BIA Summit on Native Foster Care Urged by Lakota People’s Law Project at Red Nation Film Festival


Santa Cruz, California (PRWEB) November 20, 2012

During her acceptance of the Humanitarian Service award at the Red Nation Film Festival, Lakota People’s Law Project Executive Director Sara Nelson issued a call to petition the Bureau of Indian Affairs to hold a summit requested by members of Congress last year to investigate the placement of Native children in non-native foster care homes and institutions. The Bureau of Indian Affairs has taken no action to date, despite written requests by four House members from both parties.

Nelson thanked the Red Nation Film Festival for recognizing the incredible amount of work that has been done by many Lakota people and staff in South Dakota, and by interns, volunteers, and legal staff in Santa Cruz.

Nelson also reminded the audience that A lot of money comes in from the Federal Government to pay for the scooping up of Lakota children – 6,000 Lakota children who have been taken during the first eight years of this century.

To date there has been no official inquiry at the state or federal level, despite a clear directive given to the Bureau of Indian Affairs twelve months ago by four members of the House of Representatives serving on committees charged with the oversight of Native American affairs. In a letter to the Department of Interior last October following NPRs Peabody Award-winning Native Foster Care: Lost Children, Shattered Families, two Democratic congressmen, Ed Markey of the House Natural Resources Committee and Dan Boren of the House Subcommittee on Indian and Alaska Native Affairs, demanded action by the BIA. Nothing has been done.

Nelson encouraged the audience to sign the BIA petition which is available at the Lakota Peoples Law Project web site.LakotaLaw.org. The BIA promised one year ago to host a summit on Lakota foster care, but they haven’t done it. We’re pressuring them,” Nelson concluded.

Since 2005, under the leadership of Nelson and Sheehan, the Lakota Peoples Law Project has been partnering with tribes and leaders in South Dakota to challenge more than 150 years of injustice against Native American families. The Lakota Peoples Law project combines public interest law, research, education, and organizing in a unique model for advocacy and social reform.

Photographer and journalist Aaron Huey noted in his acceptance speech that over a period of seven years he had moved from a superficial understanding of the Lakota to an ability to listen and try to allow the Lakota to express themselves directly without filters. Huey’s lead photograph for the feature article in the August 2012 issue of National Geographic, “In the Shadow of Wounded Knee” by Alexandra Fuller, was accompanied by a gallery of his highly acclaimed photographs of the Lakota. The introduction stated, “After 150 years of broken promises, the Oglala Lakota people of the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota are nurturing their tribal customs, language, and beliefs. A rare, intimate portrait shows their resilience in the face of hardship.” Huey’s May 2010 talk at the TED conference and stunning slide show “America’s Native Prisoners of War” in Denver, Colorado was a sensation and has had over 600,000 views on YouTube. Huey added his voice to Sheehan and Nelson’s call for action.

Acclaimed artist and activist Shepard Fairey is widely known for his famous campaign poster for president Obama’s 2008 campaign. This summer, Shepard Fairey allowed the use of his now famous “The Black Hills Are Not For Sale” by The Last Real Indians a group of Native activists as part of their campaign to prevent the sale of the sacred Black Hills site at Pe Sla. Fairey’s, an acclaimed and controversial street artist, sees art not only as something to be viewed or experienced but as something to generate action.

Currently, the Lakota Peoples Law Project is concentrating on the Lakota Child Rescue Project, which seeks the return of more than 2,000 Lakota children who have been taken from their homes and placed into white foster care settings by state authorities. The Lakota Peoples Law Project believes that South Dakota’s current practice of taking Lakota foster children into custody and placing 90% of them into non-Indian homes violates the Indian Child Welfare Act. The Lakota People’s Law Project is sponsored by the Romero Institute.

Based in Santa Cruz, California, the non-profit Romero Institute is named after slain human rights advocate Archbishop Oscar Romero of El Salvador. The Institute seeks to identify and dismantle the structural sources of injustice and threats to the survival of our human family.







“True Blood” Actress/Director and Rising Women Auteurs at San Francisco International Women’s Film Festival

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) April 09, 2012

Now in its 8th year, SFIWFF will showcase a plethora of exciting and diverse films directed, written and produced by women at the Roxie Theater, 3117-16th St. (at Valencia St.) in San Francisco.

This marks a banner year for the festival, with four women directors in attendance for Q&A sessions about their films, the triumphs and trials of making and often starring in their own films, and working within and outside of the Hollywood system:


SUNDAY, APRIL 15, 8:00PM: CARRIE PRESTON (Arlene in HBOs True Blood) will answer questions about her second directorial feature, Thats What She Said, along with screenwriter Kellie Overbey (The Good Wife, Law & Order: SVU). A romantic comedy starring Anne Heche, Thats What She Said chronicles epic dates, Biblical rainfall and one weird stranger in a hilarious tale of love and friendship.

SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 11:00 AM: BRUNCH WITH PAGE OSTROW: A Film Financing & Distribution Workshop. Hollywood veteran Ostrow gives an insider’s perspective on the business side of film, based on her experience financing and negotiated distribution for over 250 feature films, including Stolen Childhoods with Meryl Streep, Juvies with Mark Wahlberg and Drugging of Our Children, with Michael Moore.

SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 3:00 PM: TRUE BLOOD’S TANYA WRIGHT DIRECTS and acts in her new film Butterfly Rising, a tale of two women on a journey to find the mythical Butterfly Man.

SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 7:30 PM: TIFFANY SHLAIN (one of Newsweeks Women Shaping the 21st Century and the Webby Awards founder) will be presenting her documentary on the influence of hi-tech and our personal lives, Connected: An Autoblogography about Love, Death & Technology.

SUNDAY, APRIL 15, 5:15 PM: WRITER/DIRECTOR/ACTRESS CHRISTINA BECK began her career as a teenager acting in such cult classics as “Suburbia”, “Boys Next Door” and “Dudes” (directed by Penelope Spheeris). Becks film Perfection chronicles the inner torment and ultimate self-acceptance of a mother and daughter.

In 2012 SFIWFF will host thought-provoking, enlightening and entertaining feature-length and short films from all over North America, Europe, Africa and Asia, highlighting the accomplishments and triumphs of women of all ages, status and cultures. These fresh and engaging works are a distinct from Hollywood multiplex fare, and give a voice to rising artists from around the world.

For press inquiries, information on tickets, directions, related events and more, visit the festival website: http://www.sfiwff.com or call (415) 754-3456.