Posts tagged "indian"
San Carlos Apache ‘Warrior’ Ran Half-Marathon to Honor Natives Lost to AIDS
Isadore Boni, a San Carlos Apache member, was diagnosed with HIV and Hepatitis C in May 2002. In November 2004, he was diagnosed with AIDS. On January 20, 2013, he ran his fourth half-marathon at his personal best time of 2:15.
The HIV and AIDS survivor, who tours the state of Arizona as an educator for HIV prevention, ran PF Chang’s Rock & Roll 1/2 Marathon in Phoenix in memory of Native people who have died of AIDS complications and “to remind people living with AIDS that anything is possible,” he said. 
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/01/21/san-carlos-apache-warrior-ran-half-marathon-honor-natives-lost-aids-147122

San Carlos Apache ‘Warrior’ Ran Half-Marathon to Honor Natives Lost to AIDS

Isadore Boni, a San Carlos Apache member, was diagnosed with HIV and Hepatitis C in May 2002. In November 2004, he was diagnosed with AIDS. On January 20, 2013, he ran his fourth half-marathon at his personal best time of 2:15.

The HIV and AIDS survivor, who tours the state of Arizona as an educator for HIV prevention, ran PF Chang’s Rock & Roll 1/2 Marathon in Phoenix in memory of Native people who have died of AIDS complications and “to remind people living with AIDS that anything is possible,” he said.

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/01/21/san-carlos-apache-warrior-ran-half-marathon-honor-natives-lost-aids-147122

iknowmine is is kicking off the holiday season with a giveaway to celebrate National Native American Heritage month. Two winners will receive their choice of the beaded earrings shown in the event photo and Spawn Safely t-shirt in purple or yellow. The earrings are beaded by our own Jen Arnold, a local Yup’ik beader here at ANTHC. To enter simply post a photo showing what National Native American Month means to you on our facebook wall (facebook.com/iknowmine). The winners will be picked two ways: 1. Most liked photos (tell your friends!) 2. Judge’s pick.  The photo must be posted by 9:00a (Alaska time) December 1st. Winners will be chosen December 3rd and announced on the facebook page and in the photo’s comments. Anyone who likes the iknowmine Facebook page is eligible to enter. For questions please contact Taija Revels, tnrevels@anthc.org subject line: Facebook Photo Contest, (907) 729-3927 Please share and invite widely!


Link to the Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/302218556559168/

iknowmine is is kicking off the holiday season with a giveaway to celebrate National Native American Heritage month. Two winners will receive their choice of the beaded earrings shown in the event photo and Spawn Safely t-shirt in purple or yellow. The earrings are beaded by our own Jen Arnold, a local Yup’ik beader here at ANTHC.

To enter simply post a photo showing what National Native American Month means to you on our facebook wall (facebook.com/iknowmine). The winners will be picked two ways: 1. Most liked photos (tell your friends!) 2. Judge’s pick.

The photo must be posted by 9:00a (Alaska time) December 1st.

Winners will be chosen December 3rd and announced on the facebook page and in the photo’s comments.

Anyone who likes the iknowmine Facebook page is eligible to enter.

For questions please contact Taija Revels, tnrevels@anthc.org subject line: Facebook Photo Contest, (907) 729-3927

Please share and invite widely!

Just in time for Halloween! We present: “Baby Big Mouth”

Credit: Carving of Tupilaq, artist unknown Source: http://squeakyspooky.livejournal.com/22360.html

A long time ago there was a couple that lived in a village Akiachak, just up river from Bethel. They were a couple like any other couple. They lived in one of those old-timer, sod houses and at the top there was a window, made from seal skin, to let light in. They wanted a child and so they went to the shaman and he told them that he could help them to have a child with the help of the spirits but he warned them that: “No matter how the child looks, you must present it to the village and be proud of it or it will go badly for you.”They agreed to this thinking that any baby they had would surely be cute. After a few years of being together they had a child.

After the baby was born, they didn’t know what it was at first. It could have been a boy or girl. It had a normal mouth but also had an opening with teeth on its chest area. The opening was a gruesome mouth so large, which was already filled with teeth. As the baby grew bigger it would enjoy food just as much as anyone but would demand lots of meat. Horrified and embarrassed the two kept the child hidden in the house, and almost never looked at it. The baby got aggressive and the parents would hide the baby when they had visitors. They would hang up a drape or anything in order to hide the baby from the villagers. When the girl/boy was a little older than a toddler it started to crawl and walk.

