Wabanaki Windows on #WERU!

"#WabanakiWindows presents a timely conversation on the past, present, and future of #Wabanaki #sovereignty featuring #WabanakiAlliance Executive Director #MaulianBryant and Professor #DarrenRanco.

The program examines the impact of the 1980 Maine Indian Land Claims #SettlementAct, the formation of the Wabanaki Alliance, and the #legislation shaping the current session. There will be a part two at a later date!"

Airs January 28, 2026 at 4:00 PM on WERU — WERU.org

https://archives.weru.org/category/wabanaki-windows/

#MainePol #Sovereignty #WabanakiNations #TribalRights #WabanakiConfederacy #IndigenousSovereignty #MaineTribes
#PassamaquoddyNation #PenobscotNation #HoultonBandOfMaliseetIndians #MikmaqNation #LandBack

[3/3] #PineTreeActivism Events for #January16 - #Maine

JAN 16, Fri 4-5:00PM – #WERU 89.9 FM
Listen from anywhere
DEMOCRACY FORUM – CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS: CAN DEMOCRACY SURVIVE BILLIONAIRE ECONOMICS?
We'll talk about how wealth and income inequality undermine democracy. Does extreme income inequality lead to right wing #authoritarianism? How does that work? Is that playing out in the U.S. right now? In Maine?

Special guests: Garrett Martin, President & CEO, Maine Center for Economic Policy. Susan Stokes, Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Chicago, and author of The Backsliders: Why Leaders Undermine Their Own Democracies. FMI: www.democracymaine.org/civicrm-event/2256

JAN 16, Fri 5-5:30PM (& every Fri) – #PortlandME
Congress Square, High & Congress Sts (across from PMA) – Portland, Maine
#WomenInBlackVigil
A world-wide network of women committed to peace with justice and actively opposed to injustice, war, militarism and violence, these weekly protests typically attract a diverse group of folks.
FMI: mobilize.us/mobilize/event/828747/

#MaineEvents #MaineResists
#ResistICE #NoWar #MVPRights #GazaGenocide #WomenInBlack #Fascism #IncomeInequality

[1/3] #PineTreeActivism Events for #January16 - #Maine

JAN 16, Fri 12-1:00PM (& every Fri) – #CalaisME
Corner of North St & Main St
#StandUpDowneastMaine – Join in our weekly protest, one block from the border crossing to Canada, for this lively & international atmosphere.

JAN 16, Fri 12-1:00PM (& every Fri) – #FarmingtonME
Post Office, 196 Main St
PEACE & PROTEST VIGIL - Farmington and surrounding area activists gather at noon ON the Sidewalks in front of the post office with peace vigil signs and protest messages to advocate for #peace and protect democracy. Started 21 yrs ago as a #WomenInBlack Vigil, this is now a community event and includes #VeteransForPeace, Western Mtns Third Act, and Indivisible.
FMI: mobilize.us/mobilize/event/879624/

JAN 16, Fri 12:30-1:00PM (& every Fri) – #AugustaME
Lithgow Library, 45 Winthrop St,
WOMEN IN BLACK PEACE VIGIL – Every Friday the Augusta area Women in Black hold a peace vigil in front of the Lithgow Library. Held continuously since 2002.

JAN 16, Fri 1:00PM (& every Fri) – #HoultonME
Peace Pole, Monument Park
Weekly Stand Out for Peace – www.mvprights.org/events

JAN 16, Fri 3-3:30PM (& every Fri) – #BrunswickME
156 Maine St. Opposite Walgreens
VIGIL FOR PEACE – We stand together to bear witness for deeply held beliefs in justice of all kinds and to offer a source of public education not available in mainstream media.
FMI: peaceworksbrunswickme.org/action.html

JAN 16, Fri 4-5:00PM – #WERU 89.9 FM
Listen from anywhere
DEMOCRACY FORUM – CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS: CAN DEMOCRACY SURVIVE #BILLIONAIRE ECONOMICS?
We'll talk about how wealth and income inequality undermine democracy. Does extreme income inequality lead to right wing #authoritarianism? How does that work? Is that playing out in the U.S. right now? In Maine?

