Native American and Indigenous Studies – Religion /religion Tue, 03 Mar 2026 21:59:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 2026 Native American and Indigenous Studies Summer Field School /religion/2026/02/25/2026-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-summer-field-school/ /religion/2026/02/25/2026-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-summer-field-school/#respond Wed, 25 Feb 2026 20:39:24 +0000 /religion/?p=1565 Students are invited to apply for the Field School, running May 18 through June 12. This immersive program gives students the opportunity to work directly with Indigenous communities across New Jersey on projects related to environmental justice, land stewardship, cultural preservation, and Indigenous food sovereignty. Through fieldwork, collaboration, and experiential learning, participants gain meaningful real world experience while supporting initiatives that strengthen Native communities in the region.
Applications are due by Sunday, March 15, 2026 at 5:00pm ET.

Check out to learn about what we did in last year’s field school!

Native American and Indigenous Studies Field School
May 18-June 12
Join us for a 4-week immersive learning experience where you will work with tribal communities across the state to promote:
• Place-based land stewardship
• Environmental Justice
• Cultural Preservation
• Food Sovereignty

Program Details:
• Free to participate! Meals, transportation & supplies provided.
• $2000 stipends for participants
• No pre-reqs
• outdoor fun and overnight trips

Info session:
March 4, 2026, 2:15-3:15
UN 1120 (ADP Center)
or on ZOOM –
Snacks provided
We invite you to attend an informational session to learn more about the Field School, hear from former participants, and meet the program organizers.

Questions? Contact program directors at nais@montclair.edu

The 2026 Native American and Indigenous Studies Summer Field School is a collaboration between New Jersey’s Indigenous communities and the NAIS program and New Jersey Center for Indigenous Justice at vlog.

Applications are due by Sunday, March 15, 2026 at 5:00pm ET.

 

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vlog Launches the New Jersey Center for Indigenous Justice /religion/2025/10/03/montclair-state-launches-the-new-jersey-center-for-indigenous-justice/ /religion/2025/10/03/montclair-state-launches-the-new-jersey-center-for-indigenous-justice/#respond Fri, 03 Oct 2025 15:15:04 +0000 /religion/?p=1551 vlog has taken another bold step in its ongoing commitment to Native communities with the official launch of the New Jersey Center for Indigenous Justice (NJCIJ) — a new hub for advancing Indigenous awareness, education, and justice.

On October 8, the University will host a Welcoming Ceremony to celebrate the new Center, featuring a traditional prayer, reflections from tribal leaders, and a performance by the Red Blanket Singers, a drum and dance group from the Nanticoke Tribe. The celebration will bring together students, faculty, staff, alumni, and community partners who helped bring the NJCIJ to life.

“We’re thrilled to welcome the NJCIJ to vlog alongside our friends, partners, and longtime advocates. After years of hard work, it is inspiring to see this vision come to life. This is not only a meaningful milestone for Montclair but also for the wider New Jersey community,” says Precious Benally, Director of the New Jersey Center for Indigenous Justice.

“The Center brings together Montclair, community partners, and Native Nations to uphold Tribal sovereignty, amplify Indigenous voices, and create opportunities for students, faculty, and staff to learn and work alongside one another and with our Tribal partners with humility, creativity, and reciprocity.”

A Center Years in the Making

The Center grows out of Montclair’s Native American and Indigenous Studies program, which has steadily expanded since its creation to meet the priorities of New Jersey’s state-recognized Native nations — the Ramapough Lunaape, Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape, and Powhatan Renape. Those priorities include environmental justice, political recognition, language revitalization and the protection of cultural heritage.

“The NJCIJ will be the first and only university-based project in New Jersey that aims to transform public understanding of Native people and to do so in partnership with Indigenous communities across the state,” says , chair of Anthropology, co-director of the Native American and Indigenous Studies (NAIS) program and co–principal investigator of the grant.

The University’s adoption of a Land Acknowledgement Statement in 2022, recognizing its location on Lenapehoking, marked a visible milestone in this work. Annual events such as Indigenous Peoples Day, NAIS lectures and panels, and the Summer Field School have deepened student engagement and public understanding.

Red Blanket Singers

Members of the Red Blanket Singers of the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape tribe perform a traditional dance at Montclair’s 2022 celebration of Indigenous Peoples Day. (Photo by Mike Peters)

Mellon Foundation Support

The NJCIJ has been made possible by a prestigious three-year, $1 Million grant from the Mellon Foundation, awarded to the NAIS program to establish the Center and expand its programming. The funding will deepen interdisciplinary research, support student initiatives, and create a digital repository of tribal knowledge using Mukurtu software to preserve oral histories, environmental justice archives and language materials for use by tribal members, faculty and students.

