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The DAILY DIRT - The nitty and the gritty of outdoor news

Native American Activists Walk 3,000 Miles

All but the hardiest of thru-hikers would probably cap their desire to hike uninterrupted at a couple hundred miles or so. But marching for a cause can put fire into the feet of almost anyone. That's what happened when Native American activists and supporters left Alcatraz Island, Calif. on Feb. 11, bound for a 3,000-mile trek to Washington D.C., where they will deliver a two-inch-thick document detailing their concerns for environmental protection, sacred sites, and human rights on both reservations and public lands. Welcome to The Longest Walk 2.

Two groups, each numbering a few hundred people, have taken a northern and a southern route to the nation's capital to raise awareness, stopping at pivotal Native American historical sites along the way. The southern walkers, led by American Indian Movement co-founder and Leech Lake Ojibwe member Dennis Banks, are currently in New Mexico, and they will continue on through Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, North Carolina and Virginia. Choctaw tribe member Jimbo Simmons is guiding the northern group through Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Maryland.

In addition to promoting harmony with the Earth and social justice for indigenous people, the Longest Walk 2 commemorates the 30th anniversary of the original Longest Walk, which in 1978 started with 17 people but ended with 60,000 converging on Washington to protest legislation that would have abolished treaties protecting sovereignty rights for Native people. The original walk also helped pass the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978, which preserves traditional religious rights for Native Americans.

So far, people from places as far as Japan, Germany, Poland, Russia, Mexico, Argentina and Australia have joined and pledged to walk all the way with the Native American activists. Both groups are traveling with minimal support and without sponsors, but several cities, towns, and reservations have opened their doors to the determined travelers. Both groups expect to arrive in D.C. on July 11 where, after they deliver their message for change, they can hopefully sit down for a long, long time. — Ted Alvarez

Walk On (Reznet)

Via High country News' GOAT

For more information on The Longest Walk 2, visit http://www.sacredrun.org/

READERS COMMENTS

MY NAME IS REYNALDO ROMAN I DID NOT SUBSCRIBE TO BACKPACKER I AM RECS LETTERS WITH THE NAME RAY ROMAN RAY ROMAN THIS IS NOT MY SO PLEASE STOP SENDING ME THIS I SEND YOUR INVOICE BACK TO YOU THE ACCOUNT ON THE ON INVOICE IS 003043700095822554 THIS IS NOT ME
Posted: Jul 24, 2008 REYNALDO ROMAN

The only people that spread misinformation like the comment from William Turtleheart are eithe FBI or FBI informants. The mis-information that Mr. Turtleheart is spreading came directly out of the COINTELPRO playbook.

There are a lot of people out there walking, not just Dennis Banks, and none of them are doing it to serve him or AIM. They truly care about Sacred Sites, Human Rights, and an environment that the seventh generation would be proud to inherit.

However you feel about Dennis, put it aside and realize we are having an EARTH CRISIS, get off your complaining duff and DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!
Posted: Apr 15, 2008 FAN

This project is spoiled by lingering questions over the almost certain role Dennis Banks played in ordering the torture and murder of Ana Mae Aquash Pictu. Recent trials of one man convicted in this crime clearly cast heavy suspicion on Dennis Banks and many tribal leaders are expecting his indictment for this senseless and cruel murder. Like everyone involved with AIM, his hype is self'-serving and has never been supported by real Indian people...only by the naive and elite white liberal press. BTW, Banks and his earlier walk had ZERO to do with the passage of the American Indian Freedom of Religion Act...not sure where you got that information. Ojibway Artist
Posted: Apr 14, 2008 William Turtleheart

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