DJ Dag - Oyate

  • Length: 8:41
  • Rating Average: from people
  • View Count: 70' favoriteCount='1
  • Author: AlienYoshi

Tags: classic  dag  dance  dj  oyate  peyote  trance 

A very rare track that was never released. Beautiful trance classic from the father of trance! Thank you DJ Dag!

OYATE!

  • Length: 2:40
  • Rating Average: 5.00 from 4 people
  • View Count: 97' favoriteCount='3
  • Author: purplehand1

Tags: american  Dakota  film  lakota  Native  short 

STILLS OF PAST DAYS!!

Wolves - Oyate Ukiye

  • Length: 3:55
  • Rating Average: 5.00 from 1 people
  • View Count: 282' favoriteCount='5
  • Author: MayaAtlantis

Tags: "Eagle  "Lost  "Native  "Oyate  "world  American  Civilization"  Indian"  Indians  Message"  music"  Peru  Ukiye"  Wolves 

Sacred Spirit... A New Nation is Coming.

Maka Oyate- Peyote Prayer Song

  • Length: 3:7
  • Rating Average: from people
  • View Count: 39
  • Author: MakaOyate

Tags: Amérindien 

Petite répète prise en vidéo de Wanbli Ska du groupe Maka Oyate.

Wakiya- Oyate Singers /Northern group

  • Length: 2:10
  • Rating Average: from people
  • View Count: 53' favoriteCount='1
  • Author: wizlips31

Tags: Drum  Northern 

we just started this drum group a few months ago and we is havin fun practicing for the up coming Pow-Wow in March ,the Pow-Wow is in Louisville,TN March 20,21 and 22

The New Lakotah...

  • Length: 10:56
  • Rating Average: 5.00 from 7 people
  • View Count: 242' favoriteCount='8
  • Author: somasupernova

Tags: AIM  american  charles  faith  freedom  hope  lakota  libertarian  light  love  native  oyate  republic  russell  wacinyapin 

Russell Charles Means, or Oyate Wacinyapin, of the Native American Tribe Lakota, and a prominent member of the American Indian Movement, discusses plans to form The Republic Of Lakotah, a libertarian country in the heart of america. we can only hope it will come to pass...

Native American:Sioux Chief's Honoring Song

  • Length: 2:50
  • Rating Average: 4.56 from 9 people
  • View Count: 750' favoriteCount='9
  • Author: chetalli

Tags: American:Sioux  bull  chief  Chief's  cloud  crazy  gall  Honoring  horse  Native  red  sitting  Song 

Sioux (pronounced SUE) are a Native American and First Nations people. The term can refer to any ethnic group within the Great Sioux Nation or any of the nation's many dialects. The Sioux comprise three major divisions based on dialect and subculture: Isanti ("Knife," originating from the name of a lake in present-day Minnesota): residing in the extreme east of the Dakotas, Minnesota, and northern Iowa, and are often referred to as the Santee or Eastern Dakota. Ihanktowan-Ihanktowana ("Village-at-the-end" and "little village-at-the-end"): residing in the Minnesota River area, they are considered to be the middle Sioux, and are often referred to as the Yankton or Western Dakota. Teton or Tetonwan (uncertain, perhaps "Dwellers on the Prairie"): the westernmost Sioux, known for their hunting and warrior culture, and are often referred to as the Lakota. Today, the Sioux maintain many separate tribal governments scattered across several reservations, communities, and reserves in the Dakotas, Minnesota, Nebraska, and also in Manitoba and southern Saskatchewan in Canada. The name "Sioux" is an abbreviated form of Nadouessioux borrowed into French Canadian from Nadoüessioüak from the early Odawa exonym: naadowesiwag "Sioux". It was first used by Jean Nicolet in 1640. The Proto-Algonquian form *na·towe·wa, meaning "Northern Iroquoian", has reflexes in several daughter languages that refer to a small rattlesnake (massasauga, Sistrurus).This information was interpreted by some that the Ottawa borrowing was an insult. However, this Proto-Algonquian term most likely was ultimately derived from a form *-a·towe·, meaning simply "speak foreign language", which was later extended in meaning in some Algonquian languages to refer to the massasauga. Thus, contrary to many accounts, the old Odawa word naadowesiwag did not equate the Sioux with snakes. This is not confirmed though, since usage over the previous decades has led to this term having negative connotations to those tribes to which it refers. This would explain why many tribes have rejected this term when referring to themselves. Some of the tribes have formally or informally adopted traditional names: the Rosebud Sioux Tribe is also known as the Sicangu Oyate, and the Oglala often use the name Oglala Lakota Oyate, rather than the English "Oglala Sioux Tribe" or OST

