logo
Bald eagle's new status as the official US bird brings pride and hope to many Native Americans

Bald eagle's new status as the official US bird brings pride and hope to many Native Americans

Independent12 hours ago
Some Native Americans traditionally bestow bald eagle feathers at ceremonies to mark achievements, such as graduations, and as a form of reverence for the bird they hold sacred as a messenger to the Creator.
This year, many are doing so with elevated pride and hope. The bald eagle is now the official bird of the United States, nearly 250 years after it was first used as a symbol of the newly founded nation that's deeply polarized politically today.
'The eagle is finally getting the respect it deserves. Maybe when the nation looks at the eagle that way, maybe there will be less division,' said Jim Thunder Hawk. He's the Dakota culture and language manager for the Prairie Island Indian Community, a small Mdewakanton Sioux band on the banks of the Mississippi River in Minnesota.
This wide, unruffled stretch of water framed by wooded bluffs is prime bald eagle territory. The size of Minnesota's population of the majestic, white-head-and-tail birds that are exclusive to North America is second only to that of Alaska.
The legislation that made the eagle official came from members of Minnesota's Congressional delegation. The federal act recognizes the eagles' centrality in most Indigenous peoples' 'spiritual lives and sacred belief systems,' and a replica of it is on display at the National Eagle Center in Wabasha, Minnesota, 40 miles (65 kilometers) downriver from the Prairie Island community, which partners with the center in eagle care.
'If you grew up in the United States, eagles were a part of your everyday life,' said Tiffany Ploehn, who as the center's avian care director supervises its four resident bald eagles. 'Everyone has some sort of connection.'
Fierce symbols of strength and spiritual uplift
A bald eagle, its wings and talons spread wide, has graced the Great Seal of the United States since 1782, and appears on passport covers, the $1 bill, military insignia, and myriad different images in pop culture.
But a prolific collector of eagle memorabilia based in Wabasha realized recently that, while the United States had an official animal (the bison) and flower (the rose), the eagle was getting no formal credit. Several Minnesota legislators sponsored a bill to remedy that and then-President Joe Biden's signature made it official in December.
With their massive wingspan and stern curved beak, bald eagles are widely used as symbols of strength and power. In reality, they spend 95% of their day perched high in trees, though when they hunt they can spot a rabbit 3 miles (5 kilometers) away, Ploehn said.
For many Native Americans, the soaring eagle represents far more; it delivers their prayers to the Creator and even intercedes on their behalf.
'My grandma told me that we honor eagles because they saved the Ojibwe people when the Creator wanted to turn on them. The eagle, he can fly high, so he went to speak with the Creator to make things right,' said Sadie Erickson, who is Ojibwe and Mdewakanton Sioux.
Marking life milestones with eagle feathers
Erickson and a dozen other high school graduates received a bald eagle feather at an early July celebration by the riverbank at Prairie Island.
Thunder Hawk said a prayer in the Dakota language urging the high school graduates and graduates receiving higher education degrees to 'always remember who you are and where you come from.'
