黑料不打烊

CREDE starts Native American Heritage Month with dancing, food and pressing conversation

Jennifer Revels Baxter, president of the Guilford Native American Association delivered a keynote address on current issues facing Native American communities.

Authentic fry bread, traditional dancing and attire, and the reality of the 鈥渋nvisible community鈥 were the center of conversation during the Center for Race, Ethnicity and Diversity Education鈥檚 Native American Heritage Month keynote presentation on Nov. 2.

Jennifer Revels Baxter, president of the Guilford Native American Association, delivered the keynote address and displayed an opening slide that read, 鈥淲e are still here.鈥 North Carolina has a large presence of Native Americans with eight state-recognized tribes, including Baxter鈥檚 Lumbee Tribe. 鈥淚n many ways, we are viewed as something in the past,鈥 she said.

Baxter presented several issues plaguing the Native American community, like acknowledging Native American boarding schools that stripped young indigenous people of their culture. 鈥淢embers of my tribe were products of these boarding schools, and the mentality in the school was, 鈥楰ill the Indian save the man,鈥欌 said Baxter.

鈥淓very child deserves to know the truth and your textbooks didn鈥檛 teach you the truth about my people and our culture,鈥 Baxter said. 鈥淎s everyone should learn about the Holocaust, they should learn about the genocide that happened here.鈥

Also, she raised concerns about missing and murdered indigenous women, cultural appropriation and negative stereotypes. She implored about 35 students, faculty and staff to help bring awareness and change.

Rachel Dietert 鈥23, president of 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Native American Student Association, shared Baxter鈥檚 charge for other communities to assist in raising the issue of the Native community. 鈥淥ur community is not growing at the same rate as other races,鈥 she said. 鈥淭o have our issues prioritized we need to have the support of communities.鈥

Former Miss North Carolina Native American, Raven Dial-Stanley performing a traditional Native American dance.

Dietert鈥檚 tribal affiliation is Cherokee. Being from Houston and due to her appearance, Dietert encountered hardship embracing her heritage. 鈥淚 grew up learning about my grandma attending a Native American Boarding School and carrying my tribal enrollment card,鈥 she said. Still, others questioned if she was Cherokee. 鈥淟ooking Native was put onto us by colonialism,鈥 Diatert continued. 鈥淚 am not identifying as this for fun. It鈥檚 really a part of who I am.鈥

Baxter leading the GNAA isn鈥檛 random. She is the daughter of Lonnie Revels and Ruth Revels, both popular Greensboro activists. Ruth served as the first director of the GNAA, and Lonnie was a two-time city councilperson.

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Former Miss North Carolina Native American, Raven Dial-Stanley performed a traditional Native American dance and taught one to the group. She wore a jingle dress, which is regalia worn during different ceremonies, such as a Pow Wow. Befittingly, the event ended with the entire group holding hands in a circle, connected and embracing each other. Dancing from side to side, and then a rush into the middle with a loud yell in celebration of one another. Baxter said, 鈥淲hen we hold hands in this circle there isn鈥檛 someone that is first or last, we are all one.鈥