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Canada
Oct 23, 2025

Vatican expected to return dozens of Indigenous artifacts

The artifacts could be returned to Indigenous communities in Canada by 2026

The Vatican is expected to announce the return of dozens of Indigenous artifacts from its Anima Mundi museum back to Indigenous communities in Canada. The artifacts, including an Inuit kayak, could be returned by the end of the year, according to reporting done by Associated Press.

Negotiations for the return of the artifacts began in 2022, when Pope Francis met with Indigenous leaders to apologize for the church’s role in supporting residential boarding schools. During their visit, the leaders asked that the artifacts be returned to the community as a gesture of reconciliation.

Vatican and Canadian officials said they expect the announcement to occur in the coming weeks.

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
Civil rights
Oct 23, 2025

Native journalist and her great-grandmother inducted into Alaska Women’s Hall of Fame

The women were nominated separately

A Native journalist and her great-grandmother were inducted into Alaska Women’s Hall of Fame on October 21. Joaqlin Estus was one of Alaska’s first Native journalists. Before retiring, she worked as a national correspondent for Indian Country Today and a news director for KNBA. Estus is Lingít and lives in Anchorage.

Her great-grandmother, Matilda “Tillie” (Kinnon) Paul Tamaree, was a civil rights activist in the early 20th century. The women were nominated by different people. Estus said it’s an honor to be indicted alongside her great-grandmother.

Two other Alaska Natives, Katherine Gottlieb and the late Ada (Deluktuk) Blackjack Johnson, were also inducted into the Hall of Fame.

A recording of the induction ceremony can be found on the Alaska Women’s Hall of Fame website.

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
Call for applications
Oct 23, 2025

United Nations to provide funding for Indigenous peoples to attend major gatherings

The deadline is October 31. The U.N. event will be held in New York, April 20-May 1, 2026

The United Nations opened funding for Indigenous representatives to attend its major gatherings of Indigenous peoples, according to Grist. The 2026 U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues is focused on ensuring Indigenous health, particularly in the context of conflict. Indigenous representatives from all over the world will discuss issues including climate change and language loss. It will take place in New York from April 20 to May 1. Another gathering will take place July 13-17 in Geneva, Switzerland.

The U.N. Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples will help fund attendees’ transportation, accommodations and registration fees for either gathering. It’s calling for applicants who are actively engaging with promoting Indigenous rights, can demonstrate their contribution to the community and require financial support. Applicants need to provide a resume, a copy of their passport and a letter of recommendation from a community leader. They can fill out this form to apply by October 31. Additional information can be found in the U.N.’s call for applications.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Environmental stewardship
Oct 23, 2025

Millennium-old earthen sites demonstrate Indigenous farming skills

Researchers find Menominee’s ancestors cultivated land to raise plethora of crops

SciTech Daily reports that a team of Dartmouth University researchers have found an intricate system of raised agricultural beds in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula along the Menominee River. The formations cover more than two-thirds of a survey area at Sixty Island archaeological site, signs that early Native communities practiced intensive farming to grow corn, squash, beans and other crops in an area typically deemed cold and with too brief a growing season to sustain large crops.

“The scale of this agricultural system by ancestral Menominee communities is 10 times larger than what was previously estimated,” lead author Madeleine McLeester, an assistant professor of anthropology at Dartmouth, was quoted as saying. “That forces us to reconsider a number of preconceived ideas we have about agriculture not only in the region, but globally.”

The team’s findings are published in Science and build on previous work done at the request of the Menominee Tribe.

Brian Bull
Brian Bull
MMIP
Oct 22, 2025

Family of missing Spirit Lake citizen asks for search volunteers

Search for Jemini Posey planned for Oct. 25

A search for 23-year-old missing Spirit Lake citizen Jemini Posey is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 25. Posey’s sister, Jade Frier-Posey, encourages volunteers to show up in support. Posey was last seen by her boyfriend in January 2024. Her sister describes her as outgoing, cheerful and an incredible mother to her baby girl, now two years old.

“She is missed by a lot of people and we aren’t going to give up until we have justice for her,” Frier-Posey said.

A flyer with details for the search can be found on Facebook. A GoFundMe has been set up to help fund search efforts for Posey and care for her baby.

