As a person of Native American descent (Chiricahua Apache), I would love to eat the food that Sean Sherman is cooking. It's such a wonderful idea to prepare meals from only foods our people ate in the past.
I don't intend to insult, but what does it mean to prepare meals "from only [your] foods [your] people ate in the past"? What foods count as such, and what foods don't? This matters because no human culture is immune to outside influence/syncretism, and Native American cuisines were likely influenced by each other as well as Old World influences once contact with it was established, and it's to the point where it's impossible to tell what's "native" and what isn't, if such an endeavor is even worthwhile. What you accept and what you reject says a lot about how you define your cultural identity vis-a-vis other identities you are in contact with more than it says anything about some imaginary past.
Braulio R. You should try fry bread it isn’t the most authentic. It’s post colonial but it is delicious and easy to make. I can tell you how to make it
I'm a third generation Ojibwe mix, with my grandmother being full blooded, and I never got the chance to grow up within my peoples' culture. So seeing this and the efforts being taken to preserve our history gives me hope that I can educate myself, and one day, my children, about how much we've lost but even more importantly what we're taking back
@moptop guap I meant getting to know and learn my culture, not literally be 100%. Like, knowing the traditions and celebrating like the rest of my family. Not the plain milk bread suburbia experience that I grew up with. Not looking for recognition, I'm looking for knowledge so that the traditions dont die out
@moptop guap Ojibwe has 1/4 blood quantum laws. Since OCs grandma is full blood OC is technically seen as an ojibwe in here tribe. NO ONE OUTSIDE OF A TRIBE CAN DETERMINE WETHER OR NOT A NATIVE IS OR ISNT NATIVE ENOUGH. TRIBES THAT TRY AND STAY FULL BLOOD ONLY END UP DYING OUT. THATS THE REAL PROBLEM. If you don't understand is natives don't speak for us.
@Lee Natives are those whose bodied aka DNA adapted to an environment making them genetically varied from other locations. White, Asian, Black and Pacific Islanders are not native to the Americas. Their genetics are still more well adapted to their ancestral homelands than to the Americas. Their DNA has yet to adapt to a new environment.
People need to understand that ALL of America is native land and native food not only includes north American native but south and central America as well. Tortillas, corn, tomatoes, vanilla, chocolate, and so many other foods are all native. There is a rich history and we owe the natives for a lot such as the potato to the Peruvian natives who cultivated it.
Even tortillas have been anglicized by Spaniards, originally called "laxcalli" in the native Nahuatl language, the Hispanic colonizers would see that they resembled "tortas" (flat cakes) and change how they're processed and garnished to suit their own tastes. Luckily, the old traditions of making them can be found in the South of Mexico, and in Central & South America.
Hi AGADOR …….i was commenting on this page when i come across yours and all what you just said in your mommnet was so impressive and amazing, that's why i text you. I'm so sorry for mommenting on public….well joy i wold like us to be friend if you don't mind? this is my gmail raymondgogolf@gmail.com you can text me if you're ok with Hmy message when you get it. please this gmail is only for ……AGADOR .GOD bless you
I belong to two tribal councils in western Massachusetts. Sorry but a lot of what you think or hear about how we we're treated simply isn't true. Not to the extent most would have you believe. Many leaders of tribes sold out their own people so don't be so quick to blame the white men. In both my tribal councils their are people of all colors because we are all mixed. I wish we could take that approach towards our history and not the made up myths about how evil the white man is or was or how bad the government treated our people. In our two group's there are white, black and every shade in between and we don't judge someone by their skin color, be it white or any other!!!
@Heidi Yodel chill the fuck out and reread your comment before causing more negativity. You may be trying to say "nobody cares and that's sad." but it comes across as "nobody cares and neither do i."
As I watch this I’m hanging out in my kitchen working on a Three Sisters salad. Is anybody else watching this going ‘oh my god there’s only half a jar of those seeds’?
