The Berkeley Unified School District celebrates Indigenous Peoples Heritage Month to commemorate the histories, traditions, and important contributions of the many diverse Indigenous cultures to our nation.
On November 19, 2020, the Board of Education adopted a resolution to annually recognize the month of November as Indigenous Peoples Heritage Month, and resolved 91ΔΫ²έΒιΆΉ schools promote instructional activities and celebrations honoring the history, contemporary issues, and culture of the Indigenous People’s of the Americas.
November is Indigenous Peoples Heritage Month, also known as Native American Heritage Month, which is an important time of year for our community to reflect on the vital role of the first and original stewards of these lands we now call the United States. Our schools reside on xuΔyun (Huichin), the ancestral lands of the Lisjan Ohlone (Leeshawn) and Muwekma Ohlone tribes. We acknowledge and celebrate their ongoing role in Berkeley and their current day activism to preserve sacred shellmound sites, revitalize Indigenous practices and the Chochenyo language, and to rematriate land back to Indigenous stewardship.
As part of our district vision for students, βOur students embrace diversity, act responsibly, and contribute to our community.β To that end, our School Board passed the resolution, Declaring Annually the Month of November as Indigenous Peoples Heritage Month. We will continue to deepen our commitments to support our students to embrace and learn about the diversity of Berkeleyβs first peoples. These resource guides for educators and families are just one small way that we are working toward this
goal.
Through our Rethinking Thanksgiving Teaching Guide, we also invite community members to consider the painful legacy of Thanksgiving for many Indigenous peoples and the nuanced perspectives around this time of celebration and also mourning.
In community,
Enikia Ford Morthel
Superintendent
November is known as Native American Heritage Month, Indigenous Peoples Heritage Month, as well as American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage MonthΜύ
Why the different names?
As with any group of people who have some unifying lived experiences, shared histories and identities, there will also be a wide variety of opinions and ideas about what words best describe such a diverse community. American Indian, Indian, Native American, Indigenous, and Native are just a few of the words that people use. Many people also prefer to have their specific tribal name referenced. Whatever the case may be, identity is deeply personal and as much as possible, it is important to build relationships and learn how people personally identify themselves, rather than guess.
For more information about terminology, visit to the National Museum of the American Indian.
Visual Land Acknowledgement Mural Celebration
In the 2022-23 school year, 91ΔΫ²έΒιΆΉ worked with Berkeley High School Native Student Union (NSU) on a proposal and grant application for a land acknowledgement and mural project.
By the fall of the 2023-2024 school year, a collaboration for the mural project with the Indigenous women-led organization, Sogorea Teβ Land Trust, was established.Μύ Artists and NSU students co-designed the mural, while 91ΔΫ²έΒιΆΉβs Ethnic Studies TSA worked with NSU on a land acknowledgement draft. Painting commenced in May 2024, involving students from Oxford and BHS NSU members.
To celebrate the culmination of this project, there will be a Mural Celebration on November 19 from 4:00 – 5:30 PM on the corner of Bonar and University.
Guides for Families in English, Spanish, and ArabicΜύ
These guides are available to support families in honoring and celebrating the heritage of Indigenous Peoples.Μύ Included are suggestions of songs, videos, andΜύ activities to Listen, Learn, Lift Up, and Love!
Reading Lists for All AgesΜύΜύ
These , organized by grade level, represent books published in the last 5 years that are devoted to celebrating, representing, and affirming Indigenous heritage, featuring Indigenous authors, characters and the North American Indigenous experience.
All of these books are available through Berkeley school libraries as a physical and/or digital book. If an ebook is available through Sora, you can access it by clicking the cover of the book. For more information about any of these books, or to check one of them out, ask your school librarian.
Lifting up 91ΔΫ²έΒιΆΉ Staff Indigenous Peoples Voices
In celebration of our Indigenous Peoples community, 91ΔΫ²έΒιΆΉ is proud to lift up our Indigenous Peoples voices, a campaign to share our staff narratives with our student and community by creating posters featuring their stories and experiences. These posters will be displayed at schools, work sites, on the 91ΔΫ²έΒιΆΉ website, and in district publications. Sharing these narratives with our students will allow them to deepen connections with Indigenous Peoples staff across the district.
Please click on each name to see a full sized poster.
Teaching Resources
TK-8 Teaching Resources
This was compiled by Joemy Ito-Gates, 91ΔΫ²έΒιΆΉ’s Ethnic Studies TSA in collaboration with the Professional Development Team.
Rethinking Thanksgiving
This provides educators with lessons, teaching tips, and other resources to teach about the Thanksgiving holiday.
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