50 Years by the Black Mesa Solidarity Network [Sliding Scale] [Preorder]
THIS SHIRT IS ON A SLIDING SCALE
Enter coupon code "BMSNPAY30" to Pay $30
Enter coupon code "BMSNPAY50" to Pay $50
This shirt is on a preorder basis, please expect delivery of shirt in Mid-Early December
This shirt uplifts 50 years of ongoing resistance since the relocation law PL 93_531, so-called Navajo-Hopi Resettlement Act, was passed in 1974.
Pictured left to right are the late Ashike Bitsí, the late Jane Biakeddy, and the late Pauline Whitesinger.
Ashike Bitsí - Daughter of Boys. She was the Matriarch of Adzaan Dził Ntsáá, Big Mountain Woman family of Edgewater and Apache clans. She was one of several traditional healers with the upmost respect, that guided Big Mountain Sovereign Dineh Nation to declare Independence in 1977. Jane Biakeddy was her daughter and Pauline Whitesinger was her youngest sister.
After 50 years, we remember these Dineh Matriarchs and others who walked before us and beside us.
Big Mountain / Black Mesa Dineh resistance communities continue to lead the way forward. These resisters have outlasted the world's largest coal company, Peabody Energy; countered every colonial intention to remove them and force them to join the masses of displaced and dispossessed; and continued to carry out their lifeways, holding onto 900,000 acres of their ancestral lands in defiance of US law. It is from the direction and example of the people on the land, who continue to maintain their ways of life, that we, the international solidarity community, humbly continue to support.
Your purchase acknowledges this ongoing 50-year-long struggle against relocation and Peabody’s now defunct mines. All proceeds from these shirts will go directly to Dineh people continuing to resist relocation. Gratitude to Tom Matsuda and Nico Sardina for the beautiful design.
Black Mesa Solidarity Network is a decentralized volunteer network from around Turtle Island. We work directly with Dineh living in the territories resisting relocation laws. To learn more about the struggle for the land and get involved, visit their linktree
You can also support the network through their GoFundMe for the 2024 Winter Resiliency and Wood Camp
This shirt is printed on a Bayside Midweight Cotton T.
THIS SHIRT IS ON A SLIDING SCALE
Enter coupon code "BMSNPAY30" to Pay $30
Enter coupon code "BMSNPAY50" to Pay $50
This shirt is on a preorder basis, please expect delivery of shirt in Mid-Early December
This shirt uplifts 50 years of ongoing resistance since the relocation law PL 93_531, so-called Navajo-Hopi Resettlement Act, was passed in 1974.
Pictured left to right are the late Ashike Bitsí, the late Jane Biakeddy, and the late Pauline Whitesinger.
Ashike Bitsí - Daughter of Boys. She was the Matriarch of Adzaan Dził Ntsáá, Big Mountain Woman family of Edgewater and Apache clans. She was one of several traditional healers with the upmost respect, that guided Big Mountain Sovereign Dineh Nation to declare Independence in 1977. Jane Biakeddy was her daughter and Pauline Whitesinger was her youngest sister.
After 50 years, we remember these Dineh Matriarchs and others who walked before us and beside us.
Big Mountain / Black Mesa Dineh resistance communities continue to lead the way forward. These resisters have outlasted the world's largest coal company, Peabody Energy; countered every colonial intention to remove them and force them to join the masses of displaced and dispossessed; and continued to carry out their lifeways, holding onto 900,000 acres of their ancestral lands in defiance of US law. It is from the direction and example of the people on the land, who continue to maintain their ways of life, that we, the international solidarity community, humbly continue to support.
Your purchase acknowledges this ongoing 50-year-long struggle against relocation and Peabody’s now defunct mines. All proceeds from these shirts will go directly to Dineh people continuing to resist relocation. Gratitude to Tom Matsuda and Nico Sardina for the beautiful design.
Black Mesa Solidarity Network is a decentralized volunteer network from around Turtle Island. We work directly with Dineh living in the territories resisting relocation laws. To learn more about the struggle for the land and get involved, visit their linktree
You can also support the network through their GoFundMe for the 2024 Winter Resiliency and Wood Camp
This shirt is printed on a Bayside Midweight Cotton T.
THIS SHIRT IS ON A SLIDING SCALE
Enter coupon code "BMSNPAY30" to Pay $30
Enter coupon code "BMSNPAY50" to Pay $50
This shirt is on a preorder basis, please expect delivery of shirt in Mid-Early December
This shirt uplifts 50 years of ongoing resistance since the relocation law PL 93_531, so-called Navajo-Hopi Resettlement Act, was passed in 1974.
Pictured left to right are the late Ashike Bitsí, the late Jane Biakeddy, and the late Pauline Whitesinger.
Ashike Bitsí - Daughter of Boys. She was the Matriarch of Adzaan Dził Ntsáá, Big Mountain Woman family of Edgewater and Apache clans. She was one of several traditional healers with the upmost respect, that guided Big Mountain Sovereign Dineh Nation to declare Independence in 1977. Jane Biakeddy was her daughter and Pauline Whitesinger was her youngest sister.
After 50 years, we remember these Dineh Matriarchs and others who walked before us and beside us.
Big Mountain / Black Mesa Dineh resistance communities continue to lead the way forward. These resisters have outlasted the world's largest coal company, Peabody Energy; countered every colonial intention to remove them and force them to join the masses of displaced and dispossessed; and continued to carry out their lifeways, holding onto 900,000 acres of their ancestral lands in defiance of US law. It is from the direction and example of the people on the land, who continue to maintain their ways of life, that we, the international solidarity community, humbly continue to support.
Your purchase acknowledges this ongoing 50-year-long struggle against relocation and Peabody’s now defunct mines. All proceeds from these shirts will go directly to Dineh people continuing to resist relocation. Gratitude to Tom Matsuda and Nico Sardina for the beautiful design.
Black Mesa Solidarity Network is a decentralized volunteer network from around Turtle Island. We work directly with Dineh living in the territories resisting relocation laws. To learn more about the struggle for the land and get involved, visit their linktree
You can also support the network through their GoFundMe for the 2024 Winter Resiliency and Wood Camp
This shirt is printed on a Bayside Midweight Cotton T.