Arts & Entertainment
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Indigenous author and illustrator team Laurel Goodluck and Steph Littlebird are coming out with a new children’s picture book titled FIERCE AUNTIES!, a celebration of what makes aunties so special. The book will be available for sale on April 15.
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- By Neely Bardwell
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The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian is featuring two gowns worn by Oscar-nominated actor Lily Gladstone (Blackfeet/Nez Perce) in a special installation called “Making a Statement.”
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- By Native News Online Staff
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With the 2025 Oscar nomination of Sugarcane in the documentary film category, the horrific history of Indian residential schools continues to garner more attention.
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- By Kaili Berg
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SULPHUR, Okla. – At the Chickasaw Nation, collaborations come in many shapes and sizes.
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- By Chickasaw Nation Media
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SWAIA Native Fashion Week (SNFW) is thrilled to renew its partnership with Vancouver Indigenous Fashion Week (VIFW) for the 2025 annual event, taking place May 7-11 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. This collaboration highlights SNFW’s dedication to Native leadership, mentorship, and excellence in the expanding Native fashion industry.
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- By Levi Rickert
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Rebecca Kunz recently became the first ever Cherokee artist to be awarded the Randolph Caldecott Medal for the most distinguished American picture book for her illustrations in Chooch Helped, a children’s book by Cherokee author Andrea L Rogers.
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- By Kaili Berg
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- By Kaili Berg
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The North American Indigenous Athletics Hall of Fame (NAIAHF) has revealed its 2025 class of inductees, honoring 71 individuals and four teams for their remarkable contributions to athletics. This year’s class features 42 athletes, alongside coaches, trainers, builders, and teams, continuing the Hall of Fame’s mission to spotlight the achievements of Indigenous sports figures across North America.
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- By Native News Online Staff
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The crystal waters of the St. Mary’s River in northern Michigan and southern Ontario once teemed with whitefish, a vital food source for the Anishinaabek people. But after two centuries of colonization, overfishing and invasive species, these culturally significant fish populations have declined sharply.
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- By Neely Bardwell
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When Ojibwe filmmaker Elizabeth Day joined Without Arrows as co-director, she knew the documentary needed to speak directly to Native audiences. That confirmation came during a recent test screening in Duluth, Minn., when the packed theater roared with laughter at a scene showing family members struggling to drag a fresh buffalo hide across the ground and heave it into a car trunk, blood staining everything in its path.
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- By Brian Edwards