From restaurants to seed stewarding, tribal members are working to reconnect with their foodways and culture. "Our food is our stories. It's our sovereignty," said chef Sherry Pocknett. "And without ...
It has been many moons since Samoset said, “Welcome, Englishmen.” Since then, our land has gone from us, never to be ours ...
Thanksgiving history taught in classrooms is often whitewashed. We asked Indigenous people what everyone should know about ...
The narrative that underpins the traditional Thanksgiving story is built on myths about the Pilgrims and the Wampanoag and ...
While the 1621 feast wasn’t called “Thanksgiving” at the time, it set the stage for a holiday that would become a cornerstone ...
The Native American Wampanoag tribe was crucial to the Pilgrims’ survival, teaching them to cultivate crops and providing aid ...
Today Americans celebrate Thanksgiving, a holiday full of family, food, and, often, football. Central to the day, we see the ...
Thanksgiving Day is an American holiday that traditionally began with the Pilgrims in 1620-21 as they were indeed thankful to be alive after they survived that first harsh winter in ...
The Pilgrims and Wampanoag shared a harvest feast, but it didn't happen the way you were likely taught in school.
The Narragansett, and many Indigenous Americans, celebrate 13 Thanksgivings a year, and have done so for, perhaps, millennia.
Over four centuries ago, the Pilgrims planted the roots of what would ultimately become the constitutional republic of the United States of America.