Special guests: Garrett Martin, President & CEO, Maine Center for Economic Policy. Susan Stokes, Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Chicago, and author of The Backsliders: Why Leaders Undermine Their Own Democracies. FMI: www.democracymaine.org/civicrm-event/2256

JAN 16, Fri 5-5:30PM (& every Fri) – #PortlandME
Congress Square, High & Congress Sts (across from PMA)
WOMEN IN BLACK VIGIL
A world-wide network of women committed to peace with justice and actively opposed to injustice, war, militarism and violence, these weekly protests typically attract a diverse group of folks.
FMI: mobilize.us/mobilize/event/828747/

#MaineEvents #MaineResists
#ResistICE #NoWar #StopICETerror #ICEOut #NoWarForOil #JusticeForRenee
#ICEOutForGood #MVPRights #GazaGenocide

@chpietsch @deusfigendi @bsi @debankingstoppen

Wirklich Grundrechtskonforme Bezahllösungen sind nicht wirklich angedacht.

Da müssen wir nicht nur auf #paypal #weru #googlepay #applepay #visa und konsorten schauen:

Auch der #digitaleEuro wird mit Deiner Identität verknüpft, so dass damit kein anonymes Bezahlen möglich wird.

#GNUTaler wäre eine Alternative...
https://www.taler.net/de/index.html

Wird er nach dem #debanking und der #39c3 Aufmerksamkeit vielleicht doch Bedeutung gewinnen?

#bargeld

GNU Taler - Taxable Anonymous Libre Electronic Resources

Das Bezahlsystem GNU Taler ermöglicht das schnelle und einfache Geldüberweisen mit Datenschutz und hoher technischer Sicherheit.

#PenobscotNation #Elder ‘Butch’ Phillips dies at 85

A celebrated #CultureBearer and artist, Reuben Elliot 'Butch' Phillips also was part of the team that negotiated the #Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act of 1980.

Reuben M. Schafir, July 29, 2025

"Reuben Elliot “Butch” Phillips, a Penobscot elder, artist, culture-bearer and the former lieutenant governor of the tribe, died Sunday at the age of 85.
Phillips was a leader within his tribe, an accomplished birch bark artist known for crafting moose calls adorned with intricate etchings, an athlete and a masterful hunter.

Scott Phillips, one of the elder Phillips’ three sons, said his father was a “very patient, very soulful” hunter who successfully hunted moose until just two years ago.

Phillips was often called upon to perform ceremonies and lead prayers at events. He cherished his role as a tribal elder, family members said, and was a living advocate for Penobscot traditions.

“He was a proponent of the Penobscot Nation,” Scott Phillips said. “All the traditions and customs, he wanted to keep that going for future generations, and he tried to pass a lot of that knowledge on to me and my brothers, his grandchildren and the people of the nation.”

“He never opened a ceremony without recalling the ancestors and ensuring that we honored them in our daily lives,” said #BarryDana, Phillips’ nephew and former two-term chief of the Penobscot Nation. “When you’re an elder and you preserve a value, you repeat it as early and as often as needed, and he didn’t hesitate to repeat it all the time. And now he’s an ancestor.”

#MaulianBryant, Dana’s daughter, recalled her great-uncle as well-spoken, diplomatic and warm, yet stalwart in his convictions. Known for his impeccable presentation, Bryant said he sported a neatly combed coif of dark hair well into old age and was often present at tribal ceremonies in full regalia.

Phillips was born May 7, 1940, and grew up on Indian Island, the seat of the Penobscot Nation’s government. He served in the U.S. Army and had a lengthy career in telecommunications, in addition to the various positions he held within the Penobscot Nation and associated causes, according to an obituary written by his family. He served as lieutenant governor, a position now known as vice chief, of the Penobscot Nation from 1992 to 1994. He lived in his later years on Penobscot ancestral homelands known today as Milford, across the river from the tribe’s headquarters.

In the 1970s, Philips was one of the Penobscot representatives on the team that negotiated the Maine Indian Land Claims Settlement of 1980. The legislation was viewed by many at the time as the only way for tribes to secure limited compensation for stolen land. It also subjected tribal nations to state government control and excepted them from the sovereignty all other federally recognized tribes have.

The law was a divisive topic internally among tribal members during negotiations. Its impacts have shaped the work of Dana and Bryant, who served as Penobscot tribal ambassador before she became executive director of the Wabanaki Alliance in January 2025. Bryant’s work today is largely dedicated to unraveling many of the restrictions imposed by the settlement act. Conversations with her great-uncle caused her to shift her thinking of the law and of the negotiators who partook in its crafting.