Then they lined up and a relative tied a feather — traditionally on the left side, the heart's side — as tribal members sang and drummed to celebrate them.
'It just feels like I went through a new step of life,' said Jayvionna Buck.
Growing up on Prairie Island, she recalled her mother excitedly pointing out every eagle.
'She would genuinely just yell at me, 'Eagle!' But it's just a special occurrence for us to see,' Buck said. 'We love seeing it, and normally when we do, we just offer tobacco to show our respects.'
Some Native Americans honor the eagle by taking it as their ceremonial name. Derek Walking Eagle, whose Lakota name is 'Eagle Thunder,' celebrated the graduates wearing a woven medallion representing the bird.
To him, eagles are like relatives that connect him to his future and afterlife.
'Being able to carry on to the spirit world … that's who guides you. It's the eagle,' Walking Eagle said.
That deep respect attaches to the feathers, too.
'It's the highest respect you can bestow on a person, from your family and from your people, from your tribe,' Thunder Hawk said. 'We teach the person receiving the feather that they have to honor and respect the eagle. And we tell them why.'
Persistent troubles, but new hope
In many Native cultures, killing an eagle is 'blasphemous,' he said. It is also a federal offense.
Historically, Sioux warriors would lure an eagle with rabbit or other food, pluck a few feathers and release it, said Thunder Hawk, who grew up in South Dakota.
Today, there's a nationwide program that legally distributes eagle feathers and parts exclusively to tribal members, though it's very backlogged. U.S. wildlife and tribal officials worry that killings and illegal trafficking of eagles for their feathers is on the rise, especially in the West.
In Minnesota, eagles are most often harmed by road accidents and eating poison – results of shrinking wildlife habitat that brings them in closer contact with humans, said Lori Arent, interim director of the University of Minnesota's Raptor Center.
The center treats about 200 injured bald eagles each year. Of those they can save, most are eventually released back into the wild. Permanently disabled birds that lose an eye or whose wings are too badly fractured to fly are cared for there or at other educational institutions like the Wabasha eagle center.
The official designation could help more Americans understand how their behaviors inadvertently harm eagles, Arent said. Littering by a highway, for instance, attracts rodents that lure eagles, which then can be struck by vehicles. Fishing or hunting with tackles and ammunition containing lead exposes the eagles eating those fish or deer remains to fatal metal poisoning.
Humans have lost the ability to coexist in harmony with the natural world, Thunder Hawk said, voicing a concern shared by Indigenous people from the Chilean Andes to the U.S.-Mexico borderlands.
He hopes more people might now approach the eagle with the same reverence he was taught. It's what leads him to offer sage or dried red willow bark every time he spots one as a 'thank you for allowing me to see you and for you to hear my prayers and my thoughts.'
Erickson, the new graduate, shares that optimism.
'I feel like that kind of shows that we're strong and united as a country,' she said by the Mississippi, her new feather nestled in her hair.
___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bald eagle's new status as the official US bird brings pride and hope to many Native Americans
Bald eagle's new status as the official US bird brings pride and hope to many Native Americans

