I hope this isn’t the end of discussion for Indigenous issues on this channel. I think it’s important that we elevate voices of Indigenous people; we’ve silenced them for too long. There’s a lot to learn and to teach.
we had so much fun creating this series and hearing from other Indigenous creatives along the way. we also ope it won't be the last because we have several other topics to cover - series director
Please, we need another season! Thank you so much for having this series and putting in the work you have. I didn't think watching this one and your final words would get me emotional but it did. I loved learning new things and supplementing what I have learned about the indigenous world through this series. Thank you again.
As someone who's family was taken and hidden from our heritage to protect the children (my mother) from being stolen during the 70's, who was raised being told to 'know and be proud you are indian inside, but dont tell anyone that you are indian on the outside', learning that little family quirks and stories have deep connections to a culture we were kept from has been eye opening. And finding my way back to to the culture has been deeply important and healing for me. Media such as this has been one of the many stepping stones on my road of reconnection. Thank you, from the deepest places of my heart. I always felt lost and out of place until I began to rediscover where I came from. You have all done very important work with this series, perhaps even more than you'll ever really know, and I sincerely hope you can continue to do so.
My great^2 grandfather is Saàmi, Indigenous Scandinavian; he settled among the Salish and Kootenai Peoples in Montana, USA. I love learning from other Indigenous people, we have held so much wisdom about our world; it breaks my heart that so many and so much of it has been silenced. Blessings from the US!
I will be incredibly devastated if this is the end of the series. This has been a source of comfort after losing my grandmother, who was my real connection to my tribal heritage. Without her around it feels like I have lost a part of my identity. Seeing many types of indigenous representation and knowledge being shared makes this an important series that I really hope continues.
It's over already?! Omgosh. I need more. I was born on turtle island but I am not indigenous. I want to learn more about ways to "immigrate" to, live with in, and speak the languages just as I would if I immigrated to Nigeria or Japan.
Wado! Thank you Cheyenne for being a teacher and a fellow student throughtout this series. I hope this isn't the end but either way I'm so grateful for this time together.
Survey done! I didn't realize that this was a short series, and I cried when I realized it was. Thank you so much for hosting, Cheyenne, and I hope to see a lot more indigenous content on PBS
As a (settler) teacher of future art teachers, who works to center contemporary Indigenous voices in his curriculum for a settler-majority population of future art teachers, this video series has been illuminating and essential - I hope you get to do more of these! Obviously the priority is the value these videos have for Indigenous viewers to see and be seen - but these videos also have a larger and potentially transformative impact for settlers who need to better recognize Indigenous peoples and cede (literal and figurative) space to them.
Loved this series - we need a second season! One major issue though, which is those White Shaman paintings are NOT Nahua but a different proto-culture with more in common with the Wixarika. It isn’t the same due to time and migration, but clearly has ties.
Thank you for sharing this video, I hope you make more! I also hope to see more connections between indigenous knowledge and current mainstream science. There’s a lot of deep understanding that comes from thousands of years of experience, and I think sometimes it’s tempting for modern Euro-centric thinkers to believe they have to re-invent the wheel and find all the answers themselves.
thank you for watching. this episode was definitely a fun one, navigating through science with Indigenous Knowledge at the forefront. - series director
Beautiful work, Hope to see more! I am Cheyenne and Arapaho, grew up separated from that heritage but I have since reconnected with my paternal C and A relatives and have learned so much. So I really appreciate this show.
More, please!!! I have learned so much. I used to teach multicultural psychology (against the wishes of department members who tried to kill it before it started). I am now retired, but the more resources that are out there by Indigenous creators, the more comprehensive will be the teaching and understanding of those who follow me. I had the advantage of a connection to several local tribes, but most folks will not. This is precious.
Great segment as always. I know Kurly and he has gotten me tired recommending me Archeology sites to visit. Lol. Great guy. I recommend reading his books and podcast (tales from aztlantis) that debunk native american modern misconceptions. If you heard it in mainstream culture, kurly has broken down where the idea came from and why it's wrong. A few issues on this video: That piece that you shown is not the Maya Calendar. That's a modern piece of art from new agers. Also, Mayan refers to the language.
Thanks for watching! big apologises for the calendar. We will try to do better in the future. As for Kurly, he is such a treasure, he was a great person to speak with and walk around the petroglyphs with. - Series Director
@pbsvoices kurly is doing a great job on represtation. He is an archeologist, his past is in film, and he brings up important native issues to the white scientists' community, which most first hear about it from him. He even debunked a racist scientific paper towards natives. I'm hoping his recognition gets you guys more attention. Overall, you guys are doing a good job, and I'm hoping to see a 2nd season. I filled out the survey at the end and gave you guys positive praise.