I'm not native American But damn I love their culture Your ngaā tupuna(ancestors) would be proud of what y'all are doing From the Pacific🇵🇬 ❤️ to the Americas Roroā naē matahou(love from us)
One of the strongest and most beautiful cultures, and people in history. Stayed strong despite all the evil things done to them!! Shout out to all the Native tribes out there!!! May all the gods bless you all.
First thing you can do to help us out is to learn that there are different cultures. Not all natives are the same but there are many groups that are similar. Southeastern tribes like mvscogee,Cherokee,Shawnee, and Natchez are similar. Southwestern tribes like navajo, Apache,Ute,Tohono oodamo, and Hopi are similar. Northern tribes like mohawk, ojibwe,odawa, Lakota,nakota and Dakota are also similar.
they do not need help. perhaps freedom and human rights can be forced on the government , we could write letters ,e-mail the gov. in the state we live in , tell them to honor the treaties of the mid 1800s. we have been lied to about the people by the government for as long as there has been one, we were and are being used by the government so it could steal everything from them.
If there’s is any group in the US that deserves the most support for the way they were treated, it’s the Native American people and the South American people who are rarely talked about in their “disappearance”
How about just having compassion for everyone? I mean there are people in the US actively being targeted for violence. My ancestors walked the Trail of Tears but I didn't. Help whoever needs help right now. Giving one ethnicity special status is how the genocide started.
This video pleases me. I busted my mind and fingers writing up a literature review about introducing indigenous foods into an institution (UBC) food system.
I am going to keep sharing the real stories I learned with my children!! We must share as much as we can to spread true education and protect the original habitant of our country!
Watching this makes me want to cry. I lost my only connection to my native roots last month & I feel completely lost. I have a whole part of me missing. To all my people with both African and indigenous roots we have to reconnect. I don't know what my true cultures are & I need to find them. I don't think I'll ever Know what tribes (African or native) that I'm from but I have to reconnect with the base of my cultures through food & belief/ tradition.
Finding a native tribe isn't hard you just need to look through tribal rolls for a specific person's name. As for African tribe there is a dna test for people who are African through out their entire maternal blood line. It will help you identify your tribe
@@alexandrahenderson4368 that's only 5 tribes out of hundreds, Only a handful are documented. My family would have been on a reserve if they were accepted in the rolls. I'm a native mix on both sides of my family as well an African mix. Its just not that simple. My families are southern & old almost nothing is documented most didn't/ don't even have birth certificates.
@@queenditty2783 that's true. I only know 3/4 of my tribes because my grandma was taken from her reservation in Oklahoma. She doesn't know the tribe or anything just her grandma's name.
@@queenditty2783 there are much more than five tribes in Oklahoma. If your family has no birth records or anything then you can't enroll but if you know parts of the native culture you can pinpoint what area they were from. Like give me an example of a word or traditional object or something and I can help you figure out the tribes that have that.
This is big! It's about time we recognized the indigenous community heritage and history 👏 amazing! The Urbanization of America has created a chasm between are two worlds 🌎
Just found out our ancestors were of the Pueblo Natives from ages ago, feels good to finally put some pieces together and things make sense. Grandma held back on telling stories until she passed. Trying to learn as much as we can, including foods and how we can keep those stories going. She lived in a mud hut and they grew everything they ate, hoping to get some art and other things to support our newfound family. Wish there was a way to find out even more, but happy to have some puzzle pieces of who we are....
I love this. My family has been in Pennsylvania by the Appalachian Trail since the founding of the town (I joke.) I found an old picture in an ancestor book my aunt put together. There was a child who looked Native in one of the pictures. Did a DNA test and unfortunately, nothing indigenous to North America. I’m close to Carlisle where the boarding school was. My family likely bought a Native child for slave labor. I still feel very connected to this land in particular and I grieve what we did here. Edit to add: Can you do videos like this on specific areas each? That would be awesome! 🙂
I'm a simple white girl and I don't know why but this video gives me hope and despite all that people may say that humanity is defined by whether it be politics or technology or disconnection from nature what I feel it is to be human is simple: people simply peeling corn and cooking and defining purpose in it that's where the word human I feel it belongs
Interesting mix. Klamath and Modoc is a common heritage, those tribes with seminole however is something I've never encountered. Crazy to think such vastly different cultures are just seen as a native American monolith to so many people.