The Independent

time12 hours ago

  • The Independent

Bald eagle's new status as the official US bird brings pride and hope to many Native Americans

Some Native Americans traditionally bestow bald eagle feathers at ceremonies to mark achievements, such as graduations, and as a form of reverence for the bird they hold sacred as a messenger to the Creator. This year, many are doing so with elevated pride and hope. The bald eagle is now the official bird of the United States, nearly 250 years after it was first used as a symbol of the newly founded nation that's deeply polarized politically today. 'The eagle is finally getting the respect it deserves. Maybe when the nation looks at the eagle that way, maybe there will be less division,' said Jim Thunder Hawk. He's the Dakota culture and language manager for the Prairie Island Indian Community, a small Mdewakanton Sioux band on the banks of the Mississippi River in Minnesota. This wide, unruffled stretch of water framed by wooded bluffs is prime bald eagle territory. The size of Minnesota's population of the majestic, white-head-and-tail birds that are exclusive to North America is second only to that of Alaska. The legislation that made the eagle official came from members of Minnesota's Congressional delegation. The federal act recognizes the eagles' centrality in most Indigenous peoples' 'spiritual lives and sacred belief systems,' and a replica of it is on display at the National Eagle Center in Wabasha, Minnesota, 40 miles (65 kilometers) downriver from the Prairie Island community, which partners with the center in eagle care. 'If you grew up in the United States, eagles were a part of your everyday life,' said Tiffany Ploehn, who as the center's avian care director supervises its four resident bald eagles. 'Everyone has some sort of connection.' Fierce symbols of strength and spiritual uplift A bald eagle, its wings and talons spread wide, has graced the Great Seal of the United States since 1782, and appears on passport covers, the $1 bill, military insignia, and myriad different images in pop culture. But a prolific collector of eagle memorabilia based in Wabasha realized recently that, while the United States had an official animal (the bison) and flower (the rose), the eagle was getting no formal credit. Several Minnesota legislators sponsored a bill to remedy that and then-President Joe Biden's signature made it official in December. With their massive wingspan and stern curved beak, bald eagles are widely used as symbols of strength and power. In reality, they spend 95% of their day perched high in trees, though when they hunt they can spot a rabbit 3 miles (5 kilometers) away, Ploehn said. For many Native Americans, the soaring eagle represents far more; it delivers their prayers to the Creator and even intercedes on their behalf. 'My grandma told me that we honor eagles because they saved the Ojibwe people when the Creator wanted to turn on them. The eagle, he can fly high, so he went to speak with the Creator to make things right,' said Sadie Erickson, who is Ojibwe and Mdewakanton Sioux. Marking life milestones with eagle feathers Erickson and a dozen other high school graduates received a bald eagle feather at an early July celebration by the riverbank at Prairie Island. Thunder Hawk said a prayer in the Dakota language urging the high school graduates and graduates receiving higher education degrees to 'always remember who you are and where you come from.' Then they lined up and a relative tied a feather — traditionally on the left side, the heart's side — as tribal members sang and drummed to celebrate them. 'It just feels like I went through a new step of life,' said Jayvionna Buck. Growing up on Prairie Island, she recalled her mother excitedly pointing out every eagle. 'She would genuinely just yell at me, 'Eagle!' But it's just a special occurrence for us to see,' Buck said. 'We love seeing it, and normally when we do, we just offer tobacco to show our respects.' Some Native Americans honor the eagle by taking it as their ceremonial name. Derek Walking Eagle, whose Lakota name is 'Eagle Thunder,' celebrated the graduates wearing a woven medallion representing the bird. To him, eagles are like relatives that connect him to his future and afterlife. 'Being able to carry on to the spirit world … that's who guides you. It's the eagle,' Walking Eagle said. That deep respect attaches to the feathers, too. 'It's the highest respect you can bestow on a person, from your family and from your people, from your tribe,' Thunder Hawk said. 'We teach the person receiving the feather that they have to honor and respect the eagle. And we tell them why.' Persistent troubles, but new hope In many Native cultures, killing an eagle is 'blasphemous,' he said. It is also a federal offense. Historically, Sioux warriors would lure an eagle with rabbit or other food, pluck a few feathers and release it, said Thunder Hawk, who grew up in South Dakota. Today, there's a nationwide program that legally distributes eagle feathers and parts exclusively to tribal members, though it's very backlogged. U.S. wildlife and tribal officials worry that killings and illegal trafficking of eagles for their feathers is on the rise, especially in the West. In Minnesota, eagles are most often harmed by road accidents and eating poison – results of shrinking wildlife habitat that brings them in closer contact with humans, said Lori Arent, interim director of the University of Minnesota's Raptor Center. The center treats about 200 injured bald eagles each year. Of those they can save, most are eventually released back into the wild. Permanently disabled birds that lose an eye or whose wings are too badly fractured to fly are cared for there or at other educational institutions like the Wabasha eagle center. The official designation could help more Americans understand how their behaviors inadvertently harm eagles, Arent said. Littering by a highway, for instance, attracts rodents that lure eagles, which then can be struck by vehicles. Fishing or hunting with tackles and ammunition containing lead exposes the eagles eating those fish or deer remains to fatal metal poisoning. Humans have lost the ability to coexist in harmony with the natural world, Thunder Hawk said, voicing a concern shared by Indigenous people from the Chilean Andes to the U.S.-Mexico borderlands. He hopes more people might now approach the eagle with the same reverence he was taught. It's what leads him to offer sage or dried red willow bark every time he spots one as a 'thank you for allowing me to see you and for you to hear my prayers and my thoughts.' Erickson, the new graduate, shares that optimism. 'I feel like that kind of shows that we're strong and united as a country,' she said by the Mississippi, her new feather nestled in her hair. ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

The 11 rules of decluttering I learnt when I packed up my life to relocate
The 11 rules of decluttering I learnt when I packed up my life to relocate

