Founded in 1979, the Maryland Food Bank provides six million meals a year in Maryland through its partnership with nearly 1,200 soup kitchens, pantries, shelters, and community-based organizations. Learn more about their work.
11.08.22
As we spread awareness about the perspectives and challenges faced by Native Americans in the past and today, we pay respect to the rich cultures, traditions, and contributions that continue to guide us. Below are a few ways you can commemorate Native American Heritage Month this year:
Baltimore City is the ancestral home to the Paskestikweya (Pist-ka-tanh-wah) people, translated into English as Piscataway. Health Care for the Homeless buildings and clinics stand at the tip of a vast coastal area that sustained indigenous peoples until the arrival of Europeans in the 1600s. The Piscataway peoples were decimated, absorbed by larger tribes and eventually forced to move west.This land was shared in common with the Susquehannock Tribe. The tribe suffered genocide at the hands of colonists. Known descendants are among the Iroquois and Lenape Tribes today.
In the last year, our agency became an affordable housing developer. As we think about our role in owning and changing land and property, it's vital to understand the history of the land and how the people who lived on it shape the present day. At the 2021 groundbreaking of Sojourner Place at Oliver, Kevin Lindamood offered a land acknowledgement to recognize a history that has been deliberately erased and to move forward, informed by that history, toward a more just future.
"We acknowledge past and present citizens of the Cedarville Band of the Piscataway Conoy, the Piscataway Indian Nation, Piscataway Conoy Tribe, Susquehannock Tribe, and the many members of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina who have and continue to make Baltimore their home. We acknowledge that we stand on stolen land."
The history of Native American Heritage Month is the story of the struggle for civil rights and self-determination for Native Americans in the United States. Long before the first colonists arrived, indigenous tribes stewarded the land. Native Americans were forcibly removed from their tribal lands and saw their traditions and heritage degraded and destroyed:
Indigenous activists worked to expose the legacy of violence and hypocrisy that guided western expansion and secure "a permanent home on their own native soil." Read more about civil rights leaders below.
Due to a violent history of colonization, genocide, displacement, and oppression, today Native Americans have amongst the lowest health status of all Americans.
These disparities in health are perpetuated by the social determinants created and maintained by racism such as: lack of access to health care, poverty, lack of insurance coverage, discrimination, lower educational attainment, language and communication barriers, lack of diversity in healthcare workforce.
Federal health programs geared toward serving indigenous communities, like the Indian Health Service, have endeavored to make healthcare more accessible to the 574 federally recognized tribes in the U.S. today. However, an estimated 200 tribes are not federally recognized, which means that they do not have access to these federal funding streams or health care resources.
Thanksgiving centers on a one-sided understanding of ongoing American colonization that ignores the persistent trauma encompassed by this federal holiday. The National Day of Mourning was developed as a day of remembrance and protest to disrupt this narrative. The following plaque at Cole's Hill, which overlooks Plymouth Rock, offers a poignant reflection on the disregarded realities of Indigenous peoples during colonial expansion:
Learn more about The National Day of Mourning by exploring the following resources:
(Credit to Equity in the Center for the first three suggestions below)
Baltimore American Indian Center
Maryland Commission on Indian Affairs
Native American Lifelines
Johns Hopkins Center for Indigenous Health
Founded in 1979, the Maryland Food Bank provides six million meals a year in Maryland through its partnership with nearly 1,200 soup kitchens, pantries, shelters, and community-based organizations. Learn more about their work.
More than a quarter of all client visits to Health Care for the Homeless are with case managers. Presented below is one day in the life of Case Management Coordinator Adrienne Burgess-Bromley, who has been with the agency for 16 years.
Baltimore, you are rockstars! On the sunny first Saturday of November, 300+ runners, walkers, friends and volunteers took over Patterson Park for the 10th Annual Rock Your Socks 5K! We danced, cheered and enjoyed a festive race village complete with coffee, bagels, donuts, a bounce house and easy ways to engage with community partners.
Since opening Sojourner Place at Oliver in 2022, our affordable housing development team has been busy laying the groundwork for more affordable housing in Baltimore through a newly formed subsidiary under Health Care for the Homeless called the HCH Real Estate Company.