Dude I get in trouble at home because I like the Choctaw and modoc tribes more than my tribes. 😂 Modoc language just sounds better than Shawnee and Cherokee
I think it's beautiful the feathers of these gorgeous eagles are living and I'm happy F&G are supplying to Indigenous people. But it is very sad to see their dead bodies and know too often it's caused by man.
Wow... I love videos that were only recommended to me because of a corporation's myopic desire for self aggrandizement, and incessant need for projecting their facile virtue onto their consumers.
Fact. But do you know Jesus? That's what matters most. This subversive TRASH is infuriating, but we're still called to love on another. So arm up with the Bible, rebuke this deceitful hate bait crap in the name of the Lord and stand strong in Christ. Best way to push this social programming back into the hellfire it spawned out of. The enemy wants to get people back to their pagan practices and traditions. Pay attention and you will notice. God bless.
I learned more about the local Native Americans in this video then doing research on their tribes websites :/ I live in WA and I really, REALLY want to support the local tribes and learn more about their history and culture, see their ceremonies (if they let outsiders in) and so on...but damn if it's not hard! The most local tribe is the Muckleshoot, but their website is just...barren for anything (this was before the virus). I wish I could learn more about their tribe :(
Love these stuff..IRRI INthe philippined has an underground...2stories of rice and other cereal seed banks...some frigid rooms..bolivian/andean farmers have asimilar wild potato seed banks too..so cool.
Lonely Spirit It means there’s not a “Native American” way to be. The tribal people were many different tribes. They’re not all about the same just because their skin looks similar.
@@johnsinclair6170 - These are First Nations speaking on behalf of themselves and they never claimed that. They not only make sure to mention their specific tribe affiliation, but are also considerate of supporting all other tribes. Indigenous natives only make up 3% of the population, so it's necessary to their survival that they collaborate in unison to bring back cuisine, heirlooms, art, history, etc. for every tribe. For instance, the chef doesn't just talk about Sioux-related cuisine, but his mission to revitalize Native American cuisine as a whole. 0:24 "Native culture exists in ALL parts of America" then he specifies that 2:08 "As we travel around the country, we like to make foods that represent those areas." And at 3:43, you see that the seed library isn't just focused on revitalizing extinct seeds from the Pottawatomi tribe, but also of every other tribe such as Cherokee, Narragansett, Shawnee, Mesquakie, Osage, Arikara, Ojibwe, Mandan, Winnebago etc. from states like North Carolina, Rhode Island, Kansas, Iowa, Michigan, Tennessee, Nebraska, Wisconsin, etc. and even from colonized indigenous-countries like Mexico and Bolivia. It's no different than Middle-Eastern Arabs congregating together to celebrate their culture during Ramadan or during Arabian Festivals. The same can also be said of Latinos, who despite having cultural variances from their respective Latin American countries, will still come together during music festivals or latin parades. In America, congregating like this is normal, especially when we're more likely to be scattered all over to the point that anyone resembling the same taste and music and food is considered our brothers and sisters. So Misterrr.... uh, John Sinclair, is it? That's your name? Look John, I get that you're trying to be insightful, but you're clearly just an outsider looking in.
Thank you for sharing! Indigenous foods are the best and healthiest. None of the commercialized, fatty, prepackaged junk for me. I love seeing natives prospering, wonderful!
I am a decendant of the chief Sitting Bull in the Lakota tribe, Google says there's only 2 known decendants of sitting bull, but my dad's side is related
As a person of Native American descent (Chiricahua Apache), I would love to eat the food that Sean Sherman is cooking. It's such a wonderful idea to prepare meals from only foods our people ate in the past.
I feel that, I'm Mescalero Apache and I think this is a lovely idea
I am not Native American at all, but I thought the food was amazing. Looks extremely healthy and inviting.
