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The nonprofit Sundance Institute has been given a $4 million endowment gift from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria — the largest such endowment gift in the organization’s history.
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This story was originally published in The Colorado Sun. The Colorado Sun is a reader-supported news outlet and public benefit corporation. To learn more and subscribe for free newsletters, go to coloradosun.com. 

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Next month, the documentary film chronicling the United States government’s forced removal of Indigenous Peoples from their sacred Black Hills— “Lakota Nation vs. United States” — will premiere in New York and Los Angeles movie theaters.
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“The American Buffalo,” Ken Burns’ upcoming documentary, took four years to produce, but the idea behind it can be traced back more than 30 years.

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This week and next in Indian Country, there is an abundance of festivals, art markets and powwows.

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Dressed in traditional Native American clothing and with tears in her eyes, Sherry Pocknett made history as the first indigenous woman to win a James Beard Award for culinary excellence. 

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On May 17 at 8:34 am Nepal time, against the backdrop of Tibetan prayer flags, Dr. Jacob Weasel, a 36-year-old citizen of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, made history. Perched atop the Himalayas, Weasel became the first recorded Native American to summit Mount Everest. 
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NBC News and MSNBC contributor Alyssa London joined Native News Online’s editor Levi Rickert and senior staff reporter Jenna Kunze on this week’s Native Bidaské to discuss this coming Sunday’s The Culture Is; Indigenous Women that premieres Sunday, June 4 at 10 p.m.- EDT. on MSNBC.

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This week and next in Indian Country, there is an abundance of festivals, art markets and powwows.

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Since its premiere last weekend at the Cannes Film Festival, director Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon” has been praised by both members of the Osage Nation and critics, with major news outlets like The Guardian already labeling it an “American Classic.”