Skip to content
×
Support Us
Sign in or register for your free account
Your Profile
Your Subscriptions
Support Local News
Payment History
Sign Out
Registered Users
Already have an account?
Sign In
New Users
Create a free account.
Register
Support Local News
Sign up for Daily Headlines
Sign up for Notifications
Contact Us
Home
News
Local News
BC Votes 2024
In the Community
BC News
National News
Indigenous News
World News
Business Wire
Local Sports
National Sports
Cannabis News
Animal Stories
COVID-19
Opioid Crisis
Digital Edition
Opinion
Opinion
Send us a letter
Arts & Life
Local Arts
The Mix
Photos and Videos
Events Calendar
Automotive
Consumer Technology
Food
Health
More Lifestyles
Features
Weatherhood
Driving
Sponsored Content
Spotlight
Homes
Classifieds
View Classified Ads
Place a Classified Ad
Obituaries
View Obituaries
Place an Obituary
Connect
Contact Us
Daily Headlines Email
Support Local News
Search Type
Site
Search
Home
Indigenous News
Indigenous News
Peyote sacred to Native Americans threatened by psychedelic renaissance and development
HEBBRONVILLE, Texas (AP) — In this corner of southern Texas, the plump cacti seem to pop out of arid dust and cracked earth, like magic dumplings.
Dec 26, 2024 9:41 AM
Read more >
Why this Mexican American woman played a vital role in the US sacramental peyote trade
MIRANDO CITY, Texas (AP) — The late Amada Cardenas was called many things — the “angel of peyote,” the “peyote rose” or simply “Grandma Amada.
Dec 26, 2024 5:17 AM
Read more >
What is the Native American Church and why is peyote sacred to members?
The Native American Church is considered the most widespread religious movement among the Indigenous people of North America. It holds sacred the peyote cactus , which grows naturally only in some parts of southern Texas and northern Mexico.
Dec 26, 2024 5:12 AM
Read more >
Peyote sacred to Native Americans threatened by psychedelic renaissance and development
HEBBRONVILLE, Texas (AP) — In this corner of southern Texas, the plump cacti seem to pop out of arid dust and cracked earth, like magic dumplings.
Dec 26, 2024 5:07 AM
Read more >
Ontario First Nation challenging selection of underground nuclear waste site in court
A First Nation in northern Ontario is challenging the selection of a nearby region as the site of an underground repository that will hold Canada's nuclear waste, arguing in a court filing that it should have had a say in the matter as the site falls
Dec 24, 2024 11:41 AM
Read more >
Pioneering Métis human rights advocate Muriel Stanley Venne dies at 87
EDMONTON — Muriel Stanley Venne, a trail-blazing Métis woman known for her Indigenous rights advocacy, has died at 87. Venne, born in Lamont, Alta.
Dec 23, 2024 1:45 PM
Read more >
Second mudslide victim's body found as more high winds strike B.C. coast
High winds are again hitting the coast of British Columbia, as gusts surpassing 100 km/h have been reported at several outlying islands.
Dec 22, 2024 5:14 PM
Read more >
Gisèle Pelicot's Australian supporters are moved that their French heroine wore an Aboriginal scarf
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — A group of Gisèle Pelicot’s Australian admirers said Friday they're moved that the victim in France’s notorious drugging-and-rape case has acknowledged her distant supporters Down Under by wearing a scarf adorned with Abor
Dec 20, 2024 2:44 PM
Read more >
Amazon Indigenous community wins latest stage of court battle for lost territory
An Indigenous community in the Peruvian Amazon is celebrating a legal victory in the latest stage of its attempt to take back claimed ancestral rainforests .
Dec 20, 2024 12:17 PM
Read more >
Ottawa's proposed shift of elver wealth has a problem: some recipients don't want it
HALIFAX — Ottawa has hatched a plan to redistribute the wealth of Nova Scotia's baby eel harvest from large licence holders to hard-working, individual fishers like Suzy Edwards and Mark Weldon.
Dec 20, 2024 8:53 AM
Read more >
1
2
3
4
5
6
>
>>