{"title":"A New Day Must Begin: Tribal Nation Building and Higher Education","authors":"B. Brayboy","doi":"10.1353/jaie.2021.a851806","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract:The childhood memory remains vivid. Floyd Westerman’s political anthem “Custer Died for Your Sins” blared on the family 8-track, imploring that a new day must begin, as the author’s parents unwound from a long but impactful week. This report is a reflection on past, present, and future, as Bryan Brayboy recounts how his parents worked to bring about that new day. His father helped their tribal nation access quality health care. His mother worked with Native nations and non-Native institutions of higher learning in the name of self-determination through education. “It was quiet. Active. Subtle. Effective. Nation building,” Brayboy writes. “I am a product of my parents. In so many ways. I am my parents.” Nation building is the active fulfillment of the belief that we are responsible to our ancestors and responsible for our descendants. It answers the question: How can I be of service and what can I build? It begins a new day. Bryan Brayboy has spent 25 years researching and writing about the role of higher education as it relates to Indigenous Peoples and shares “principles and ideas crucial to engaging in nation building work from within institutions that have traditionally been antithetical to how we think about knowledge and the ways we do our work.”","PeriodicalId":90572,"journal":{"name":"Journal of American Indian education","volume":"60 1","pages":"113 - 95"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of American Indian education","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/jaie.2021.a851806","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract:The childhood memory remains vivid. Floyd Westerman’s political anthem “Custer Died for Your Sins” blared on the family 8-track, imploring that a new day must begin, as the author’s parents unwound from a long but impactful week. This report is a reflection on past, present, and future, as Bryan Brayboy recounts how his parents worked to bring about that new day. His father helped their tribal nation access quality health care. His mother worked with Native nations and non-Native institutions of higher learning in the name of self-determination through education. “It was quiet. Active. Subtle. Effective. Nation building,” Brayboy writes. “I am a product of my parents. In so many ways. I am my parents.” Nation building is the active fulfillment of the belief that we are responsible to our ancestors and responsible for our descendants. It answers the question: How can I be of service and what can I build? It begins a new day. Bryan Brayboy has spent 25 years researching and writing about the role of higher education as it relates to Indigenous Peoples and shares “principles and ideas crucial to engaging in nation building work from within institutions that have traditionally been antithetical to how we think about knowledge and the ways we do our work.”
摘要:童年记忆历历在目。弗洛伊德·韦斯特曼(Floyd Westerman)的政治圣歌《卡斯特为你的罪而死》(Custer die for Your Sins)在家庭八音轨中响起,恳求新的一天必须开始,作者的父母从漫长但影响深远的一周中放松下来。这篇报道是对过去、现在和未来的反思,Bryan Brayboy讲述了他的父母是如何努力实现新的一天的。他的父亲帮助他们的部落国家获得高质量的医疗保健。他的母亲以教育自决的名义与土著民族和非土著高等教育机构合作。“很安静。活跃。微妙的。有效。国家建设,”Brayboy写道。“我是父母的产物。在很多方面。我是我的父母。”国家建设是对我们的祖先和后代负责的信念的积极实现。它回答了这样一个问题:我怎样才能提供服务?我能建立什么?新的一天开始了。Bryan Brayboy花了25年的时间研究和写作高等教育与土著人民的关系,并分享了“在传统上与我们对知识的看法和工作方式相对立的机构内参与国家建设工作的关键原则和思想”。