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RESISTING ERASURE: The role of Indigenous People in American Identity

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Date and time
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
1:35pm - 1:35pm
Virtual:
Tuesday, December 16 - 5pm EST
Virtual
Free
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As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary, we are called upon to consider a profound and often overlooked truth: this nation was built on the backs of many and perhaps the greatest cost was borne by Native peoples. Sadly, today’s indigenous communities represent just 1% of the population, but their names, images and traditions are woven into the fabric of American culture — from place names and sports mascots to art and spiritual wisdom. How is it that the Native presence is so ubiquitous yet “unseen”, and its collective voice so marginalized?

Cambridge Forum will unravel the contradictions at the heart of American identity. We will examine how Indigenous knowledge and ways of life have been borrowed and celebrated by mainstream culture, even as Native peoples have faced dispossession, exclusion and erasure. We will also highlight how, despite all efforts to eradicate them over the centuries, Indigenous communities have continued to survive and exercise their sovereignty and sacred cultural ways.

Lawrence Baca poses in a suit, he is smiling. He wears a red tie and has grey hair, glasses and a beard. He stands in front of a black backdrop.
Lawrence Baca is a Pawnee Indian and at the time of his retirement was Deputy Director of the Office of Tribal Justice, United States Department of Justice. Previously he was a Senior Trial Attorney in the Civil Rights Division for 28 years. At his 2008 retirement celebration he was presented the Attorney General’s Medallion, the highest Award that the Attorney General can present to a retiring employee.
Brad-Lopes poses in front a natural background, his shirt is grey and he has brown hair and a beard
Brad Lopes is an Aquinnah Wampanoag citizen and life-long educator currently working within the traditional homelands of his people, the Wampanoag Nation. He currently serves as the Education Manager for the Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribal Education Department (TED) and as the Education and Outreach Coordinator for the Aquinnah Cultural Center, an Aquinnah Wampanoag led museum located on Noepe(Martha's Vineyard).
Rhonda Anderson smiles in front of a winter tree background. She is wearing purple and has brown hair.
Rhonda Anderson is Iñupiaq – Athabascan from Alaska. Her Native enrollment village is Kaktovik. Rhonda has sat on several Indigenous panels and roundtables to discuss how to uphold reproductive rights within all IHS institutions across the United States, how to educate Native students in Massachusetts better, issues regarding Native teen drug and alcohol use, land acknowledgments, land back movement, and Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women.
A man dressed in winter garb stands with a mic, interviewing a subject.
Phillip Martin is a senior investigative reporter for the GBH News Center for Investigative Reporting. Feedback? Questions? Story ideas? Reach out to Phillip at phillip.martin@gbh.org.
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