Jolan Kruse
Jolan Kruse
Spark image
Travel
Oct 22, 2025

North Dakota Badlands among National Geographic’s best places to visit in the world in 2026

This year’s list of top travel destinations includes world capitals and national parks

National Geographic highlighted the North Dakota Badlands as one of its 25 “Best of the World” must-visit destinations in 2026. Picked for their stunning scenery, adventurous excursions and rich history, the list also includes Québec, Canada; Beijing, China; and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to name a few.

The magazine says travelers should visit the Badlands for its "otherworldly landscape” that stretches on “seemingly forever.” It suggests visiting the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library, which opens July 4, 2026, and is located just outside of Medora, North Dakota, as well as the Three Affiliated Tribes National Park, which is adjacent to the Fort Berthold Reservation. The park is run by the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation and not yet fully open to the public.

Gabrielle Nelson
Gabrielle Nelson
Education
Oct 22, 2025

As federal government shutdown continues, Native education takes a hit in Idaho

Federal grants to reservation schools stop

With the federal government shutdown now in its third week, schools on Native reservations are already seeing grant money dry up, affecting a multitude of programs and services for students and their families.

IdahoEdNews.org reports that school districts on nontaxable federal land — which includes military bases — aren’t getting grants from the Impact Aid Program.

The National Association of Federally Impacted Schools says nine Idaho school districts and charters in fiscal year 2024 received roughly $9 million in Impact Aid basic support payments.

One affected district in Idaho, Lapwai, relies on the Impact Aid program for a third of its annual budget. Superintendent David Aiken told IdahoEdNews he’s worried about what a continued impasse in Congress could mean in the long term.

“What I’m really concerned about more than the government shutdown is the layoffs,” Aiken was quoted as saying. “The threatening of the layoffs at the U.S. Department of Education.”

Most federal money is still flowing in Idaho, including to the state’s Department of Education. But ImpactAid is one of the few federal programs that allocates funds directly to Idaho schools.

Adding to the frustration is the lack of communication during the shutdown. Impact Aid staff are employed through the U.S. Department of Education and not able to respond to messages while furloughed. Its website currently states that no emails or voicemails can be responded to while the shutdown continues.

Brian Bull
Brian Bull
Philanthropy
Oct 21, 2025

Young Indigenous leaders direct $720K in grants to fight food insecurity

Panel backs 24 projects via Indigenous Tomorrows Fund

Young Indigenous leaders helped distribute $720,000 in grants to address food insecurity in tribal communities, according to the Associated Press. The funding came from Newman’s Own Foundation and Novo Nordisk and was organized by Native Americans in Philanthropy.

Twenty-one Indigenous youth, ages 16 to 24, designed the selection criteria, reviewed applications and chose two dozen recipients for the Indigenous Tomorrows Fund. “Funders can listen to Native youth to know where they should direct resources,” Savannah Baber, program manager at Native Americans in Philanthropy, was quoted as saying. The initiative aims to expand next year’s funding to $1 million to continue supporting projects promoting food sovereignty and wellness.

Disaster Recovery
Oct 21, 2025

Indigenous Alaska villages face long recovery after Typhoon Halong

Kipnuk sees 90% destruction as 2,000 evacuate to Anchorage

The Indigenous villages of Kipnuk and Kwigillingok were among the hardest hit by the remnants of Typhoon Halong, which caused severe flooding and destruction across western Alaska, according to ICT. Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy requested a major disaster declaration, saying many displaced residents will not be able to return home for at least 18 months.

An estimated 90 percent of buildings in Kipnuk and 35 percent in Kwigillingok were destroyed, according to Alaska’s emergency management division. More than 2,000 people were evacuated to Anchorage. “My house drifted away,” Daryl John of the Native Village of Kipnuk was quoted as saying. “Everything is gone, our food supply, our clothes, everything.”

Child Welfare
Oct 21, 2025

Eight tribes’ child welfare data added to federal AFCARS dashboard

New entries include Cherokee and Navajo

For the first time, data from eight tribal nations is included in the federal Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System, according to The Imprint. The database tracks foster care and adoption information used by policymakers to shape child welfare programs.

The updated dashboard includes data from the Cherokee and Navajo nations, the Pascua Yaqui Tribe in Arizona, Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe in Washington and the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community in Michigan. The tribes receive funding through Title IV-E of the Social Security Act.