Jim Pepper - Witchi Tai To

  • Length: 3:33
  • Rating Average: 5.00 from 21 people
  • View Count: 7532' favoriteCount='40
  • Author: b3geek

Tags: Jim  Pepper  Tai  To  Witchi 

From the documentary on Jim Pepper, "Pepper's Pow Wow" Available here: http://www.oyate.org/catalog/video.html and here: Upstream Productions Phone: 206-526-7122 Fax: 206-524-8879 uproduct@aol.com

FLOYD WESTERMAN-CHANTE WASTE WI

  • Length: 4:30
  • Rating Average: 4.81 from 21 people
  • View Count: 2589' favoriteCount='25
  • Author: oldcountrytunes

Tags: "Red  country  Crow"  Floyd  music  Westman 

TAKEN FROM WIKIPEDIA:Westerman was born on the Lake Traverse Reservation, home of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Dakota (Sioux) in the U.S. state of South Dakota.[1] As a youth, he attended an off-reservation elementary school where he was forced to cut his hair and forbidden to speak his native language. This would profoundly impact his later life and his restless pursuit of championing his own heritage (Time Magazine, Dec. 31 2007 - Jan. 7th 2008). At the age of 10, Westerman was sent to the Wahpeton Boarding School, where he first met Dennis Banks of the American Indian Movement. Westerman's film and television appearances include the role of the "Shaman" for Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone's The Doors and as "Ten Bears" in Dances with Wolves.[1] Westerman debuted in Renegades in which he played "Red Crow" the Lakota Sioux father of Lou Diamond Phillips. In his last film, Westerman appeared as Standing Elk alongside his long-time friend Max Gail in the 2006 family film, Tillamook Treasure. He can be seen as well in the beginning of Hidalgo, as the Chief in Buffalo Bill's circus. His television roles have included playing "Uncle Ray" on Walker, Texas Ranger[1], "One Who Waits" on Northern Exposure and multiple appearances as "Albert Hosteen" on the X-Files. In September 2007, Westerman finished work for the film Swing Vote.[1] Before entering films and television, Westerman had established a solid reputation as a country-western music singer. His recordings offer a probing analysis of European influences in Native American communities. In addition to several recordings of his own, Westerman has collaborated with Jackson Browne, Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt, Harry Belafonte[1], Joni Mitchell, Kris Kristofferson, and Buffy Sainte-Marie. Westerman toured with Sting in the 1990s to raise funds to preserve rain forests.[1] He earned a degree in secondary education from Northern State University in South Dakota. Westerman also spent two years in the United States Marine Corps.[1] Westerman was also a recognized political advocate for Native American causes, working at times with the American Indian Movement. In 2000, American Indian Expo named Westerman celebrity of the year. From 2003-2007, Westerman appeared in a number of television advertisements for "Lakota" brand topical pain reliever, often wearing traditional Native dress. Westerman died on December 13, 2007 at Cedars Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles after an extended illness and complications from leukemia.[2][1]

Yankton Sioux Tribe part 2- Protectors of the Red People

  • Length: 10:0
  • Rating Average: 4.58 from 19 people
  • View Count: 3582' favoriteCount='16
  • Author: AntithesisProphecy

Tags: Awa  Dakota  Duta  Farm  Farms  Hog  Ihanktonwan  Longview  Nation  Oyate  Part2  Protest  Sioux  South  Tribe  Wagner  Yankapo  Yankton 

The Yankton Sioux Tribe of South Dakota is continuing to protest a proposed hog farm in Charles Mix County. Tribal leaders and members say the operation would harm the environment. Long View Farms wants to house 3,350 sows and process up to 70,000 pigs a year at the farm. Tribal members are blocking a Bureau of Indian Affairs road that leads to the site. Long View Farms says the tribe has no authority at the actual farm, which is apparently located on fee land adjacent to tribal land.

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