental freedoms of their inhabitants; that this ultimate sovereignty is surrendered to the world body, and that although each State retains the responsibility to uphold and enforce human rights law, all States are subject to international oversight in this regard, and if necessary, international intervention. The speeches that were made at the founding of the UN note that the need for the world to act in solidarity against Hitler's Germany was this same principle of world solidarity that was applied to the apartheid regime in South Africa, resulting in the very positive developments that have occurred there recently. Of course there was no UN when Columbus landed in the so-called "New World," and from the look of things now, I would say that the Indians, the indigenous peoples of the Americans, could certainly have used a UN.

65. "the People's Paths!" Articles - International Day World's Indigenous People
2 Mr. Rene Godinez Garcia, indigenous Youth from guatemala, Movimiento de to education,and their respective relations to the lives of indigenous peoples.
http://www.yvwiiusdinvnohii.net/Articles2000/Samual000919IDWIP.htm

NLThomas
International Day World's Indigenous People
Report "Indigenous Children and Youth" As provided by Marie-Danielle Samuel
the People's Voice ~ Tuesday, September 19, 2000
The International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples
Dialogue: Indigenous Children and Youth, August 9, 2000.
On the afternoon of 9 August, a dialogue session was held on the theme of this year’s meeting of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations, namely “Indigenous Children and Youth”. Co-Chairs:
-Ms. Elissavet Stamatopoulou, Deputy Director OHCHR/NYO
-Ms. Tonya Gonnella Frichner, American Indian Law Alliance Panelists:
1- Mr. Olara Otunnu, SRSG for Children and Armed Conflict
2- Mr. Rene Godinez Garcia, Indigenous Youth from Guatemala, Movimiento de Jovenes Mayas por la Objeccion de Conciencia/CONAVIGUA
3- Mr. Kul Gautam, Deputy Executive Director, UNICEF
4- Mr. Bacre Waly Ndiaye, Director OHCHR/NYO 5- Mr. Evans Dwayne Eagle Child, Kainaiwa Nation, Alberta, Canada Panelists brought different perspectives on issues ranging from armed conflict to poverty to education, and their respective relations to the lives of indigenous peoples. 1- Mr. Otunnu began the dialogue by describing his role as an advocate for children. He then provided a brief historical backgrounder regarding the establishment of his office, stating that the genesis of his mandate was a 1996 report dealing with children and armed conflict.

66. University Of Minnesota Human Rights Library
journaling, maps, background information on guatemala, group discussion, and decisionmakingto examine relationships between indigenous peoples of the Western
http://www.umn.edu/humanrts/education/4thR-sm94/indigenous-sm94.htm
Human Rights Education: The 4th R, Human Rights Education
Resource Guide, Vol. 6, No.1 summer 1994.
Indigenous Peoples
A-Gay-Yah (1992). A Gender Equity Curriculum for Grades 6-12 . Tahlequah, Oklahoma: American Indian Resource Center. WEEA Publishing Center, 55 Chapel St., Newton, MA 02160. Classroom activities and teaching lessons exploring gender roles, stereotyping, prejudice, and their impact on todays society. Focuses on various Native American Tribes. Barreiro, Jose, and Carol Cornelius, eds. (1992). Knowledge of the Elders: The Iroquois Condolence Cane Tradition . Ithaca, NY: Cornell American Indian Program, 300 Caldwell Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, tel 607-255-6587. Curriculum booklet for 11th grades, focusing on the power of the living oral tradition. Caduto, J. Michael, and Joseph Bruchac (1988). Keepers of the Earth: Native American Stories and Environmental Activities for Children. Golden Colorado: Flucrum, Inc. $19.95. ISBN 1-55591-027-0. Keepers of the Earth Teacher Guide. ISBN 1-55591-040-8. $9.95.

67. Report From Alvaro Cendeno - Strategimidler 2003
Together with my colleague BjørnRichard Monsen we have decided to writeour thesis on indigenous peoples in guatemala. More specifically
http://www.sami.uit.no/oza/rapport/alvaro_cedeno.html
- NB! Senter for samiske studier har flyttet! Ny besøksadresse: 2. etasje, Hus 2, Teorifagbygget Universitetet i Tromsø
Jus
Realfag Medisin Marine fag ...
Gammen
STRATEGIMIDLER 2003

