Indigenous mother and child in traditional dress

The 黑料专区 office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion raises awareness about National Native American Heritage Month in November.

On November 27, 2020, the nation celebrated Native American Heritage Day. In 2009, former President Barack Obama signed 鈥淭he Native American Heritage Day Resolution,鈥 designating the Friday after Thanksgiving as 鈥淣ative American Heritage Day.鈥 After signing H.J. Res 40 into law he stated, 鈥淚t is also important for all of us to understand the rich culture, tradition, and history of Native Americans and their status today, and to appreciate the contributions that First Americans have made and will continue to make to our Nation.鈥 The resolution received unanimous support in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate.

On October 30, 2020, President Donald J. Trump issued a proclamation designating November 2020 as National Native American Heritage Month.

As we deepen our commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion,聽the 黑料专区 respectfully acknowledges that we are on the traditional, contemporary, and ancestral homelands of鈥痶he Anishinaabe – Council of Three Fires:鈥痶he Ojibwe/Chippewa, Odawa/Ottawa, and Potawatomi/Bod茅wadmi along with their neighbors the Seneca, Delaware, Fox, Shawnee, Loups, Miami and Wyandot who maintained, and continue to preserve lifeways along Detroit鈥檚 river banks and throughout the Great Lakes region. Through signing the Treaty of Detroit in 1807, Anishinaabek tribes鈥痗eded鈥痶he鈥痩and now occupied by the city we stand on.鈥 We recognize Michigan is home to 12 federally recognized tribes who continue to steward this land, in remembrance of their ancestors and thinking of future generations.

For more information, please explore the resources below that highlight local Native history, perspectives, and links to Detroit-area events.

 

  • (FREE)
    • Detroit Experience Factory: On this hour-long virtual tour, participants will learn about the history and current impact of Indigenous Peoples in Detroit.
    • Next event: Tuesday, January 5, at 6:00 pm (EST). You can register .
  • Maada’oonidiwag Series of Conversations about land, legacies, and one another.
    • These conversations are an effort to establish lines of communication and share information so as to move individuals, groups, and society in a new direction.
    • Link to the previous gathering –
    • Next event: online gathering in this series is next Tuesday, December 1, at 6:00 PM (EST). You can register here.
  • is a digital magazine dedicated to Indigenous voices, communities, and contemporary issues.
  • Detroit Urbanism: Uncovering the History of Our Roads, Borders, and Built Environment