“I never wanted those tribal leaders to feel ashamed or that they did a bad thing, because it was a historic thing and there were good things for the tribe and they were between a rock and a hard place,” she said. “I really credit him with me shifting my approach to the whole thing and seeing it in a wholesale way and just remembering the humanity of everyone involved.”

Dana and Phillips never spoke of the negotiations outside of a single town-hall meeting — but Dana said he knew his uncle was fully behind him when he went head-to-head with the state on several occasions.

By working on the negotiating team, Phillips was fulfilling a duty asked of him by his government, said John Dieffenbacher-Krall, the former executive director of the Wabanki Alliance.

“There can be no greater example of citizenship,” he said.

Phillips was also an outspoken advocate of the #PenobscotRiver restoration.
“My generation, we saw the Penobscot River at its worst. It was like an open sewer,” he told #WERU Community Radio and #SunlightMediaCollective in 2018. “And as children, it really didn’t mean too much to us. We still swam in it, we still ate the fish, we still canoed in it and so forth. But I also witnessed the cleansing of the river.”

He was part of a group in 2002 that built the first birch bark canoe on Indian Island in 60 years and helped paddle the boat up the Penobscot River to Katahdin.
Butch Phillips at his Milford home in 1997. (John Ewing/Staff Photographer)
“It was a really strong moment in the revitalization of our culture,” Dana said.
Phillips was married for 40 years to Linda Ann Stewart, who died in 2001. He is survived by his three sons, four siblings and numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren and friends.

In his final days, family members say Phillips asked those around him to show love.

“He hoped people would put their differences aside and just love each other,” Scott Phillips said."

Source:
https://www.pressherald.com/2025/07/29/penobscot-elder-butch-phillips-dies-at-85/

Archived version:
https://archive.md/Dmby4

#Penobscot #PenobscotElder #MaineSettlementAct #WaterIsLife #PenobscotRiver #WaterKeeper #NativeAmericanArtist #CultureKeeper

Aww.

For a span of life, I lived in #MidCoast #Maine, and listened to a lot of community radio on #WERU, out of #BlueHill.

One of the the regular short programs, of poems, astronomical events, farming advice, and seasonal reminders was the Awanadjo Almanack. It was a joy every time it came on, and the wit and wisdom of its creator, Rob McCall, was apparent.
He passed in April of this year, at 79, alas! https://weeklypacket.com/news/2023/may/19/a-community-remembers/

A community remembers

When Brooklin resident Rob McCall passed away on April 21 at the age of 79, the community responded with an outpouring of tributes. WERU, where McCall authored and produced the weekly Awanadjo Almanack (also a column in this paper and other publications), immediately posted the news to their site, saying that McCall’s “voice was, to countless people, a warm embrace full of wisdom, wit, and compassion.”

The Weekly Packet

@thomkennon
Yes.

If anyone wants to test whether the #radioStation works for them over Tor, here is the direct link:
https://stream.pacificaservice.org:9000/weru_128

A direct link is important inn this case because the actual website for #WeRU is #cloudGlare.Someone ought contact them to request their #radio station be available over #I2P. There are a number of great I2P radio stations, but it sounds like this one would fill a real niche.

#Museum30 Day8 Today's topic is #Clothing or #Weru (or sometimes #Weruweru) in Māori #NZTwits #Aotearoa #History #Murihiku #Southland #NZ
#Waiau #Ōtautau #Archives
#CentralWesternSouthland #GLAM #CommunityHistory #digipres

With the clothing of children 100 odd years ago being dresses for all genders, it's not always easy to tell who is who!. This is Harry Laurie from our community history in the Central & Western Murihiku Southland Archive. Check out more about him here: https://ehive.com/collections/202139/objects/1598799/otautau-later-township-district-settlers-laurie-family

Ōtautau - Later Township & District Settlers, Laurie Family:; Laurie, Harry; c19... on eHive