Prosject 200300843-19
Financial support to the project
"Guatemala:The peace process and its relationship to indigenous peoples"
we have decided to write our thesis on Indigenous Peoples in Guatemala. More specifically, what we have decided to research is the perceptions of civil society organizations in Guatemala about the role of MINUGUA (United Nations mission of verification of Human Rights for Guatemala) regarding Indigenous Peoples specifically. The Saami Center has provided us with funding to do the field work in Guatemala, which took place between June and September, 2003.
The experience has been a very fulfilling process of coming closer to a nation that has been trying to rebuild itself after 36 years of Civil War. During this conflict, Indigenous Peoples have suffered very much from direct and structural violence. Tens of thousands died, and even more were displaced from their lands and even from their country, forced to cross the border with Mexico in search of better living conditions.
Indigenous Peoples in Guatemala make up a very high percentage of the population. There are claims as high as 70%, and as low as 30%, which means that there are between 3 and 7 million Indigenous Peoples in this Central American country. The number depends basically on who provides them, and how Indigenous Peoples are counted. Besides, there are more than 20 different ethnic groups among them, which provides a very wide variety of cultural diversity in a country.

68. Defenders Of The Forests: Amnesty International Report
Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Paraguay andPeru) are State Parties to the indigenous and Tribal peoples Convention known
http://www.wrm.org.uy/peoples/amnesty.html
Defenders of the forests
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Press Release Americas: Indigenous people at high risk of human rights violations AI Index: AMR 01/008/2001
Publish date: 09/08/2001 As the world marks the International Day of the World's Indigenous People, native peoples continue to be the victims of human rights violations including killings and "disappearances" in many parts of the Americas, Amnesty International said today.
"Intimidation, harassment and violent attacks against indigenous communities are frequent occurrences in countries including Honduras, Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico and Venezuela," the organization added, calling on governments throughout the region to ensure the rights of indigenous people are fully respected.
In Colombia, indigenous communities find themselves increasingly caught up in the spiralling civil conflict and are targeted for attacks and killings both by army-backed paramilitaries and armed opposition groups accusing them in turns of collaborating with the other side.
Violence and threats against indigenous populations often take place in the context of disputes relating to the lands they live on and to the exploitation, by national and multinational companies, of natural resources on indigenous territories.

69. INDIGENOUS-FOLKLORE-TRADITIONS
outside world on an isolated indigenous tribe, the Many native peoples of the BrazilianAmazon have Semana Santa en guatemala (Easter in guatemala) Produced by
http://www.latinamericanstudies.villanova.edu/media/indigenous.htm
Log on Media Resources-Latin America Feature Films Historical Videos Videos on Indigenous Peoples
Videos on Current Issues
... Slides Latin American Studies Program Requirements Courses Faculty ...
Events
Villanova University Prospective Students Students Parents Your browser does not support JavaScript!
INDIGENOUS-FOLKLORE-TRADITIONS
City of the Gods
Hosted by John Rhys-Davies
Presented by New Dominion Pictures ; in association with the Archaeological
Videocassette (VHS)(28 min.)
Location: Instructional Media Services
Call Number: VT1186 VHS
Murals found at Teotihuacán site provide archaeologists with information about this ancient metropolis. Notes: Episode from the television program Archaeology. Credits: Host, John Rhys-Davies; Producers, Tom Naughton, Nicolas Valcour ; director, Bertrand Morin ; writer, George Bledsoe. The Fall of the Maya
An ARKIOS Production in association with the Archaeological Institute of America at Boston University and The Learning Channel. Videocassette (VHS)(23 min.)

70. OHCHR - Guatemala
work, OHCHR has collaborated with MINUGUA in the preparation of manuals and guidelineson the human rights for the indigenous peoples of guatemala, and in
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu2/5/guatemala.htm
Human Rights Field Presence in Guatemala
I. Contact data
Head: Birgit Gerstenberg
Project Coordinator Address: 13 calle 3-40, Zona 10
Edificio Torre Granito
(MINUGUA) 6, Nivel
Blvd. Los Proceres 18-67, Zona 10
Guatemala City Phone:
Mobile: (502) 708 99 27 Fax: E-mail: birgit.gerstenberg@undp.org II. Terms of reference / Legal authority
The Office was established as part of a technical co-operation project ( GUA/96/AH/13 ) signed by OHCHR with the Government of Guatemala in 1996.
The office's mandate concluded in September 2000. A final evaluation mission was carried out in June 2000. A new project document was signed with the Government of Guatemala in August 2001. The project was revised in 2002 and in 2003. In December 2003 an agreement was signed with Government of Guatemala to establish a new office with a monitoring mandate. III. Functions and mandate