Telegraph

time05-07-2025

  • Telegraph

The 11 rules of decluttering I learnt when I packed up my life to relocate

Next month, my family and I are moving to the United States. Not for ever, just for a couple of years, for my husband's job. We have signed a rental agreement on a furnished house and will ship the bare essentials to turn it into a home. We have a shipping allowance of 15 cubic metres – equivalent in size to 52 washing machines – and the rest of our belongings will go into storage. Consequently, the past month or so has been a frantic whirl of sorting, stowing and throwing. Not only do we have to decide on what we can't live without, but we also have to work out what will fill us with joy when we open the storage unit in two years, rather than make us wonder why on earth we hung on to it. Which means that almost every possession has had to be assessed for its value to us and its fate decided. We're working on the basis that unless furniture is either useful or meaningful, we can get rid of it. So far, we have sold a piano (meaningful, but my husband also owns a piano and we don't need two); my middle son's bed (a nightmare to put together); a redundant chest of drawers; a drum kit; and a tumble dryer (easily and cheaply replaceable). We have ferried countless carloads to the dump, flogged possessions at a car boot sale, restocked all the local charity shops and furnished all our friends with cast-offs. Our packers come next week. This is what I've learnt along the way about how to decide what you really need to hang on to – whether you're downsizing, or simply decluttering. 1. Colour coding is your friend Susanna Hammond of Sorted Living gave me one of the most useful pieces of advice to help organise both my things and my mind: buy a multipack of different-coloured rolls of masking tape on Amazon. 'Create a key, and assign each of your possessions a colour from A through to G,' she tells me. 'Those in the A group are definitely coming with you; Bs and Cs might make it; and G is going to the dump. If everything in the house has a square of coloured masking tape on it for a week or two, it helps focus the mind.' She's not wrong. I used seven colours: green was stuff definitely coming with us, yellow was for possible items, blue-stickered things were to go to storage, pink to hand on to family and friends, red to sell, purple to go to charity, and orange for the tip. After initially assigning almost all of our pictures green tape for A possessions, for example, I realised we didn't need to take that many things to hang on our walls, so half of them were reassigned blue tape and some turned pink. Over time, we whittled things down, occasionally replacing one colour of tape with another. 2. Work out what means 'home' to you 'We have to take the clock!' exclaimed my 14-year-old when he saw I'd stuck a yellow (for 'maybe') sticker on our kitchen timepiece. The clock was something he'd associated with home and the kitchen all his life – which meant hanging it in our new kitchen would make that feel like home, too. Ditto our ancient world-map kitchen table oilcloth, four candlesticks, a couple of rugs that hang on the end of the sofa and a little picture I picked up on holiday years ago that has always hung somewhere near the cooker. Once we'd collectively worked out the things that made us all feel safe and our surroundings familiar, it made it much easier to pick which decorative things to take with us. 3. You can get rid of books even if you're a book lover I have always been deeply suspicious of anyone who has no books in their home. For me, books are not only an essential part of life, but make a home cosy: I have consequently dragged boxes of them with me every time I've moved. But I can't take my entire library stateside, and I've gradually realised that I don't need to store all of them for two years either. A handful will come with me, and others are non-negotiable when it comes to storage: the novels I return to again and again. But do I really need to hang on to that enormous biographical encyclopedia when Wikipedia is much more up to date? And is it entirely necessary to keep the entire works of Thomas Hardy just because I studied him at GCSE? I've decided retaining a couple of my favourite Hardys will suffice; that the book on how remote working has changed the world that I've been meaning to read for the past three years can always be taken out of the library; and that the newly glaring gaps on the shelves will be filled within a matter of months anyway. 4. Don't hang on to things just because they 'might' come in handy one day In my mind and in my kitchen cupboards, I am a person who can throw a dinner party for 20 people at short notice. In reality, I favour having no more than six people to supper at a time, because that way you get to talk to everybody. Nevertheless, my kitchen shelves are (or were) groaning with plates, glassware, vases, baking trays and other accoutrements more suitable to mass catering than my everyday life. Working out what I needed to cater for the odd social gathering plus my family for the next two years helped me realise that actually, I probably didn't need that enormous pan, or the beautiful but impractical copper bowl that I have used precisely once, or a vast collection of glass vases when these days I prefer to stick tulips in a jug. 5. You don't have to do it all in one go Decluttering is exhausting, as it entails so many emotional decisions, but you don't have to blitz it all in one go. 'Your brain needs time to process,' says Sian Pelleschi, the president of the Association of Professional Declutterers and Organisers. 'If you're not sure about something, put it aside and come back to it later.' The same goes for even the boring, relatively easy tasks with less emotional attachment, such as sorting through your Tupperware. Rachel Cordingley, who runs the decluttering service A Tidy Mind, advises using a coffee break, for example, to sort through the kitchen junk drawer, or giving yourself 10 minutes to whistle through a bookshelf. If you spend a whole day decluttering, you'll get decision fatigue, but start doing a little, often, and you'll get on a roll. 6. It's OK to pay for time to consider I haven't had as much time or mental bandwidth as I'd have liked to work out what I want to keep or chuck. A case in point: the boxes of old magazine and newspaper clippings of work that I really need to spend some time sorting through – time I don't have right now. 