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More than 40 Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples (MMIP) activists gathered outside the Oklahoma state capitol on Sunday to walk in honor of their loved ones.
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Someone vandalized the Million Dollar Elm, a symbolic tree located on the Osage Nation campus. The act left many in the community asking, 'why?'
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As a little Chickasaw-Choctaw girl living in Stigler, Oklahoma, Norma Howard and her seven siblings grew up on the same plot of land her grandmother had received after being forced to walk 500 miles from Mississippi to Oklahoma.
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Add one more accolade to legendary Oklahoma athlete Jim Thorpe’s trophy case.
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Rates are so bad in Native American communities that public health experts have asked the federal government to declare an emergency. Inadequate prenatal care may be partly to blame.
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At least 3,314 students, from elementary through high school, participated in an Indigenous language program at their public school in the 2022-23 school year. That’s over 1,000 more students than the previous school year and 2,500 more than in 2020-21, according to state data.
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The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals has recognized that the Wyandotte Reservation was never disestablished.
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Despite 10 nominations, the Oklahoma-shot film that tells the story of the Osage Reign of Terror claimed no Oscars.
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Are they creating new tropes while breaking new ground? And how committed is Hollywood to telling these stories?
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If Lily Gladstone wins an Oscar this Sunday for her portrayal of Mollie Burkhart in the film Killers of the Flower Moon, she’ll be the first Native American to take home the Best Actress statue.
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When it’s all said and done, about 3,000 households in the Osage Nation are expected to have more reliable internet access.
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New research shows that a majority of Indigenous languages in America are endangered. NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Native American language preservationist Alaina Tahlate.
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Lily Gladstone has won another major award for her portrayal of Mollie Burkhart in the film Killers of the Flower Moon.
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A Navajo musician has begun performing a song that will last as long as the Navajo Long Walk, the forced removal of the tribe from their desert homelands in the 1860s.