71. Noticias.nl | Indigenous Peoples And The FTAA
of terror directed against Mayan peoples in guatemala. ruthless genocide againsther own peoples was aimed there is no reason for indigenous peoples, or, for
http://www.nadir.org/nadir/initiativ/agp/free/ftaa/noticias_nl/indigenious.htm
Indigenous peoples and the FTAA
http://www.noticias.nl/global_eng_artikel.php?id=291 An alternative summit, call for papers, panels and involvement Salle kondiarionk, Huron Reserve, Quebec City The proposal to create the FTAA extends a process of imperial globalization that began in 1492 and continues yet. Once again the geopolitical map of the Americas is about to be redrawn in ways that violate the titles, treaties and basic human rights of the hemisphere's First Nations. The FTAA continues the genocidal tradition which began with the founding of New Spain, New England, New France, New Netherlands etc as jurisdictions based on the absorption of Indian lands, usually without Indian consent. The USA's notorious violations of its 400 or so treaties with Indigenous peoples shows that the world's only remaining Superpower has no respect for the sanctity of treaties and for the requirements of living within the framework of international law. The USA added to its notorious reputation in 1871, when the American Congress passed a law excluding the American government from the international juridical principles as they then existed. From that time forward the USA has been an outlaw state in terms of its failure to respect even the limited requirements of international law mandating the purchase through treaty of Aboriginal title before non- Aboriginal settlement can proceed. From April 19-21, the Huron Reserve in Quebec City, the current capital of Wendake, will be the site of an alternative summit to highlight the many issues in and around the relationships of Indigenous peoples throughout the Americas to the proposed FTAA. The meetings will take place at Salle Kondiaronk on the Huron reserve at Loretteville. This community is situated about eight miles from downtown Quebec City.

72. BBC NEWS | Americas | Americas 'failing Native Peoples'
accuses of weakening guarantees on indigenous constitutional rights; guatemala whereAmnesty says almost nothing has been leader of the Xavante people fled his
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/2318757.stm
NEWS SPORT WEATHER WORLD SERVICE ... A-Z INDEX SEARCH
You are in: Americas News Front Page Africa Americas ... Programmes SERVICES Daily E-mail News Ticker Mobile/PDAs Text Only ... Help LANGUAGES EDITIONS Change to UK Friday, 11 October, 2002, 12:35 GMT 13:35 UK Americas 'failing native peoples'
Governments have failed to implement agreements
Governments throughout the Americas are failing to fulfil their commitments to the region's indigenous peoples, according to a new report. The human rights group Amnesty International says America's native peoples are still one of the most marginalised and poorest communities in the world, discriminated against and often exposed to grave abuses of their fundamental human rights. Many people are forced to sleep on the streets
Amnesty published the report to coincide with Columbus or Native American Day, when several countries celebrate the continent's multicultural heritage and mark the arrival in the Americas of Christopher Columbus in 1492. "Basic rights of indigenous communities, including the right to land and to cultural identity in the use of language, education and the administration of justice are systematically violated," the report says. "Racism and discrimination entrenched in most societies make indigenous people more vulnerable to human rights violations including torture and ill-treatment, 'disappearance' and unlawful killings," Amnesty argues.

73. CINE's International Activities
place during 2002, representatives and traditional authorities of indigenous peoples,Nations and in Panajachel, Sololá, at Lake Atitlán, guatemala, on April
http://www.cine.mcgill.ca/res_atitlan.htm
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' CONSULTATION ON THE RIGHT TO FOOD:
DECLARATION OF ATITLÁN, GUATEMALA
Reported by: Harriet Kuhnlein, Founding Director, Centre for Indigenous Peoples' Nutrition and Environment (CINE), McGill University, Montreal, QC; Bill Erasmus, National Chief, Dene Nation, Northwest Territories, Canada; and Carol Kalafatic, Program Coordinator, International Indian Treaty Council, New York, NY This summary is excerpted from the original Declaration, the intent and spirit of which the authors have attempted to retain as much as possible for the readers of the SCN News. The original text can be seen in its entirety on the website http://www.treatycouncil.org
Background
In preparation for the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, the World Food Summit: 5 Years Later, and the World Summit on Sustainable Development, all to take place during 2002, representatives and traditional authorities of Indigenous Peoples, Nations and organizations from 28 countries, gathered from all regions of the world in a meeting in Panajachel, Sololá, at Lake Atitlán, Guatemala, on April 17-18, 2002. The hosts for the meeting were the Maya Kaqchikel People. Objectives were to learn of the hardships faced by Indigenous Peoples with respect to food, to define common elements and strengthen ties of cooperation, and to prepare a strategy to overcome hardships related to food security and food sovereignty. It was recognized that Indigenous Peoples, as "the poorest of the poor" in many countries, face a higher risk of suffering and consequences of food insecurity, and that the situation appears to be worsening in many places.