This is the kind of cultural content that I really want; I don't feel connected to my European ancestral cultures - monotheism has caused such devastating harm worldwide. The ancestral knowledge of our indigenous nations makes so much more sense for North America. I only have a fragment of indigenous blood myself, (my great grandmother was Métis,) but I still think that it is foolish that our colonial cultures spend so much time ignoring the history and knowledge of *people who have been here for literally forever.* (16-20+ THOUSAND years definitely qualifies as forever in my books at least.)
Here in Aotearoa New Zealand there's a TV show called 'Moon Tide Fishing'. It's all about going fishing based on the current phase of the moon, as understood by Māori. There's also a greater acceptance of mātauranga Māori (a form of scientific understanding) among the western science community, with partnerships being formed to study and understand traditional practices. It's fascinating to see it grow.
I've loved every episode that's been dropped. Apparently my family has some connection to a first nations tribe but there is no record of such due to how the Spaniards interacted with the tribes, so this has been enlightening
Many indigenous cultures hold the view that we are related to all other living beings and the earth itself. That the animals are our siblings, that we came certain animals, or from trees and stone. Considering evolution and how we are actually all genetically related, however distantly, to all life on earth via the single celled Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA), I feel like it’s not only the most scientifically accurate worldview, it also gives me great respect and love for our planet and animals
The first thing that came to my mind when I spent time down at the Petroglyph Monument was that there were so many just random carvings it felt like a place where people were learning and sketching and practicing cuz there's certain things that are obviously unfinished things that are just really very crude all the way up to things that are very detailed and very very good.
thank you -- I would like one large university teaching and researching the First Nation world in toto for the whole of the Americas, with different courses in the different disciplines - language culture stories art religion craft archaeology psychology anthropology agriculture etc etc there are so many aspects to study and so much salvage and reconstruction needed -- you and your friends should be university professors at the top of the profession -- one university focused entirely on the First Nations -- it could be a wonderful degree -- just like we have English Literature in the UK -- a wonderful substantial learning at the beginning of adulthood, an enrichment and a growth in confidence, and a learning about the big picture of all the First Nations -- I'd like to give that to all First Nation youth who would enjoy and grow with it.
The best one is pretty incredible. The 20 days known to the Maya and many other nations, correlate precisely with the alphabetical order of the 20 amino acids by sequence and function. Glycine is Tijax the Flint. Balance of polarities. Electricity. Tyrosine is Toj, and Toj (19) is related to Kat (14) which is Phenylalanine. The functions are very obvious. Also, the 20 days also correlate in sequence and function with the primordial elements , Tin - Yyterbium. In that one Tijax is Lanthanum. The flint. Etc etc...I've done a few vids on it.
I had already graduated from archaeology before i was taught that semi-sedentery civilizations like Piney Point (modern louisiana) were innovative trade empires that stretched across the ocean and even had standardized forms of math, geometry, and measurement. The problem with archaeology as its typically taught is that we hyperfocus on economic development by looking for evidence of wealth & "permanent" structures. We dont give any credit to the many hundred-thousands of years of traders, explorers, scientists, and biodiversity that paved the way. Technology does not only include metal tools or smart phones...it also includes astronomy, math, music, art, medicine, construction techniques, and more. Its easy to disregard the majesty of mammoth tusk huts before you learn that it required the collective effort of an entire family or tribe to plan & complete, representing generations of wealth & safety for future gatherings.
Us too. This series has been truly special to all of us and this encapsulation is only a small percentage of the videos we'd like to produce next - series director
I know that all the tribes around the Great Lakes used to place the start of the new year around the end of winter- so March-April. I'm curious if the October thing is a southwestern thing, or just a southern thing, in general. It makes sense that people who don't experience winter would pick a different annual event to base their calendars off of.
I hope this isn’t the end of discussion for Indigenous issues on this channel. I think it’s important that we elevate voices of Indigenous people; we’ve silenced them for too long. There’s a lot to learn and to teach.
we had so much fun creating this series and hearing from other Indigenous creatives along the way. we also ope it won't be the last because we have several other topics to cover - series director
Please, we need another season! Thank you so much for having this series and putting in the work you have. I didn't think watching this one and your final words would get me emotional but it did. I loved learning new things and supplementing what I have learned about the indigenous world through this series. Thank you again.
Thank you for watching! this series has been a treasure to make - series director
More indigenous knowledge content please 🙏🏽
As someone who's family was taken and hidden from our heritage to protect the children (my mother) from being stolen during the 70's, who was raised being told to 'know and be proud you are indian inside, but dont tell anyone that you are indian on the outside', learning that little family quirks and stories have deep connections to a culture we were kept from has been eye opening. And finding my way back to to the culture has been deeply important and healing for me. Media such as this has been one of the many stepping stones on my road of reconnection. Thank you, from the deepest places of my heart. I always felt lost and out of place until I began to rediscover where I came from. You have all done very important work with this series, perhaps even more than you'll ever really know, and I sincerely hope you can continue to do so.
