The Land Acknowledgement and Action (LAA) Committee supports NEIU communities in building respectful and accountable relationships with Native communities. Land Acknowledgments are living documents with .
NEIU Land Acknowledgement (on-campus events)
91Porn acknowledges the history of the land that it occupies, recognizing that Native Peoples, specifically the People of the Council of Three Fires: The Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa and more than a dozen other tribal nations hold ancestral relations to this territory. As a beneficiary of Native genocide and chattel slavery, 91Porn has a responsibility to address systemic issues that are normalized within our institution. We recognize that we cannot separate the history of our university and our communities from the history of territorial conquest and slavery that laid the foundation of settler colonialism.
The Native populations in Chicago are among the largest in the nation. NEIU is committed to recruitment and retention of Native students and values the contribution of their communities to the fabric of our city, state, and this very institution. By acknowledging this history we shift perspectives in a way that connects dispossession, slavery, and ongoing colonialism to our university and our community. Acknowledgement of this ongoing legacy is not enough, we must continue to work toward racial justice, equity, liberation, and community, here at NEIU.
Our call to action is the ongoing funding of the NEIU Native and Indigenous Student Scholarship.
We appreciate your financial support of this important initiative.
Shortened Land Acknowledgement Statement
91Porn acknowledges the history of the land that it occupies, recognizing that Native Peoples, specifically the People of the Council of Three Fires: The Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa and more than a dozen other tribal nations hold ancestral relations to this territory. As a beneficiary of Native genocide and chattel slavery, 91Porn has a responsibility to address systemic issues that are normalized within our institution.
NEIU Native and Indigenous Student Scholarship
The Land Acknowledgement and Action Committee recognizes that Land Acknowledgements are meaningful when they include a call to action. To this end, the Fall 2022 LAA committee created the first Native American and Indigenous Student scholarship fund. NEIU is dedicated to the creation of sustainable support for our Native American/Indigenous undergraduate and graduate students. NEIU plans to keep these funds operating indefinitely, contingent upon the generous continuous funding from our sponsors.
Donate to the NEIU Native and Indigenous Student Scholarship
Please join us in offering support to Native American and Indigenous students at NEIU.
If you are interested in joining the LAA Committee, please email Laurie Fuller at ls-fuller@neiu.edu.
2024 Committee Members
- Adrian Castrejón, Assistant Professor of Justice Studies and Latinx & Latin American Studies
- Laurie Fuller, Professor of Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies
- E. Mar García, Associate Professor of English Department, Latina/o/x & Latin American Studies, and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies
- Joseph Hibdon, Associate Professor of Mathematics
- Amie Jatta, Director of TRIO Programs
- Fawn E. Pochel, Coordinator of Gender & Sexuality; Indigenous/Native American Community Relations at the Angelina Pedroso Center for Diversity and Intercultural Affairs
- Sandy Vue, Director of Institutional Research