As a person I would like to eat a different type of cuisine :)
@Steven Universe jeez you are everywhere in this videos comment section arent you?
I don't intend to insult, but what does it mean to prepare meals "from only [your] foods [your] people ate in the past"? What foods count as such, and what foods don't? This matters because no human culture is immune to outside influence/syncretism, and Native American cuisines were likely influenced by each other as well as Old World influences once contact with it was established, and it's to the point where it's impossible to tell what's "native" and what isn't, if such an endeavor is even worthwhile.
What you accept and what you reject says a lot about how you define your cultural identity vis-a-vis other identities you are in contact with more than it says anything about some imaginary past.
I don't know why but the seeds being almost extinct make me a little sad
I no
@@stbeal64 "I no" ?
Captain Calamari yea he nose
@@massimoaiello8557 he does indeed 👃
When he said it makes the corn feel good i was so happy about it
This video just made me realize I have never had Native American food, in the Americas, except for Mexican dishes that have roots in Aztec cuisine.
Braulio R. You should try fry bread it isn’t the most authentic. It’s post colonial but it is delicious and easy to make. I can tell you how to make it
@Steven Universe Damn like how pathetic are you to be everywhere in this comment section
Steven Universe nah you mix buttermilk and flour until a dough forms then you fry it until golden brown
@Steven Universe For someone that once defied gender stereotypes, you arent really tolerant are ya?
Aztec isn't really what we consider Native Americans. If you look at the history Aztecs & Native "Americans" they didn't get along
I'm a third generation Ojibwe mix, with my grandmother being full blooded, and I never got the chance to grow up within my peoples' culture. So seeing this and the efforts being taken to preserve our history gives me hope that I can educate myself, and one day, my children, about how much we've lost but even more importantly what we're taking back
@moptop guap I meant getting to know and learn my culture, not literally be 100%. Like, knowing the traditions and celebrating like the rest of my family. Not the plain milk bread suburbia experience that I grew up with. Not looking for recognition, I'm looking for knowledge so that the traditions dont die out
@moptop guap Ojibwe has 1/4 blood quantum laws. Since OCs grandma is full blood OC is technically seen as an ojibwe in here tribe. NO ONE OUTSIDE OF A TRIBE CAN DETERMINE WETHER OR NOT A NATIVE IS OR ISNT NATIVE ENOUGH. TRIBES THAT TRY AND STAY FULL BLOOD ONLY END UP DYING OUT. THATS THE REAL PROBLEM. If you don't understand is natives don't speak for us.
@Lee no... That's not even remotely close to being true. Especially when your DNA literally disagrees with that statement.
@Lee Natives are those whose bodied aka DNA adapted to an environment making them genetically varied from other locations. White, Asian, Black and Pacific Islanders are not native to the Americas. Their genetics are still more well adapted to their ancestral homelands than to the Americas. Their DNA has yet to adapt to a new environment.
nobody cares!
Being an Alaskan native and y’all doing awareness is just beautiful and great. ❤️
No, it's sadly just your standard subversive "race" bait.
Your people were slaughtered by the republican white men, not to be confused with democrat white men. Biden 2024!!
Man what a beautiful culture, it’s sad what has happened in the past but I hope their tradition keeps strong 🙏
Nice profile pic
Nice name
Nice comment and profile pic
Yes!!!!
I’ve seen you somewhere I don’t know where but I’ve seen you somewhere
People need to understand that ALL of America is native land and native food not only includes north American native but south and central America as well. Tortillas, corn, tomatoes, vanilla, chocolate, and so many other foods are all native. There is a rich history and we owe the natives for a lot such as the potato to the Peruvian natives who cultivated it.
Even tortillas have been anglicized by Spaniards, originally called "laxcalli" in the native Nahuatl language, the Hispanic colonizers would see that they resembled "tortas" (flat cakes) and change how they're processed and garnished to suit their own tastes. Luckily, the old traditions of making them can be found in the South of Mexico, and in Central & South America.