Angelique Day, a Ho-Chunk descendant and associate professor at the University of Washington, said the inclusion “has the potential to enhance our understanding of American Indians’ and Alaska Natives’ child welfare needs” and could improve resources for tribes.

Faith & Politics
Oct 21, 2025

Catholic leaders in western South Dakota reject decision to uphold Wounded Knee medals

Rapid City bishop and De Smet Jesuit Community denounce Hegseth’s decision

Catholic leaders in western South Dakota have issued a statement rejecting the defense secretary’s decision to affirm Medals of Honor awarded for the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre, according to reporting by South Dakota Searchlight.

The statement, released Oct. 20 by the Most Rev. Scott Bullock, bishop of Rapid City, and the De Smet Jesuit Community of West River, said the massacre “was not a battle” and that “those who died at Wounded Knee are sacred.” The leaders said the acts committed “were grave evils and cannot be honored.”

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced last month that the medals would not be rescinded, calling the massacre a “battle.” The Defense Department has not released the review panel’s report or responded to requests for a copy, according to South Dakota Searchlight.

Justice
Oct 15, 2025

Hawaii settlement ends penalties for midwives

Traditional practices will be protected

Hawaii reached a legal settlement this week with midwives and students that ends criminal penalties for midwifery care, according to reporting by News From the States. The settlement resolves a lawsuit over restrictions that had threatened practitioners with jail.

The Hawaii Legislature passed House Bill 1194 after the lawsuit was filed. State law now repeals many restrictions, removes criminal penalties, protects Native Hawaiian practices and allows students to train locally through apprenticeships. Licensing violations now bring civil fines instead of jail time.

The settlement, finalized Oct 15, adds constitutional protections for traditional Native Hawaiian midwifery. Advocates say that ending the criminal law should expand access to midwifery in Hawaii, where rural residents often face travel and added costs to give birth in Honolulu. A KFF report says Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander people have the highest risk for pregnancy-related deaths in the U.S. Maui-based midwife Ki‘inaniokalani Kaho‘ohanohano was quoted as saying, “We finally have a way forward to protect and pass down our sacred practices.”

Federal lawsuit
Oct 20, 2025

Oglala Sioux Tribe sues U.S. over policing on Pine Ridge

The situation is ‘catastrophic’: Tribe seeks a court order to fully fund and staff law enforcement

The Oglala Sioux Tribe filed a federal lawsuit Oct. 17 in the U.S. District Court for the District of South Dakota, Western Division, alleging the U.S. has failed to meet treaty and statutory duties to provide adequate law enforcement on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

The defendants are the United States, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Bureau of Indian Affairs leaders. The tribe asks the court to order the government to provide sufficient law enforcement resources. “There is a complete lack of adequate and effective law enforcement within the Tribe's Reservation, and the impacts to the Tribe and its members have been and continue to be catastrophic,” the tribe said in its complaint.

The complaint frames public safety as a treaty and trust obligation — not a discretionary program — rooted in the 1825 Treaty and the Fort Laramie Treaties of 1851 and 1868, and reinforced by later laws including the Snyder Act and the Indian Law Enforcement Reform Act of 1990.

According to the filing, only 33 officers and eight investigators currently serve Pine Ridge, far below federal benchmarks that would require as many as 150 officers, depending on the population used. The tribe cites the BIA’s minimum of 2.8 officers per 1,000 residents and ties the shortfall to federal funding decisions.

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Native Issues
Education
Oct 19, 2025

New Mexico’s Yazzie/Martinez draft plan draws criticism from Indigenous education advocates

Indigenous education experts and advocates criticized New Mexico’s draft action plan to address the Yazzie/Martinez court ruling, saying it lacks detail and meaningful community input, according to ICT. Regis Pecos, former governor of Cochiti Pueblo and co-director of the Leadership Institute at Santa Fe Indian School, said during a five-hour gathering north of Albuquerque that “we may be stuck with something that is unconscionable” if the Public Education Department does not make changes before submitting the final plan to the court in early November.

The 2018 Yazzie/Martinez decision found the state was violating its constitutional duty to provide adequate education to Native American and low-income students, English language learners and students with disabilities. Advocates said the department has not fully incorporated public feedback collected over several years, including at statewide meetings held in August, according to ICT.