One night the man woke up to a noise and saw that the baby was on his wife. The man thought that his child was breast feeding but it was really eating at her flesh. The man got out of bed to put his clothes on. The baby crawled back to its sleeping area and made it look like it was asleep. The man alerted the villagers at night. It was a clear full moon and the man went to everyone’s huts and gathered everyone together. They even brought the dogs in to help. The dogs knew that something was wrong.

As the man and everyone were getting ready to go, the baby woke up. They baby hollered “Naawyuu. Naawyuu!” meaning “Where are the people, where is everybody!” “Chigemucha.” “How come I’m by myself, why am I by myself.” The baby started to crawl and look for other people. As the villagers were about to go out to the end of the village, they looked back and saw that the baby was crawling out of the window and falling over. After they saw that, they walked to a different village and never returned to see what had become of the baby. The Big Mouth Baby now wonders the tundra, coming out during storms to devour herds of caribou and occasionally people as well.

Thank you to Harlyn’s granddad for the story, John Andrew, an Yup’ik Elder

Check out this awesome music created by Indigenous teens in Portland, OR at a Native Youth Conference. If you didn’t know, wernative is our sister organization to the south. It’s a good day to be Indigenous!

Taija

wernative:

This original music CD was created in 4 days in June 2012 by Native youth living across the USA and adult mentors to prepare them as musical peer educators in their communities and schools. Their songs and stories are devoted to: native Pride, Health Promotion, Suicide, Alcohol and Addiction Prevention. Music academy program support and funding was provided by THRIVE, a project at the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board, hots of the health Promotion Conference. Music mentors academy staff include: Todd Denny, Program Director, J. Ross Parrelli, and our talented audio engineer Brad kaminski, Kevin “Yamio” Winkle and Spiro Spanos.

Contact project THRIVE at the NPAIHB at: 503.228.4185 or Todd Denny, Music Mentor Academies at: 360.866.7140

20 plays

Focus group finds rural NC African-American teens don’t identify with safer sex messaging

hellyeahscarleteen:

“In 2006, we recruited 37 black adolescents from two rural North Carolina counties to participate in focus groups exploring adolescent understanding of how primary prevention strategies reduce STD transmission, described common barriers to the adoption of prevention strategies, and identified risk reduction strategies adolescents commonly employ,” says Aletha Y. Akers, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Pittsburgh.

“What we found is adolescents understand how STDs are transmitted but consider primary prevention strategies like abstinence and consistent condom use unlikely or difficult to implement.”

As reported in the journal Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, adolescents in the study say they develop their own strategies to reduce their STD risk, which include indirect partner assessments like evaluating a person’s physical appearance, eye contact, and body language.

Girls who were interviewed often used regular STD testing as a way to fact-check their partners’ faithfulness. As long as they remained STD-free, they felt they could trust their partners’ commitment.

“This study is incredibly important because it shows us a disconnect between adolescents and the public health messages put forth,” Akers says. “We need to identify whatever misconceptions about STD transmission they may have and correct them.

Read the rest here or read the original study.

For a check-in on what safer sex is NOT — like what people look like, or only one person’s test results — you can have a lookie-loo here.

I feel like this is also true in Alaska Native/American Indian/NDN populations. True? Not true?

plannedparenthood:

Sometimes being above average isn’t such a good thing. Wondering if you should get tested? The Check will help you figure out if your nether bits should be screened for chlamydia, gonorrhea, or HIV. Check it out.
via menshealthmag

Fellow AK Native teens! Our rates for gonorrhea outrageous. Out of all the cases in AK, over 70% occurred in Alaska Natives and almost 50% of those were diagnosed in people 24 and under!
Get free and confidential testing mailed to you anywhere in the state of Alaska here.

plannedparenthood:

Sometimes being above average isn’t such a good thing. Wondering if you should get tested? The Check will help you figure out if your nether bits should be screened for chlamydia, gonorrhea, or HIV. Check it out.

via menshealthmag

Fellow AK Native teens! Our rates for gonorrhea outrageous. Out of all the cases in AK, over 70% occurred in Alaska Natives and almost 50% of those were diagnosed in people 24 and under!

Get free and confidential testing mailed to you anywhere in the state of Alaska here.

To provide truthful and accurate sexual health information free of bias, agenda, or politics for Alaska Native/American Indian youth and youth at large in order for them to be in control of their own health.

twitter.com/iknowmine

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