Natives didn't "own land", they just lived here
@@Atrophuis they were there first and you know that
@@user-rk8yb5sg4s ok and
@@Atrophuis what makes a person own land, exactly?
"Removing colonial ingredients" i love it
decolonization of our food
Does that mean italian food with no tomatoes? Or thai food with no peppers? Get used to disappointment and misery if you don't like mixing cultures.
Yet, you sit on your ass and enjoy the fruits of the conquerors.
@@FirstLast-qf1df Do your Googles on the origin of tomatoes and peppers. Your entire comment is based on ignorance.
yea the colonists were so bad, all white and mean
You forgot the S in Culture...There are many Native American cultures.....
This was one interesting and important story after another.
Hi AGADOR …….i was commenting on this page when i come across yours and all what you just said in your mommnet was so impressive and amazing, that's why i text you. I'm so sorry for mommenting on public….well joy i wold like us to be friend if you don't mind? this is my gmail raymondgogolf@gmail.com you can text me if you're ok with Hmy message when you get it. please this gmail is only for ……AGADOR .GOD bless you
65M to move a community/village is a small amount for the US gov. to shell out. The US owes so much to these people. They should build it ASAP!:))
I belong to two tribal councils in western Massachusetts. Sorry but a lot of what you think or hear about how we we're treated simply isn't true. Not to the extent most would have you believe. Many leaders of tribes sold out their own people so don't be so quick to blame the white men. In both my tribal councils their are people of all colors because we are all mixed. I wish we could take that approach towards our history and not the made up myths about how evil the white man is or was or how bad the government treated our people. In our two group's there are white, black and every shade in between and we don't judge someone by their skin color, be it white or any other!!!
The US owes them nothing.
Such a strong culture hanging by a thread.
Sadly this is true I can say this cause I’m Native American
@Heidi Yodel chill the fuck out and reread your comment before causing more negativity. You may be trying to say "nobody cares and that's sad." but it comes across as "nobody cares and neither do i."
@@albigensiac3206 ive never gotten sick either you're on to something 😊
We should fucking snip it 😍😍
So much innovation was developing from the Indians... They didn't need white people after all
*FINALLY INDIGENOUS PEOPLE RECOGNITION OMLLL ILY*
About damm time!!!
As I watch this I’m hanging out in my kitchen working on a Three Sisters salad. Is anybody else watching this going ‘oh my god there’s only half a jar of those seeds’?
@Steven Universe holy shit it's you again. dont have much else to do do ya?
@@FreudsHotDad Says the dude who's on more comments than Steven Lenny-verse over there-
Oh cool, we bigfoots are also part of Native American history and culture
we call your people sabe
it’s you again hi
Bigfoots are native to Wyoming because Wyoming isn't real
Can't tell if this guy is making a joke or throwing a punch at my culture.
The real owners of the U.S.
Reality Kingzz and. Canada
Dope FourTwoOh Mexican is a nationality and most of us aren’t natives
Unbearable I’m saying native to this land
Dope FourTwoOh We aren’t really either, most of us are mixed so
Mayans Incas and Aztecs were native to this land this is the Mexicans I was referring to
Such resilient and beautiful people and an equally beautiful culture
I'm not native American
But damn I love their culture
Your ngaā tupuna(ancestors) would be proud of what y'all are doing
From the Pacific🇵🇬 ❤️ to the Americas
Roroā naē matahou(love from us)
uhhh ok... thanks? i guess?
One of the strongest and most beautiful cultures, and people in history. Stayed strong despite all the evil things done to them!! Shout out to all the Native tribes out there!!! May all the gods bless you all.
Hats off for every Native American they worked hard and they shared there land with all the people they deserve respect ✊ from every body
Am native American
Not exactly shared, more like forced off it
Shared??
@@totally_galaxy4641 You mean the way Native Americans forced other native Americans off their land before the white man got here?
The videos GBS puts out are all so vibrant and entertaining. I always find myself learning something new and I love it!
I have never seen white corn before! How cool!
