Native American Student Association (NASA)

Native American Student Association (NASA) Stay up to date with N.A.S.A: http://eepurl.com/djCOJT

During Fall and Spring Semester:

Meeting Times: Thursdays 6:00pm Bowman 218

We are a student organization.

07/28/2019
Congratulations to our wonderful president Lyric Aquino! She’s been named a 2019 Native American Journalist Fellow and w...
04/22/2019

Congratulations to our wonderful president Lyric Aquino! She’s been named a 2019 Native American Journalist Fellow and will be working with native journalists from across the country and covering important news including their annual conference in Minnesota!

NORMAN, Okla. – The Native American Journalists Association (NAJA) has selected six first-year and five returning fellows to join the Native American Journalism Fellowship (NAJF) class of 2019.

04/16/2019

ATTENTION: The Native American Student Association at Kent State is planning on hosting a spring social celebration on April 27th 2019. We are looking for any volunteer dancers and drummers who would be willing to join us and celebrate vibrant native cultures! Food will be provided. Let us know if you’re interested by private message or email our president at [email protected] !

03/26/2019

In honor of

Lozen, sister of famous Chiricahua Apache leader Victorio, was a female warrior, military strategist, midwife, and medicine woman.

Geronimo’s people called her Woman Warrior. Her own Warm Springs Apaches called her Little Sister, and revered her as a holy person. An accomplished warrior and medicine woman, she could ride, shoot, and fight as well as a man.

All great Apache leaders had power, and Lozen’s was to know the location of the enemy. She would stand with outstretched arms, palms up, and pray. While turning slowly, her hands would tingle and the palms change color when they pointed toward the foe. The closer the enemy, the more intense the feeling.

In the 1870s, Victorio and his band of Apaches were moved to the wretched conditions of the San Carlos Reservation in Arizona, but left around 1877 and began marauding and raiding against Americans who had appropriated their homeland around western New Mexico's Black Mountain. Lozen fought beside Victorio while helping them avoid capture by the military.

Victorio said: “Lozen is as my right hand: strong as a man, braver than most, and cunning in strategy. Lozen is a shield to her people… I depend on Lozen as I do Nana.”

Late in Victorio’s campaign, Lozen left the band to es**rt a new mother and her newborn infant across the Chihuahuan Desert from Mexico to the Mescalero Apache Reservation, away from the hardships of the trail.

Equipped with only a rifle, a cartridge belt, a knife, and a three-day supply of food, Lozen set out with the mother and child on a dangerous journey through territory occupied by Mexican and U.S. Cavalry forces. En route, afraid that a gunshot would betray their presence, she used her knife to kill a longhorn, butchering it for the meat.

Lozen stole a Mexican cavalry horse for the new mother, escaping through a volley of gunfire. Next, she stole a vaquero’s horse for herself, disappearing before he could give chase, and soon also acquired a soldier’s saddle, rifle, ammunition, blanket, and canteen – and even his shirt. Finally, she safely delivered the mother and child to the reservation.

Taken into U. S. military custody after Geronimo’s final surrender, Lozen traveled as a prisoner of war to Mount Vernon Barracks in Alabama. Like many other imprisoned Apache warriors, she died in confinement of tuberculosis on June 17, 1889.

“Riding first into danger, as an example and leader, Lozen inspired pride in her fellow warriors. She was a model of fearless bravery and heroism, a person of humility, great knowledge, and power. Lozen holds a respected place among the Apache and continues to inspire women today.” – Valerie Rangel

03/13/2019

In honor of ...

Esther Martinez (Ohkay Owingeh) is a storyteller, linguist and teacher who dedicated herself to preserving the Tewa language of the Northern Pueblos of New Mexico.

"Esther has been a keeper of the language central to Pueblo expression and identity as well as a storyteller whose traditional tales both enlighten and entertain," NEA Chairman Dana Gioia said.

Storytelling is a part of the Tewa culture and a way of life, said Matthew Martinez, Mrs. Martinez's grandson. She was a natural and had a skill for conveying stories, he said. "She embodied what it meant to be a Tewa person and lived it and practiced it and served as a role model."

In November of 2017, Esther Martinez Native American Preservation Act was passed in the Senate! The Esther Martinez Native American Language Act aims to extend and update two grant programs administered by the Administration for Native Americans at the Department of Health and Human Services. These grant programs, the Native American Languages Preservation and Maintenance (P&M) grant program and the Esther Martinez Initiative (EMI) grant program, provide opportunities for tribal communities to assess, plan, develop, and implement projects that ensure the survival and continuing vitality of Native languages.

02/13/2019

Address

Kent State University ATTN: NASA CSI 226 KSC Box 60
Kent, OH
44240

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