74. GTZ - Indigenous Peoples In Latin America & The Caribbean
The majority of Latin America’s indigenous peoples live in Bolivia, guatemala,Ecuador, Mexico and Peru roughly 90% of the total Latin American indigenous
http://www.gtz.de/indigenas/english/
Indigenous Peoples
Home
Home
Introduction

German DC

Other donors

International

Instruments
DC approaches

Service

Glossary
Contact ... GTZ Home
The indigenous peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean are those sectors of the population which are historically related to the pre-colonial peoples of the American continent, that is to say, the "original inhabitants of the sub-continent". The estimates of their percentage of the total population differ greatly. Numbers vary from 12.6% (World Bank) to 7.2% (Instituto Indigenista Interamericano in Mexico). Overview These differences are not only the result of diverse definitions of indigenous peoples but are also due to their self-definition and the different methods of population census. The majority of Latin America’s indigenous peoples live in Bolivia Guatemala Ecuador Mexico and Peru - roughly 90% of the total Latin American indigenous population. Uruguay is the only country in Central and South America today with no indigenous population.

75. Financing Of Education In Guatemala
National Educational Plan in guatemala during the year 2000 and beyond, to ensurethat national budget allocations reflect the interests of indigenous peoples.
http://web.idrc.ca/en/ev-4253-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html
var static_ko="4253"; var static_section="201"; var static_langue="en"; IDRC.CA Research Activities Socioeconomic Equity Peacebuilding ... Political Economy of PB Education GUA Topic Explorer Peacebuilding
About the Initiative

Projects

By Region
...
Team Members

Participate
Editors
Eileen Alma
Lauraine Clement

Tahira Gonsalves

Élène Bérubé

ID: Added: 2002-06-21 8:26 (Ottawa) Modified: 2004-05-07 12:36 (Ottawa) Financing of Education in Guatemala (closed) IDRC Project Number: Status: closed Start Date: April 4, 2000 Completion Date: May 4, 2001 Responsible Officer: Colleen Duggan Background: One central area of reforms stipulated in both the Agreement on the Identity and Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Agreement on Socio-Economic Aspects and Agrarian Situation is education reform. The Joint Commission of Educational Reform (composed of government and indigenous representatives) has elaborated a broad Design of Educational Reform , which envisions a high-quality, universal, multicultural, bilingual, and participatory education system. The Consultative Commission on Educational Reform (composed of representatives of the government, indigenous groups, universities, teachers, private schools, churches, and the private sector) has taken up this Design and is putting together a National Educational Plan for the next 20 years.

76. 4-Patents: Indigenous Peoples' Statement On TRIPs
los Ninos Mayas de guatemala, guatemala 36 Rattanakanjangrii, IMPECT (InterMountainPeoples Education and Mangte, Indian Confederation of indigenous and Tribal
http://www.gene.ch/genet/1999/Sep/msg00058.html
GENET archive [Index] [Thread]
4-Patents: Indigenous peoples' statement on TRIPs
  • To Subject 4-Patents: Indigenous peoples' statement on TRIPs From Date: Tue, 21 Sep 99 11:45:42 +0200 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Sender: owner-genet-news@xs4all.nl
mailinglist genet-news - GENET-news - TITLE: Indigenous peoples¹statement on TRIPs SOURCE: Tebtebba Foundation, Philippines, tebtebba@skyinet.net DATE: September 13, 1999 - archive: http://www.gene.ch/

77. Opposition To Columbus Day
International Indian Treaty Council (IITC), the Working Group on indigenous Peopleto move military leaders of the death squad governments of guatemala and the
http://www.aimovement.org/moipr/columbus-oct00.html
PRESS STATEMENT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE WORLDWIDE
October 6, 2000 Ministry for Information,
American Indian Movement Grand Governing Council Press Contact:
WaBun-Inini, Ind-diz-Nikaz
Anishinabe Ojibwe Nation
aka, Vernon Bellecourt, National Representative
Phone: 612-721-3914 Fax: 612-721-7826
aimggc@worldnet.att.net