I'm 55 and seen it all my life!! You must be very young or come from somewhere they don't grow it. It's all over New England.
You rock! Thank you for waking people up to REAL American cuisine.
Listening to these stories is very important
I wish there was more we could do to help this awesome culture.
Well the least we can do is learn the culture and teach the children and teach the children's children to teach there children to teach the culture
*these awesome cultures
First thing you can do to help us out is to learn that there are different cultures. Not all natives are the same but there are many groups that are similar. Southeastern tribes like mvscogee,Cherokee,Shawnee, and Natchez are similar. Southwestern tribes like navajo, Apache,Ute,Tohono oodamo, and Hopi are similar. Northern tribes like mohawk, ojibwe,odawa, Lakota,nakota and Dakota are also similar.
they do not need help. perhaps freedom and human rights can be forced on the government , we could write letters ,e-mail the gov. in the state we live in , tell them to honor the treaties of the mid 1800s. we have been lied to about the people by the government for as long as there has been one, we were and are being used by the government so it could steal everything from them.
If there’s is any group in the US that deserves the most support for the way they were treated, it’s the Native American people and the South American people who are rarely talked about in their “disappearance”
I feel as though every race should get some recognition for the hardships they went through. not just us
How about just having compassion for everyone? I mean there are people in the US actively being targeted for violence. My ancestors walked the Trail of Tears but I didn't. Help whoever needs help right now. Giving one ethnicity special status is how the genocide started.
South America and Central America is filled with millions on indigineous people still living and speaking their language.
nice
This video pleases me. I busted my mind and fingers writing up a literature review about introducing indigenous foods into an institution (UBC) food system.
I love the native American! Feel honored to hear your story.... you are a last of a generation.. a forgotten civilization...
Sioux Chef gotta open some boughie restaurants and rake in the Michelin stars
I am going to keep sharing the real stories I learned with my children!! We must share as much as we can to spread true education and protect the original habitant of our country!
If you dont like this video, dont watch it. It's that easy. Stop leaving stupid comments
Beautiful culture, wonderful and humble people :) Great share GBS!
The Natives were quite humble people
Some of them were, others were extremely proud and savage to other tribes.
i love native American culture and tradition
I respect and love and Native Americans 👊🏼
Thank you, i respect and love you too! But be sure to have that love for all of your fellow man. Amen?
Watching this video gives me lots of joy.
I appreciate the diverse showcase of different tribes here.
Watching this makes me want to cry. I lost my only connection to my native roots last month & I feel completely lost. I have a whole part of me missing. To all my people with both African and indigenous roots we have to reconnect. I don't know what my true cultures are & I need to find them. I don't think I'll ever Know what tribes (African or native) that I'm from but I have to reconnect with the base of my cultures through food & belief/ tradition.
Finding a native tribe isn't hard you just need to look through tribal rolls for a specific person's name. As for African tribe there is a dna test for people who are African through out their entire maternal blood line. It will help you identify your tribe
@@alexandrahenderson4368 that's only 5 tribes out of hundreds, Only a handful are documented. My family would have been on a reserve if they were accepted in the rolls. I'm a native mix on both sides of my family as well an African mix. Its just not that simple. My families are southern & old almost nothing is documented most didn't/ don't even have birth certificates.
I know you're trying to help, it's just stressful, all the hoops & dead ends I've been through looking for my roots
@@queenditty2783 that's true. I only know 3/4 of my tribes because my grandma was taken from her reservation in Oklahoma. She doesn't know the tribe or anything just her grandma's name.
@@queenditty2783 there are much more than five tribes in Oklahoma. If your family has no birth records or anything then you can't enroll but if you know parts of the native culture you can pinpoint what area they were from.
Like give me an example of a word or traditional object or something and I can help you figure out the tribes that have that.
This is the most amazing thing Ive seen and heard in decades!!! Thank youuuuu!!
love the video ty for doing it i am part miami i decend from cheif little turttle he is my 6th great grandfather and i am prod of my heritage
Thank you! We’re underrepresented
I am currently reading about Maya, Aztec and Inca history, fascinated about them. Also read Chief Seattle's speech, really touched.
