Seventh Generation Earth Ethics
Native Voices of Wisconsin
- Walter Bresette, Red Cliff Ojibwe, community activist
- Hilary Waukau, Menominee, environmental warrior
- Frances Van Zile, Mole Lake (Sokaogon) Ojibwe, keeper of the water
- James Schlender, Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe, treaty rights guardian
- Jose Rose, Bad River Ojibwe, elder, environmentalist, and scholar
- Dorothy Davids, Stockbridge-Munsee Community Band of Mohican Indians, educator
- William Gollnick, Oneida, culture keeper
- Thomas St. Germaine, Lac du Flambeau Ojibwe, attorney
- Truman Lowe, Ho-Chunk, organic sculpture artist
- Jenny and Mary Thunder, Forest County Potawatomi, medicine women
- Wanda McFaggen, St. Croix Ojibwe, Tribal Historic Preservationist
- Caroline Andler, Brothertown Indian Nation, genealogist
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bestselling author Patty Loew is Professor Emerita in the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University and recently retired as the inaugural director of NU’s Center for Native American and Indigenous Research. She is a documentary film producer and former broadcast journalist in public and commercial television. A citizen of Mashkiiziibii (Bad River Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe), she is the author of several books, including Indian Nations of Wisconsin and Native People of Wisconsin, which is used by tens of thousands of Wisconsin school children as a social studies textbook.PRAISE
“We Anishinaabeg believe that all humans are born with a special gift to benefit and serve our first mother, the Earth, and all living beings. Seven Generation Earth Ethics shares the biographies of twelve indigenous people whose lives provide pathways and inspiration for all to follow.”
—Lisa Poupart (Lac du Flambeau Anishinaabequay), associate professor of First Nations Studies, University of Wisconsin–Green Bay
“Patty Loew invites us to greet, sit down with, and stand alongside these Native activists, artists, educators, and healers who have shown us the way of making community with the land and with each other. These wonderfully told stories are for friends, allies, and all defenders of place and culture.”
—Rick Whaley, coauthor of Walleye Warriors: The Chippewa Treaty Rights Story
“By capturing the legacies of these inspiring and courageous people, Dr. Loew reminds us that history can be and indeed is made every day in our communities by those who remain true to indigenous ecological values and cultural sensibilities.”
—James E. Zorn, former executive administrator, Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission
“In Loew’s capable hands these stories offer insight into the spiritual, ecological, and communal values of Native nations, into the cultural gravity that calls tribal people back to their home reservations, and into the Seventh Generation earth ethics that stand behind the grassroots movements founded by many of those featured in this volume.”
—Kimberly Blaeser (White Earth Ojibwe), author of Apprenticed to Justice and past Wisconsin Poet Laureate