My great^2 grandfather is Saàmi, Indigenous Scandinavian; he settled among the Salish and Kootenai Peoples in Montana, USA. I love learning from other Indigenous people, we have held so much wisdom about our world; it breaks my heart that so many and so much of it has been silenced. Blessings from the US!
I will be incredibly devastated if this is the end of the series. This has been a source of comfort after losing my grandmother, who was my real connection to my tribal heritage. Without her around it feels like I have lost a part of my identity. Seeing many types of indigenous representation and knowledge being shared makes this an important series that I really hope continues.
It's over already?! Omgosh. I need more. I was born on turtle island but I am not indigenous. I want to learn more about ways to "immigrate" to, live with in, and speak the languages just as I would if I immigrated to Nigeria or Japan.
PBS, please give this another 2 seasons. More is fine, also!
When I see a PBS channel I’m not already following, I IMMEDIATELY FOLLOW IT. PBS offers so much knowledge, I appreciate every channel they offer 🙌
Wado! Thank you Cheyenne for being a teacher and a fellow student throughtout this series. I hope this isn't the end but either way I'm so grateful for this time together.
Thank you for watching. we hope to bring another season of learning and sharing in Indigenous Knowledge. - series director
Survey done! I didn't realize that this was a short series, and I cried when I realized it was.
Thank you so much for hosting, Cheyenne, and I hope to see a lot more indigenous content on PBS
I would love to see this show become an ongoing show rather than just a limited series! We need way more content like this.
Thank you, PBS, for improving our educations! I hope there is much more to come of this series.
As a (settler) teacher of future art teachers, who works to center contemporary Indigenous voices in his curriculum for a settler-majority population of future art teachers, this video series has been illuminating and essential - I hope you get to do more of these!
Obviously the priority is the value these videos have for Indigenous viewers to see and be seen - but these videos also have a larger and potentially transformative impact for settlers who need to better recognize Indigenous peoples and cede (literal and figurative) space to them.
Loved this series - we need a second season!
One major issue though, which is those White Shaman paintings are NOT Nahua but a different proto-culture with more in common with the Wixarika. It isn’t the same due to time and migration, but clearly has ties.
More of indigenous content please, PBS!!! This show is awesome!
Thank you for sharing this video, I hope you make more! I also hope to see more connections between indigenous knowledge and current mainstream science. There’s a lot of deep understanding that comes from thousands of years of experience, and I think sometimes it’s tempting for modern Euro-centric thinkers to believe they have to re-invent the wheel and find all the answers themselves.
thank you for watching. this episode was definitely a fun one, navigating through science with Indigenous Knowledge at the forefront. - series director
Beautiful work, Hope to see more! I am Cheyenne and Arapaho, grew up separated from that heritage but I have since reconnected with my paternal C and A relatives and have learned so much. So I really appreciate this show.
More please, never end this show!!!!!!!! It's so important to make sure the information in these continues to spread
More, please!!! I have learned so much. I used to teach multicultural psychology (against the wishes of department members who tried to kill it before it started). I am now retired, but the more resources that are out there by Indigenous creators, the more comprehensive will be the teaching and understanding of those who follow me. I had the advantage of a connection to several local tribes, but most folks will not. This is precious.
MORE OF THIS! I love learning about indigenous culture!
Great segment as always.
I know Kurly and he has gotten me tired recommending me Archeology sites to visit. Lol. Great guy. I recommend reading his books and podcast (tales from aztlantis) that debunk native american modern misconceptions. If you heard it in mainstream culture, kurly has broken down where the idea came from and why it's wrong.
A few issues on this video:
That piece that you shown is not the Maya Calendar. That's a modern piece of art from new agers. Also, Mayan refers to the language.
Thanks for watching! big apologises for the calendar. We will try to do better in the future. As for Kurly, he is such a treasure, he was a great person to speak with and walk around the petroglyphs with. - Series Director
@pbsvoices kurly is doing a great job on represtation. He is an archeologist, his past is in film, and he brings up important native issues to the white scientists' community, which most first hear about it from him. He even debunked a racist scientific paper towards natives. I'm hoping his recognition gets you guys more attention.
Overall, you guys are doing a good job, and I'm hoping to see a 2nd season. I filled out the survey at the end and gave you guys positive praise.
Thank you so much for this series. It means so much to learn about the Indigenous people of the land I live on.
What a wonderful series! Please continue!
This is the kind of cultural content that I really want; I don't feel connected to my European ancestral cultures - monotheism has caused such devastating harm worldwide. The ancestral knowledge of our indigenous nations makes so much more sense for North America. I only have a fragment of indigenous blood myself, (my great grandmother was Métis,) but I still think that it is foolish that our colonial cultures spend so much time ignoring the history and knowledge of *people who have been here for literally forever.* (16-20+ THOUSAND years definitely qualifies as forever in my books at least.)