This is big! It's about time we recognized the indigenous community heritage and history 👏 amazing! The Urbanization of America has created a chasm between are two worlds 🌎
I really love this channel I have learned so much from these amazing videos keep up the great work I love watching these
Xbear I learned that Democrats are criminals
Beautiful stories... especially the seeds reactivation and the phased resettlement. 👍
I'm so grateful Creator made me Indigenous, a Lakota/Dakota woman. ❤
Really cool to see ppl from in and around my hometown/homeland in this video. I'm from Nooksack, WA and am a member of the Cheam Band of St:olo nation
How fascinating! Indigenous Americans have such a beautiful culture
I love it! Very interesting🌈🌎😍👌🌟👋
I feel so sad that I grew up without being taught about my native culture.
Just found out our ancestors were of the Pueblo Natives from ages ago, feels good to finally put some pieces together and things make sense. Grandma held back on telling stories until she passed. Trying to learn as much as we can, including foods and how we can keep those stories going. She lived in a mud hut and they grew everything they ate, hoping to get some art and other things to support our newfound family. Wish there was a way to find out even more, but happy to have some puzzle pieces of who we are....
Beautiful and moving.
I love this. My family has been in Pennsylvania by the Appalachian Trail since the founding of the town (I joke.) I found an old picture in an ancestor book my aunt put together. There was a child who looked Native in one of the pictures. Did a DNA test and unfortunately, nothing indigenous to North America. I’m close to Carlisle where the boarding school was. My family likely bought a Native child for slave labor. I still feel very connected to this land in particular and I grieve what we did here.
Edit to add: Can you do videos like this on specific areas each? That would be awesome! 🙂
The Native American/Indigenous culture and traditions are amazing.
The Inca empire was a good one. It was the biggest Native American empire.
That is so special that you are doing this.
I love how educational this video is.
i like the shoes color. thats awesome designe
I've been to the 8th gen store at pike's place!!! It was really amazing
wow i live near hugo and ive been there a couple times, love their food totally recommend 8/10
Thanks for the information my brother ✨❤️✨
I'm from northeast india 🇮🇳 and people from my tribe also do face paintings like the beautiful lady in the thumbnail.
Thank you very informative
Food is one of the best ways to connect people and their cultures
I'm a simple white girl and I don't know why but this video gives me hope and despite all that people may say that humanity is defined by whether it be politics or technology or disconnection from nature what I feel it is to be human is simple: people simply peeling corn and cooking and defining purpose in it that's where the word human I feel it belongs
They looks soooo healthy. Thanks for the upload!
I am glad this is finally here.
The elder in the seed museum thing could be a a rdr 2 voice actor
im black and i love native culture
The eagles that dwell in my hometown are well protected!Beautifull art work!
I would love to be able to buy one of the wool blankets. Absolutely stunning.
I'm 3 quarters native and a quarter white I'm Klamath Modoc and Seminole
Interesting mix. Klamath and Modoc is a common heritage, those tribes with seminole however is something I've never encountered. Crazy to think such vastly different cultures are just seen as a native American monolith to so many people.
You white
Dude I get in trouble at home because I like the Choctaw and modoc tribes more than my tribes. 😂 Modoc language just sounds better than Shawnee and Cherokee
Hey I have Sean's book. I like it a lot!
I am half navite american
I am decentant of my grand father
And my mother I admire their culture
The first Native Americans kept a written history on metal plates. You can read these translated writings in the Book of Mormon.
The book of bullcrap?
Mormon win
Spread let the people know what real beautiful Americans food,culture and people really is . #nativeamericans #realamericans .
So healthy, so very healthy. Just think of how healthy we all would be if we ate like this today. Love it.
I think it's beautiful the feathers of these gorgeous eagles are living and I'm happy F&G are supplying to Indigenous people. But it is very sad to see their dead bodies and know too often it's caused by man.