'You can assess that in the future; you don't need to think about it now,' is Pelleschi's advice when I ask her about this. Consequently, I know that these and a couple of boxes of other things will go into storage and that I will have to sort through them properly when I get back – but that's OK. I'd rather do it properly than in a rush and regret it. 7. Get someone to help you A couple of months before we moved, a great friend whizzed up on the train for 24 hours. I was feeling overwhelmed by my bulging wardrobe; she is a ruthless decluttering fiend whose own closet is streamlined to the max. With my pal's truthful yet compassionate eye I was able to admit that, yes, those jumpsuits no longer did anything for me; the navy wool trousers that were my go-to office attire could be replaced with a more flattering pair; and the Ganni dress I pulled out and put back every time I went out didn't fit me well. Within a mere hour, I had an enormous pile of clothes to put on Vinted, another pile for the charity shop, and another to be packed away for the colder months. Now I have a wardrobe of clothes I can actually wear and that, crucially, I know will work for the life I have right now. A second pair of eyes can be a useful barometer, for everything from clothes to kitchenware. 8. Imagine you're shopping your house The advantage of being able to take only a small selection of our things meant that I had actively to decide what to take rather than what to leave. Professional move manager Sarah Myers is a general believer in making life simpler, and came over to help me do this. In practice, this meant emptying out my kitchen cupboards one by one and picking out my 10 favourite mugs, the 10 drinking glasses I like best, my prettiest plates, the saucepans I can't live without and so on – almost as if I were in a cookware shop, picking out a wedding list. All the rest either went into storage or to the car boot sale. 9. Have an exit strategy Because this was such a big move, we had to plan ahead, so we knew that we'd sell our tumble dryer, fridge and piano, but also that this might take a little time. Planning a specific exit strategy for the bigger pieces – that this item needed to be gone within this time window, and if it didn't sell we'd take it to a charity shop, for example – meant that the whole task was far less overwhelming. 10. Know that most things are replaceable Don't agonise over whether to keep everyday things that generally don't hold lots of sentimental value and can easily be replaced if necessary. 'If your house was about to burn down in flames, what would you grab?' asks Cordingley. For most people that would be their phone, their handbag, their passport, their computer and maybe a couple of sentimental items – probably not that set of saucepans from your wedding list. Yes it's annoying to find yourself rebuying something you once owned, but you'll more than likely find you manage perfectly well without it. 11. Decluttering is a skill everybody can learn 'All decluttering is emotional and habit-based,' says Cher Casey, a professional organiser, who comes to help me sort through my children's stuff with them. 'But it's a skill and everybody can learn how to do it.' Casey says that children can be incredibly receptive to the idea of letting go of things, and gently asks each of my three children how they feel about certain items, giving them time to consider their response. At the end of a couple of hours, my eldest son has a single box of possessions that he wants to take with him to America, my middle child has two boxes, and the youngest about the same. Casey's suggestion of taking pictures of things that they insisted they had to keep and I was adamant should go (my middle son's immense collection of Prime bottles, for example) was also a good one – a halfway house to the actual chucking. How to get rid of things you don't need The Sell Your Books app allows you to scan a barcode on any book and it will tell you how much money it will give you for it. Once you've reached a minimum of 10 items or £5 worth of value, you box up the books and someone will come and collect them; they go off to be checked and then the money hits your bank account. If you've got drawers full of pens, pencils, half-used notebooks and the like, most primary schools will happily take them off your hands (just tear out any used pages in notebooks and so on first). Dunelm, Marks & Spencer, H&M, John Lewis and George at Asda all offer textile recycling: take them a bagful of (clean) old clothes, towels or bedding and they will recycle them for you. The last three retailers all also offer vouchers towards future purchases, too. Old tins of paint that are still usable can be donated to Community RePaint, which redistributes paint to community groups or those in need. If you're taking paint to a recycling centre, you need to make sure it has hardened first. If you've got an assortment of usable household items but can't get to a charity shop, book a collection with Anglo Doorstep Collections. The site will tell you when the next run is happening in your area and you simply leave a box for your collection on your front doorstep.

Abandoned wild horse foal finds new mother at the zoo
Abandoned wild horse foal finds new mother at the zoo

The Independent

time30-06-2025

  • The Independent

Abandoned wild horse foal finds new mother at the zoo

An endangered Przewalski's horse foal named Marat, critically ill and rejected by his biological mother, found a surrogate parent in Alice, a domestic Pony of the Americas, at the Minnesota Zoo. Marat, born with limb problems, developed severe infections and was rejected by his first-time mother, prompting the zoo to seek an alternative to hand-rearing. The unique interspecies adoption occurred after Alice, who had recently lost her own newborn, bonded immediately with Marat, providing him with essential maternal care. This rare surrogacy is crucial for the Przewalski's horse species, the only truly wild horse remaining, which was once extinct in the wild and has fewer than 2,000 individuals globally. Marat is now recovering well and learning appropriate horse behavior from Alice, with plans for his eventual integration into the zoo's adult Przewalski's herd.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store