From Cultural Survival <[email protected]>
Subject Celebrating Indigenous Women Today and All Year...
Date March 9, 2025 1:21 AM
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7 things you can do on International Women's Day...
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** 7 Things to Do on
International Women's Day
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Today, March 8, is International Women's Day ([link removed]) (#IWD), first celebrated in 1909. While too many women all over the world still suffer from violence and rights abuses, it is important to recognize the amazing work Indigenous women are doing to make change happen and speak truth to power. They are movement builders, system shakers, stewards of ecosystems, community caretakers, and working towards a transformative, equitable, and just future for all of our relations.

On this International Women's Day, show your solidarity with women as they fight to assert their rights. When we speak of the rights of Indigenous women, we mean all Indigenous women - cisgender and transgender women alike. Join us in this action to honor, uplift, and resource Indigenous women's leadership, so that next year we will have even more to celebrate!

1. Learn about CEDAW's General Recommendation No. 39 on the Rights of Indigenous Women and Girls
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Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) General Recommendation No. 39 on the Rights of Indigenous Women and Girls includes the first language in a binding international treaty focused on the rights of Indigenous women and girls. Learn more. ([link removed])

2. Read our issues of the Cultural Survival Quarterly devoted to Indigenous women.
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3. Learn how the United Nations has been championing Indigenous women's rights over the past two decades.
Read the full report here ([link removed])
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4. Celebrate some of the amazing Indigenous women working to make change happen around the world. Share their inspiring stories #IWD2025 #IndigenousWomenRising #NativeSistersBlossom
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Mona Omar ([link removed]) (Somali/Maasai) is making change happen at the frontlines of climate change.
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Margaret Tarrant ([link removed]) (Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara) shares insights on the Indian Child Welfare Act.
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Dr. Mayian Lekirimpoto ([link removed]) (Samburu) is paving the way for future generations of girls and women in both science and her culture.
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Tara Moses ([link removed]) (Seminole/ Muscogee Creek) is a renowned director and award-winning playwright.
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T’ata Begay ([link removed]) (Choctaw, Chickasaw, Taos Pueblo) is a Fancy Dancer, and educator with a strong academic background in education, world-tourism, policy analysis, and Native American studies.
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Aimee Roberson ([link removed]) (Choctaw/ Chickasaw) is Cultural Survival's new Executive Director, a conservation biologist and environmental steward dedicated to integrating Indigenous knowledge with science to protect social-ecological systems, and preserve biodiversity. En español. ([link removed])
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Elvia Rodríguez ([link removed]) (Mixtec), Cultural Survival's Community Media Program Assistant, is dedicated to Indigenous rights and social justice. En español. ([link removed])
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Anexa Alfred Cunningham ([link removed]) (Miskitu) is an exiled leader, human rights advocate, and UN Indigenous rights expert working from Geneva to support Indigenous communities and political prisoners.
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Saraí Jiménez Orozco ([link removed]) (Mixe), Estefania Grefa (Kichwa Amazonia), and Florentina Sri Dewi Wulandar (Dayak Simpakng) are young Indigenous leaders dedicated to revitalizing their languages and cultural traditions and advocating for environmental sustainability and Indigenous rights within their communities.
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Kuenan Tikuna ([link removed]) (Tikuna/Tariano) is a trans woman artist, activist, model, and Indigenous communicator.
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Angélica Ayala ([link removed]) (Nahuat) an advocate, anthropologist, and researcher from Tepoztlán, dedicated to Indigenous rights and communication. En español. ([link removed])
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Aviut Rojas ([link removed]) (Nahua) is an Indigenous educator and aspiring veterinary technician. En español. ([link removed])
5. Listen and share podcasts by and about Indigenous women.
The perspectives and inclusion of Indigenous women is essential to gender equality worldwide. Using community radio as a tool, we invite you to celebrate Women's Day by bringing Indigenous women's perspectives to the airwaves. The following programs are free for you to listen to, download, and broadcast! Access more here ([link removed]) .

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UNESCO Global Study on Indigenous Media - Sheryl Lightfoot ([link removed])
UNESCO’s study on Indigenous Peoples and Media with Sheryl Lightfoot, Member of Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP) explores gaps in Indigenous language media access.
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Justice For Indigenous Women! ([link removed])
Yasso Kanti Bhattachan (Thakali) discusses the unique forms of violence faced by Indigenous women in Nepal, highlighting the historical and systemic factors contributing to their vulnerability.

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Let Us Get Our Water Back! ([link removed])
The National Tribal and Indigenous Climate Conference 2024 in Alaska brought together Indigenous leaders to discuss climate impacts, featuring an interview with Cheepache-Nitty, a Mono/Chukchansi Indigenous youth advocating for a decolonized education system.

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“Nosotras amamos la tierra”: Día Internacional de las Mujeres Rurales ([link removed])
María Patzi, mujer quechua de 70 años, comparte su experiencia en la revitalización de su cultura y lengua, y reflexiona sobre la cosmovisión de los pueblos indígenas respecto a la tierra y el agua.
6. Support Indigenous Women Artists
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7. Donate to Cultural Survival.
For five decades, Cultural Survival has prioritized projects centering Indigenous women and engaging women’s and girls’ leadership through our programs, grantmaking, fellowships, capacity building, and communications. An investment in Cultural Survival is an investment in Indigenous women and girls' leadership globally!
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DONATE ([link removed])
Cultural Survival advocates for Indigenous Peoples' rights and supports Indigenous communities’ self-determination, cultures and political resilience since 1972. We envision a future that respects and honors Indigenous Peoples' inherent rights and dynamic cultures, deeply and richly interwoven in lands, languages, spiritual traditions, and artistic expression, rooted in self-determination and self-governance.
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