
Native News Weekly (September 28, 2025): D.C. Briefs
Help Us Tell the Stories That Could Save Native Languages and Food Traditions
At a critical moment for Indian Country, Native News Online is embarking on our most ambitious reporting project yet: “Cultivating Culture”, a three-year investigation into two forces shaping Native community survival—food sovereignty and language revitalization.
The devastating impact of COVID-19 accelerated the loss of Native elders and, with them, irreplaceable cultural knowledge. Yet across tribal communities, innovative leaders are fighting back, reclaiming traditional food systems and breathing new life into Native languages.
These aren’t just cultural preservation efforts—they’re powerful pathways to community health, healing, and resilience.
Our dedicated reporting team will spend three years documenting these stories through on-the-ground reporting in 18 tribal communities, producing over 200 in-depth stories, 18 podcast episodes, and multimedia content that amplifies Indigenous voices.
We’ll show policymakers, funders, and allies how cultural restoration directly impacts physical and mental wellness while celebrating successful models of sovereignty and self-determination.
This isn’t corporate media parachuting into Indian Country for a quick story. This is sustained, relationship-based journalism by Native reporters who understand these communities. It’s “Warrior Journalism” — fearless reporting that serves the 5.5 million readers who depend on us for news that mainstream media often ignores.
We need your help right now. While we’ve secured partial funding, we’re still $450,000 short of our three-year budget. Our immediate goal is $25,000 this month to keep this critical work moving forward—funding reporter salaries, travel to remote communities, photography, and the deep reporting these stories deserve.
Every dollar directly supports Indigenous journalists telling Indigenous stories. Whether it’s $5 or $50, your contribution ensures these vital narratives of resilience, innovation, and hope don’t disappear into silence.
The stakes couldn’t be higher. Native languages are being lost at an alarming rate. Food insecurity plagues many tribal communities. But solutions are emerging, and these stories need to be told.
Support independent Native journalism. Fund the stories that matter.
Levi Rickert (Potawatomi), Editor & Publisher
https://nativenewsonline.net/currents/native-news-weekly-september-28-2025-d-c-briefs
You may also like
You may be interested
Study: reading can save your life
Avid readers may feel there’s nothing better than diving into...
Why some adults never want to have sex? Science decoded
**Life Without Sex: Insights from a Landmark Study on Lifelong...
The incredible transformation of Elastigirl on screen
**The Incredible Transformation of Elastigirl on Screen** *By Vinita Jain...
The New York Times
- Storm Pounds Southern California With Heavy Rains and Some Flooding 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Amy Graff
- Todd Snider, Folk Singer With a Wry Wit, Dies at 59 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Derrick Bryson Taylor
- Fetterman Is Released From the Hospital After a Fall 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Billy Witz
- Epstein, Fuentes and Trump’s Political Erosion 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Jamelle Bouie, Michelle Cottle, David French and Derek Arthur
- Displaced Gazans Face More Misery as Torrential Rain Lashes Enclave 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Bilal Shbair, Abu Bakr Bashir and Aaron Boxerman
- Gallego Pitches Demoralized Democrats on a Midterm Message 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Catie Edmondson
- Trump Is Wrong About Fentanyl in Almost Every Way 2025 年 11 月 15 日 David Herzberg
- On a Clipped Wing, Flamingo Escapes a British Zoo for a Life in France 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Jonathan Wolfe
- Once He Was ‘Just Asking Questions.’ Now Tucker Carlson Is the Question. 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Robert Draper
- Seven Days of Paralysis: Inside the BBC Crisis Over a Trump Documentary 2025 年 11 月 15 日 Jane Bradley and Tariq Panja



Leave a Reply