UNCERD Raises Concerns Over Discriminatory Impacts of US/Mexico Border Wall
Mar 20, 2013 • The U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) recently issued an Early Warning and Urgent Action letter... Read More
The Pueblo people are a Native American people in the Southwestern United States. Their traditional economy is based on agriculture and trade. When first encountered by the Spanish in the 16th century, they were living in villages that the Spanish called pueblos, meaning “towns”. Of the 21 pueblos that exist today, Taos, Acoma, Zuni, and Hopi are the best-known. The main Pueblos are located primarily in Arizona, and New Mexico and also in Texas and formerly in Colorado.
Despite forced conversions to Catholicism (as evidenced by the establishment of a mission at each surviving pueblo) by the Spanish, the Pueblo tribes have been able to maintain much of their traditional lifestyle. There are now some 35,000 Pueblo Indians, living mostly in New Mexico and Arizona along the Rio Grande and Colorado River.
Text adapted from Wikipedia’s article on the Pueblo people
Apache Arapahoe Arikara Cherokee Cheyenne Chumash Comanche Coos Crow Dineh Havasupai Hawaiian Hoopa Hopi Houma Hualapai Inupiat Kalapuya Karuk Klallam Lakota Luiseno Maidu Mandan Maricopa Miwok Mojave Muscogee Navajo Oglala Ohlone Onondagega Onyotaaka Paiute Passamaquoddy Penobscot Pomo Pueblo Quapaw Quechan
Mar 20, 2013 • The U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) recently issued an Early Warning and Urgent Action letter... Read More
Oct 20, 2012 • Stephanie Adohi, a member of Workers World Party, speaks on the truth about Christopher Columbus, the Spanish mercenaries known... Read More
Nov 2, 2009 • In this month’s Underreported Struggles: Mexican Superior Court Orders Immediate Halt to Gold mine; Amazon mega-dams stoke new wave... Read More
May 5, 2007 • By focusing on the Native American struggle for spiritual and cultural autonomy on disputed lands in the U.S. Southwest,... Read More
"In a media landscape made up of lies, flash, giant blind spots and corporatized sites of distraction, Intercontinental Cry is a trustworthy pathway to the truth where people who are committed to understanding Indigenous realities can gain insight and information to illuminate and activate their struggles."
Don't miss our latest free eBook:
Indigenous Struggles 2012: Dispatches From the Fourth World