Wow... I love videos that were only recommended to me because of a corporation's myopic desire for self aggrandizement, and incessant need for projecting their facile virtue onto their consumers.
Beautiful
There are winners and losers in history. Every culture has practiced conquest. Natives included
Fact. But do you know Jesus? That's what matters most. This subversive TRASH is infuriating, but we're still called to love on another. So arm up with the Bible, rebuke this deceitful hate bait crap in the name of the Lord and stand strong in Christ. Best way to push this social programming back into the hellfire it spawned out of.
The enemy wants to get people back to their pagan practices and traditions. Pay attention and you will notice. God bless.
People need to understand that ALL of Americas is indigenous land. North, Central and South. It all belong to the indigenous peoples and not to us
I learned more about the local Native Americans in this video then doing research on their tribes websites :/
I live in WA and I really, REALLY want to support the local tribes and learn more about their history and culture, see their ceremonies (if they let outsiders in) and so on...but damn if it's not hard! The most local tribe is the Muckleshoot, but their website is just...barren for anything (this was before the virus). I wish I could learn more about their tribe :(
I love mother 🌎 and eagles birds
Thank you for reminding us to seven card what little we still able to take from our GODS creation.
Love these stuff..IRRI INthe philippined has an underground...2stories of rice and other cereal seed banks...some frigid rooms..bolivian/andean farmers have asimilar wild potato seed banks too..so cool.
Always wanted to try sofki. I'll bring the spoon!
Great videos, good to have documents of natives before they are only seen in history books
They’re not a monolith.
What does that mean
Lonely Spirit It means there’s not a “Native American” way to be. The tribal people were many different tribes. They’re not all about the same just because their skin looks similar.
@@johnsinclair6170 - These are First Nations speaking on behalf of themselves and they never claimed that. They not only make sure to mention their specific tribe affiliation, but are also considerate of supporting all other tribes. Indigenous natives only make up 3% of the population, so it's necessary to their survival that they collaborate in unison to bring back cuisine, heirlooms, art, history, etc. for every tribe. For instance, the chef doesn't just talk about Sioux-related cuisine, but his mission to revitalize Native American cuisine as a whole. 0:24 "Native culture exists in ALL parts of America" then he specifies that 2:08 "As we travel around the country, we like to make foods that represent those areas."
And at 3:43, you see that the seed library isn't just focused on revitalizing extinct seeds from the Pottawatomi tribe, but also of every other tribe such as Cherokee, Narragansett, Shawnee, Mesquakie, Osage, Arikara, Ojibwe, Mandan, Winnebago etc. from states like North Carolina, Rhode Island, Kansas, Iowa, Michigan, Tennessee, Nebraska, Wisconsin, etc. and even from colonized indigenous-countries like Mexico and Bolivia. It's no different than Middle-Eastern Arabs congregating together to celebrate their culture during Ramadan or during Arabian Festivals.
The same can also be said of Latinos, who despite having cultural variances from their respective Latin American countries, will still come together during music festivals or latin parades. In America, congregating like this is normal, especially when we're more likely to be scattered all over to the point that anyone resembling the same taste and music and food is considered our brothers and sisters. So Misterrr.... uh, John Sinclair, is it? That's your name? Look John, I get that you're trying to be insightful, but you're clearly just an outsider looking in.
Thank you for sharing! Indigenous foods are the best and healthiest. None of the commercialized, fatty, prepackaged junk for me. I love seeing natives prospering, wonderful!
I want more of this, but not sure how I can get this in Atlanta.
Honestly am so happy to see restraunts like this. Beautiful foods like this should be more common than certain fast foods in my opinion 😅
ooo I want to try all of the foods shown!
Heck, I wanna go to one of those Native American restaurants.
I really love this video!
Shout out to the 2 Navajo guys in Job Corp who are Gold Gloves boxers who would kick my ass. Fun as hell.
More videos like this please!
I am a decendant of the chief Sitting Bull in the Lakota tribe, Google says there's only 2 known decendants of sitting bull, but my dad's side is related
That's so cool!
Love this video