Gorgeous thinline Telecaster.
Here in Aotearoa New Zealand there's a TV show called 'Moon Tide Fishing'. It's all about going fishing based on the current phase of the moon, as understood by Māori. There's also a greater acceptance of mātauranga Māori (a form of scientific understanding) among the western science community, with partnerships being formed to study and understand traditional practices. It's fascinating to see it grow.
One of the best series, thank you so much!
We are stronger when we accept, embrace, and learn from other cultures.
Shout out the goat, Kurly Tlapoyawa!!
I've loved every episode that's been dropped. Apparently my family has some connection to a first nations tribe but there is no record of such due to how the Spaniards interacted with the tribes, so this has been enlightening
this was such a great show!! I hope we see more of cheyenne on the channel somehow 😭
Many indigenous cultures hold the view that we are related to all other living beings and the earth itself. That the animals are our siblings, that we came certain animals, or from trees and stone. Considering evolution and how we are actually all genetically related, however distantly, to all life on earth via the single celled Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA), I feel like it’s not only the most scientifically accurate worldview, it also gives me great respect and love for our planet and animals
The first thing that came to my mind when I spent time down at the Petroglyph Monument was that there were so many just random carvings it felt like a place where people were learning and sketching and practicing cuz there's certain things that are obviously unfinished things that are just really very crude all the way up to things that are very detailed and very very good.
thank you -- I would like one large university teaching and researching the First Nation world in toto for the whole of the Americas, with different courses in the different disciplines - language culture stories art religion craft archaeology psychology anthropology agriculture etc etc there are so many aspects to study and so much salvage and reconstruction needed -- you and your friends should be university professors at the top of the profession -- one university focused entirely on the First Nations -- it could be a wonderful degree -- just like we have English Literature in the UK -- a wonderful substantial learning at the beginning of adulthood, an enrichment and a growth in confidence, and a learning about the big picture of all the First Nations -- I'd like to give that to all First Nation youth who would enjoy and grow with it.
Don’t usually do surveys but did this one, hope it helps keep you guys keep doing what you’ve been doing
Another season please!
The best one is pretty incredible. The 20 days known to the Maya and many other nations, correlate precisely with the alphabetical order of the 20 amino acids by sequence and function. Glycine is Tijax the Flint. Balance of polarities. Electricity. Tyrosine is Toj, and Toj (19) is related to Kat (14) which is Phenylalanine.
The functions are very obvious. Also, the 20 days also correlate in sequence and function with the primordial elements , Tin - Yyterbium. In that one Tijax is Lanthanum. The flint. Etc etc...I've done a few vids on it.
Great series
Thank you so much for watching
I love this series!
Big ups on this hope to see more
thank you for making this video, and all the videos in this series!
I like that the petroglyphs are being seen for what they are...
We need more, more, more!
I had already graduated from archaeology before i was taught that semi-sedentery civilizations like Piney Point (modern louisiana) were innovative trade empires that stretched across the ocean and even had standardized forms of math, geometry, and measurement. The problem with archaeology as its typically taught is that we hyperfocus on economic development by looking for evidence of wealth & "permanent" structures. We dont give any credit to the many hundred-thousands of years of traders, explorers, scientists, and biodiversity that paved the way. Technology does not only include metal tools or smart phones...it also includes astronomy, math, music, art, medicine, construction techniques, and more. Its easy to disregard the majesty of mammoth tusk huts before you learn that it required the collective effort of an entire family or tribe to plan & complete, representing generations of wealth & safety for future gatherings.
3:31 Never forget Indigiana Jones
Miigwetch and Nia:wen, I can't wait to see more videos like this in the future
Us too. This series has been truly special to all of us and this encapsulation is only a small percentage of the videos we'd like to produce next - series director
Chur this resonates with me even tho im Māori, we have our own ways of timekeeping too
Happy Pride Month 🏳️🌈
Also, so happy to see a new video! Human beings and timekeeping is so fascinating.
What does Pride Month have to do with this video?
Precious ❤
I know that all the tribes around the Great Lakes used to place the start of the new year around the end of winter- so March-April. I'm curious if the October thing is a southwestern thing, or just a southern thing, in general. It makes sense that people who don't experience winter would pick a different annual event to base their calendars off of.
PBS- renew another season!
❤❤❤
5:00 So, they were like Indigenous Zines.
Huichol is incorrect- that is a Spanish name. The correct name is Wixarika or Wixaritari.
“Indigenous knowledge leads to … Skinwalker Ranch finding a wormhole just as the Native Americans told you so…
Indige-ana Jones lol nice
Can we be besties😊
It doesn't
I hate that medication ads always say, ask your doctor and never, ask your doctor or shaman