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Other editions of book Winona LaDuke: Restoring Land and Culture in Native America

  • Winona LaDuke: Restoring Land and Culture in Native America

    Michael Silverstone

    Hardcover (The Feminist Press at CUNY, Aug. 1, 2001)
    Overcoming discouragement from white teachers and classmates, Winona LaDuke became outspoken at an early age about the disproportionate difficulties faced by Native Americans, including massive pollution of reservations.Winning acceptance to Harvard, Winona pursued environmental research and activism, becoming the youngest person to address the United Nations, and at age twenty-nine winning the Reebok Human Rights Award. At home at White Earth reservation in Minnesota, Winona founded the White Earth Land Recovery Project, fighting poverty and pollution by reclaiming treaty lands.Winona’s remarkable vision was recognized by the Green Party, which chose her as their vice-presidential candidate in 1996 and 2000. Her achievements show young readers the positive impact of one person’s determination to change her world.Michael Silverstone is an elementary school teacher and author of Rigoberta Menchú, among other biographies for children.
  • Winona LaDuke: Restoring Land and Culture in Native America

    Michael Silverstone

    Paperback (The Feminist Press at CUNY, Aug. 1, 2001)
    This tireless fighter's vision of justice catches the imagination, showing young readers the positive impact of one person's determination to change her world.When Winona LaDuke's parents brought her from LA to White Earth reservation in Minnesota to experience powwows and to see her grandparents' home, she began to understand who she was. Winona became outspoken at an early age about the disproportionate difficulties faced by Native Americans, including large-scale pollution of reservation lands. At seventeen, she became the youngest person ever to speak before the United Nations. At Harvard University Winona studied the destruction caused by unsound development. Later she received the Reebok Human Rights Award and used the money to found the White Earth Land Recovery Project (WELRP). WELRP built sustainable, traditional livelihoods, while establishing reservation schools and education in the Anishinaabeg language.
  • Winona Laduke: Restoring Land and Culture in Native America

    Michael Silverstone

    Library Binding (Feminist Pr, Aug. 11, 2008)
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