Photo of Harry Francis Laurie, born 24 Feburary 1916, at Ōrawia. It is interesting to note how in infancy, children of all sexes were all clothed in "dresses", until at least around age 2-3. Harry appears about 2 here. Harry was the only child of Olive Catherine née MOFFAT (another early Ōtautau family) and "Jim" James Nelson LAURIE. Harry then married Jean Mary née BAKER in 1938 and they had four children, who all grew up in Ōtautau. The siblings have great memories of their childhoods, and of all the neighbours and friends they had and made. At just 21 years of age, Harry Laurie bought out the local carrying business of Harry Bone's, back in 1937, Over the next few decades, he built the business up to eight trucks, shown in entry CWA.159.139.015 The depot for HF Laurie Ltd, was at Sorn St, where second of the old Thomson & Georgeson Woodware factories was situated in days past, opposite the Railway Station, backing onto the railway tracks behind the township. It was said that Harry would cart anything... all except sheep!! I have not heard why this was, but maybe because they were too obstinate? One of Harry's old Commer Trucks is now part of the current Bill Richardson "Transport World" Museum in Invercargill, if anyone wishes to go and there see this. It was purchased by them and restored. You can also see a photo of this truck in the place notes below, there is a link to their entry of this fabulous old vehicle. In 1971 on retirement, Harry sold up his trucking business to Basil Jackson, who was father of Kerrin Jackson, of Western Motors in Ōtautau. The Jackson's renamed the business "Western Haulage". Harry and his wife spent their retirement years at Queenstown but apparently the whole retirement thing did not last long. Family has recalled how Harry soon got himself a job at a local building supplies firm, John Edmond's, in the machinery department and before long he was building trailers for them, which are believed to have lasted in the area for many years. Harry was quite the engineer, with many skills, And we are also told that when Harry joined the local bowling club, he started creating machinery for them too! One of these was said to be a vertical mower, which involved quite a bit of "lateral thinking". And this was not the only piece of machinery that Harry had built or tinkered with to help the Queenstown Bowling club maintain their grounds/greens. It seems Harry was a handy guy to have around. Jim was the kind of father who obviously had an influence on Harry growing up. Being an engine driver and traction engine owner, who had started the first commercial extraction from the Clifden Limeworks back in 1915, it appears as if it was from his father that Harry obtained his particular brand of skills, as he became known as a great inventor. In chatting to locals in the district about Harry Laurie, I found a lot of them remember well his great creations. For both fun and farming. One elderly gent recalls an open-topped car that he put off-centre wheels onto, using it to hump and lurch its way along the Main Street in the VJ Day parade, much to the amusement of onlookers. Another more useful piece of equipment that Harry engineered and invented, was the bulk spreading gear he was known in the area for. This consisted of a bulk bin with a "removable Munro topdressing box under it, with another larger 4-axle bulk bin following that, which was able to hold 20-30 tonnes of fertilizer." I was told how Harry's trucks fitted with this amazing gadgetry were the only ones around able to continually refill the large bulk bin that kept the small bin going, without anyone having to stop work to fill it, which was wonderful. At Harry's Eulogy, a friend and son-in-law commented that Harry had an unreal capacity for inventing gadgets of both machinery and other structures. He recalled that Harry also invented what was believed to be the first bag loader for getting grain onto trucks, but said that as Harry never patented it, others who were more financially able to do so, saw the opportunity and copied it, producing a profitable piece of machinery and gaining from doing so. This account is backed up by daughter "Bonny", who told me that her father had made the first wheat bag loader in New Zealand, which was later manufactured by Hamilton Engineering. So what a wonderful legacy Harry left us all. Also mentioned to me by many people around the town and district, was how Harry was a father figure to those who worked for and with him over the years. Many of the men and their families have the best memories of their time in his employment, as he was known as a great encourager and supporter. Some of the families have said they did not know how they would have got through life without Harry as boss. What a great fitting remembrance of Harry and his kindness to others. He is well remembered as one of the truly great gentlemen of his age. Harry passed away in Queenstown at age 95, on 29 March 2011. He is also buried there. Sadly in 2020 his lovely wife Jean, who was also well remembered and loved by many, followed him to the grave. RIP to them both. I hope their memories here are a fitting tribute for them. NOTE: I am indebted to the Laurie family descendants, who have so generously and willingly shared their fascinating family history with us. More information about both the Laurie family and Harry Laurie's trucking business itself will be added shortly. In the meantime, please do share your memories and stories of the family and this long-standing local business. You can do this by adding a comment, at the bottom of this page under the images and information. Also, if you have any photos to share of either, can you please let us know, by using the contact details on this archive front page, or also leave a comment. Thank you.

eHive