I am from the village of Shungnak, Shungnak is on the Kobuk River. Kids my age don't know much about ANCSA. My grandma would talk about how it was back than. She lives in the village of Shungnak. She told me how they got food, they would go to camp and move during the winter. She didn't worry about who owned the land, there wasn't a piece of paper that said anybody owned the land. In the reading it says, " Land was generally held by the group as a whole, with perhaps the exception of individual hunting or fishing camps. These boundries of control were not based on written documents or maps, but on actual traditions and practice." My grandma knew how to get food and knew how to live in the weather conditions because her parents taught her.
Today life is so different. Life is easier today. It was different for my grandma. Back then it wasn't so easy for my grandma to get to places, for me it is because now there is transportation. It also wasn't easy to get a good education, my grandma didn't graduate. Things are easier now. Back than it wasn't.
Today I think kids my age should know about ANCSA because it is important to know about what made Alaska how it is today.
Welcome to Effie Kokrine High School Early College !! In this blog you will find the comments, opinions and the learning of 14 incredibly bright high school students at Effie Kokrine High School in Fairbanks Alaska who have been brave enough to take a college level Freshmen Geography course called "Expedition Earth" The course covers Global Issues, past, present and future, under the context of Geography.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Interview
I interviewed my grandma the other day and it was quite interesting. They first had meetings in colleges dorms and living rooms and then the leader ship started to form called the AFN. She did went to the first few meetings. She told me that they started the meetings because when the oil was discovered they knew that the white people would take it away. She knew William Hensley, Sara Fema Shane, and Ruby Tensy (I'm not sure how to spell their names so you can correct me if I spelled it wrong). When she went to a restaurant called Country Kitchen which was also called Sugar Shack the manager/cook told her and her friends to sign up for Anchorage because since they were going to stay in Anchorage and not go back to the villages they might as well sign up. So my grandma sign herself, my mom Iva, and her nephew and now they are shareholders of CIRI. My grandma also told me that in the papers it said that having fedral owned lands is illegal. So now I'm curious about that topic and I hope you guys will too. Anyways when ANCSA passed she wasn't happy when they got 44 million acres after all the fighting they did. That was it for the interview.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Minority Business Benifits
I do not agree with minority business benifits. I think laws should uphold equal oppertunity regargless if you are a minority or majority. I also don't agree with laws that extract revenge or payback for past wrongs. The law should uphold things as they presently are, not try to fix things as they were. Sure, it shouldn't of happened, but it happened. it is not happening. It would not be just to give one business a bigger advantage over another.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Hensly was Right (Cont.)
Some people nowadays call Hensly a sellout and that all he wanted was money from the white man. i personally and strongly disagree. i think that we are far better off than the Natives in the lower 48 who actually were and still are in reservations. i honestly cant imagine my people on a reservation. Can you?
As Hensly says in his speach that he gave in '69 "When Alaska was first sighted in 1741, the Native population was about 74,700. thirteen years after Alaska was sold by the Russians, the population was decimated to 33,000. and the Eskimo population went from about 54,000 to 18,000 in just 150 years." i was just aastounded at how much we lost as a people and im honestly surprised we still survived. to me William Hensly is a hero.
As Hensly says in his speach that he gave in '69 "When Alaska was first sighted in 1741, the Native population was about 74,700. thirteen years after Alaska was sold by the Russians, the population was decimated to 33,000. and the Eskimo population went from about 54,000 to 18,000 in just 150 years." i was just aastounded at how much we lost as a people and im honestly surprised we still survived. to me William Hensly is a hero.
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