Native Issues
Education
Oct 19, 2025

University of Kansas receives $1.5 million grant to train teachers for Native-serving schools

The University of Kansas received a $1.5 million grant from the Office of Indian Education in the U.S. Department of Education to collaborate with tribal nations and school districts in Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma, according to the Kansas Reflector. The five-year Southern Plains American Indian Teaching Pathways Project aims to prepare and mentor 15 teachers for Native-serving schools through a partnership that includes Haskell Indian Nations University.

Alex Red Corn, Osage, director of Indigenous studies at KU and lead principal investigator on the project, said the grant will provide a “funded pathway to full teacher licensure through KU and Haskell.” Students will receive financial support, including tuition, stipends and laptops, and will be required to work in Native-serving schools after graduation.

Native Issues
Digital Sovereignty
Oct 19, 2025

Tribal Broadband Bootcamps train Native communities to build their own networks

Tribal Broadband Bootcamps are helping Native communities gain hands-on experience building and maintaining broadband networks, according to reporting by ICT. Since 2021, nearly 20 bootcamps have trained more than 400 people from over 80 tribes across the United States.

Program co-founder Matt Rantanen, a Cree descendant, told ICT the bootcamps create a non-judgmental learning space where “everybody has something to learn, but everybody has something to contribute.” Instructor Davida Delmar, Navajo, said she encourages women to enter the male-dominated field, noting that more women are leading tribal internet service providers. The most recent bootcamp, hosted by the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians in Michigan, trained participants in fiber and wireless technology. “Together, we are advancing digital sovereignty for our people, now and for generations to come,” Dan Doyle, the tribe’s chief executive officer of enterprise operations, was quoted as saying.

Native Issues
Language Revitalization
Oct 19, 2025

Standing Rock educator named to UNESCO global task force

Tipiziwin Tolman, a Standing Rock Sioux Tribe member and descendant of the Spirit Lake Dakota, has been appointed to the UNESCO Ad-hoc Group 2: Indigenous Language Transmission and Resilience Building of the Global Task Force for the International Decade of Indigenous Languages, according to a news release.

Tolman, a doctoral candidate at Washington State University, focuses her research on Lakota and Dakota language pedagogy and literacy. “I’m honored to contribute to this global effort,” Tolman was quoted as saying. “Our languages carry the wisdom, laws, and lifeways of our people as learned from the land and water.” Audrey-Maude Perreault, Secretariat of the International Decade of Indigenous Languages, said Tolman’s expertise and commitment will “enrich the collective efforts to safeguard, support, and promote Indigenous languages worldwide.”

Native Issues
Youth Sports
Oct 16, 2025

Native All-American football game returns to Minneapolis in December

The Native All-American football game will return to U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Dec. 14, according to ICT. The event, featuring Indigenous high school football players from across the country, marks the fourth year of partnership between the National Football League and the Native American Athletic Foundation.

Executive Director Michael Stopp said the foundation aims to use sports to develop future leaders in Indian Country and will also host a flag football clinic for Native girls on Dec. 13. Brett Taber, Minnesota Vikings vice president of social impact, said the team values its partnership with Native communities in Minnesota and surrounding states. Former NFL players Ahman Green and Levi Horn will serve as head coaches, and Randy Fine will act as athletic director.

Native Issues
Disaster Response
Oct 16, 2025

Alaska airlifts residents from storm-hit coastal villages

Alaska officials are conducting one of the state’s largest airlifts to move hundreds of people from coastal villages devastated by the remnants of Typhoon Halong, according to the Associated Press. The storm brought record water levels to Kipnuk and Kwigillingok, washing away homes and killing at least one person. Two others remain missing, officials said.

Jeremy Zidek, spokesperson for the state emergency management office, said more than 1,000 residents from the two villages were being evacuated, with about 300 flown to Anchorage. Mark Roberts, the agency’s incident commander, said the focus is ensuring people are safe and warm while essential services are restored. State officials said some homes cannot be reoccupied, and local leaders have urged residents not to return due to safety concerns.

Buffalo's Fire staff may use generative AI as a tool to assist in summarizing information for The Daily Spark. Every micropost is reviewed by our team to ensure accuracy, clarity and relevance to Native American communities. See our Standards & Policies.