www.aimovment.org

RE: Indigenous People's Opposition to Celebration and Glorification of
Colonial Pirate Christopher Columbus
As we enter the new Millennium on October 9 or 12, 2000, the settler governments and peoples of North, Central and South America, who occupy the lands of various Indigenous nations of peoples, will again celebrate with holiday parades and festivals the invasion of our sacred lands by the colonial pirate Christopher Columbus. Columbus was the beginning of the American holocaust, ethnic cleansing characterized by murder, torture, raping, pillaging, robbery, slavery, kidnapping, and forced removals of Indian people from their homelands. To our Italian American friends, we say that to celebrate the legacy of this murderer is an affront to all Indian peoples, and others who truly understand this history. It would be the same as if German people would celebrate and glorify Adolf Hitler and the rise of fascism, and the Nazi holocaust by holding parades through the Jewish communities of America and throughout the world. We unequivocally support the right of Indian peoples of all the Americas along with friends and supporters to peacefully hold demonstrations and vigils, and exercise firm and resolute civil disobedience against any groups, religious, other organizations, and governments who continue to insist on celebrating and glorifying the murderous Columbus with parades, festivals, and celebrations.

78. Robert Leon Photographer - Photojournalism, Feature Stories, Travel Photography,
guatemala images of guatemala image of guatemala pictures of guatemala picture ofguatemala picture. indigenous photography of indigenous people photographs of
http://www.robertleon.com/index.php
Welcome to the online image gallery of photojournalism, reportage photography, travel photography, feature stories, photo essays and stock photography from destinations worldwide. This photography website features realistic photojournalism about humanity and our planet, travel, festivals, geography, indigenous cultures and rituals photography in this website is suitable for people of all ages including children interested in photojournalism featuring the World's diverse cultures, travel photography, adventure travel, exotic cultures, familiar cultures, festivals, and the Earth's geography. Contact Robert Leon to arrange image licensing or assignment photography for use in magazines, books, private photography collections, and websites where photojournalism, travel photography and location photography are required
Robert Leon is a photojournalist and adventure travel photographer with 23 years of professional photography experience. He is based in Vancouver Canada and photographs reportages and feature stories around the World with the aim of creating awareness and understanding of the Earth, cultures and nature for both present and future generations.
SiteMap
photography SiteMap
Site Map
Robert Leon photographer : Location Photography Map ...

79. LookSmart - Directory - Indigenous People In Guatemala
indigenous People in guatemala Read anthropological papers, and find outabout groups working to strengthen the Mayan community in guatemala.
http://search.looksmart.com/p/browse/us1/us317916/us559898/us560156/us560161/us5
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IN the directory this category
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Indigenous People in Guatemala - Read anthropological papers, and find out about groups working to strengthen the Mayan community in Guatemala.
Directory Listings About
  • Int'l Devpt. Research Ctr - Maya Biosphere Reserve
    Read about efforts in the Maya Biosphere Reserve to achieve sustainable development. Explains ProPeten, the branch of Conservation International.
    Mayan Connection, Los Cimientos Alliance

    Partnership between the peoples of the United States and Los Cimientos describes its projects, including the building of a cultural center.
    Pan-Mayanism and Multiculturalism in Guatemala

    Read a paper by Kay B. Warren on the role of the Pan-Mayan political movement in postwar Guatemala.
  • We're always looking for ways to improve your search experience. Tell us how we're doing. Join the Zeal community and help build the "Indigenous People in Guatemala" Directory Category
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    80. LookSmart - Directory - Indigenous People Maya
    an essay that tells about the Maya Indian in guatemala, Honduras, Mexico Join theZeal community and help build the indigenous People Maya Directory Category.
    http://search.looksmart.com/p/browse/us1/us317916/us147916/us10133057/us10133523
    @import url(/css/us/style.css); @import url(/css/us/searchResult1.css); Home
    IN the directory this category
    YOU ARE HERE Home Society Indigenous Peoples
    Indigenous People Maya - Access data resources, some photos, history, culture, art, and traditions of the Mayan people.
    Directory Listings About
  • Arte Maya Tzutuhil Museum and Gallery
    Featuring oil painting by Mayans from the country's highlands. Also displays textiles and photography and presents historical background.
    Fundación Agri-Cultura Marcos Orozco

    Review the mission and the history of this organization that is focused on those in Guatemala and the Mayan culture.
    Mayan Culture, Oddities, and Games

    Browse sections on Mayan foods, religious beliefs, games of chance, hieroglyphics, and beauty. Also includes Maya date t-shirt sales.
    Mayan Folktales

    Five traditional stories in English translation as told by Don Pedro Miguel Say of Guatemala.
    Mayan Splendorous Culture
    Briefly presents Mayan history, art and culture. Includes a chronology and photos of sculpture. Planet Papers - Mayan Indians Read an essay that tells about the Maya Indian in Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Belize, and El Salvador.
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