“The Mellon Foundation grant will significantly increase Montclair’s ability to fulfill our commitment to addressing the historical legacies of Indigenous dispossession and dismantling practices of erasure that persist today,” says NAIS co-director Mark Clatterbuck. “The new Center, in tandem with our NAIS program, is focused on Indigenizing New Jersey while decolonizing educational, social and political legacies that continue to overlook Native people and exploit Native lands.

Leading with Experience

At the helm of the NJCIJ is Precious Benally, an Indigenous (Diné) professional with more than a decade of experience in tribal law, policy and community engagement. She has worked with tribal governments, justice system practitioners, and federal agencies to design innovative solutions addressing governance, economic development, juvenile justice and social services.

Benally brings a leadership style grounded in listening and partnership. As Senior Advisor in the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Office of Native Affairs and Economic Development, she advised on tribal consultations and policy matters aimed at creating pathways for sustainable economic growth and self-determination. She also teaches Native American Law at Columbia and Brooklyn Law Schools, cultivating culturally competent classroom communities that engage deeply with Indigenous narratives and policies.

Her proven fundraising success — including securing over $2 million in federal grants — and extensive conference planning experience will strengthen the Center’s programming, community engagement, and resource development.

“I’m truly honored to step into this role as the Center’s first director and to carry forward the strong foundation built by my colleagues and our partners. My lived experience as an indigenous woman and my work supporting Native nation-building efforts have shown me the transformative power of community—and that’s exactly what drives the Center’s work. Our mission is simple but profound: to walk in partnership with Tribal communities to re-Indigenize New Jersey, while giving students meaningful, holistic learning experiences and transforming how the University lives up to its responsibility to society.”

Building Partnerships and Advancing Justice

Working closely with NAIS faculty and tribal leaders, the NJCIJ will serve as a center for communication, fundraising, events and gatherings that highlight the unique questions facing Montclair’s Indigenous students and New Jersey’s tribal communities. The Center embraces cultural traditions, community-led research and environmental stewardship, combating Indigenous erasure by ensuring that Indigenous leaders guide teaching, learning and public understanding.
Among its priorities:

  • Community collaboration on language revitalization, sacred site protection and cultural preservation.
  • Student engagement through field-based courses, mentorship and direct learning from Indigenous knowledge keepers.
  • Digital preservation of oral histories and resources to ensure accessibility for tribal members and scholars alike.

The NJCIJ envisions a future where Indigenous histories and futures are honored and celebrated, where Native students thrive, and where public understanding of New Jersey’s Indigenous communities deepens through education, dialogue and justice-centered action.

Welcoming Ceremony – October 8 at 2:00 p.m.

In addition to the Red Blanket Singers and Dancers, the event will include a Land Acknowledgement reading, a traditional welcoming prayer, remarks from Dean Fatma Mili, NJCIJ Director Precious Benally, and tribal leaders Chief Mann and Chief Ridgeway. A reception will follow for conversation and community building. All are welcome to join in celebrating this significant accomplishment and the partnerships that made it possible.

Read More
On Their Land, In Their Voices
Students Plant Seeds to Revive a Native American Language

 

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vlog Graduate Khara Brown Defies 3% Survival Odds to Uncover Hidden Histories Through Anthropology and Archaeology /religion/2025/05/02/montclair-state-university-graduate-khara-brown-defies-3-survival-odds-to-uncover-hidden-histories-through-anthropology-and-archaeology/ /religion/2025/05/02/montclair-state-university-graduate-khara-brown-defies-3-survival-odds-to-uncover-hidden-histories-through-anthropology-and-archaeology/#respond Fri, 02 May 2025 17:21:04 +0000 /religion/?p=1515 This story is part of a series celebrating vlog’s Spring Commencement 2025 graduates – students who embody the University’s mission to broaden access to exceptional learning opportunities and contribute to the common good.

When Khara Lillian Brown walks across the stage at vlog’s Spring Commencement, she’ll be celebrating more than earning her bachelor’s degree in Anthropology – she’ll be celebrating a victory against extraordinary odds.

While in college, Brown was given just a 3% chance to live. Defying that prognosis with courage and determination, she not only survived but thrived, finding her purpose and passion through research, community and storytelling.

Her resilience carried her through multiple surgeries and intensive rehabilitation. Today, she is presenting original research, receiving prestigious scholarships, and exploring the complex history of free and formerly enslaved African American communities.

Maybe I didn’t do as well as I wanted – I’m a perfectionist and hard on myself – but I’ve met people, changed lives, touched people with my story. And that’s all a person can ask for – to be a catalyst for change.” — Khara Brown

A Newark native, Brown majored in Anthropology with minors in Archaeology and Native American and Indigenous Studies. Throughout her time at Montclair, she combined scholarship with activism, volunteering in the campus Archaeology Lab, co-founding the club LadiesFIRST, and participating in organizations such as the Native American and Indigenous Studies Club and the Coalition for Collective Liberation.

She also helped launch the Women’s Leadership Conference, organized by the University’s Educational Opportunity Fund (EOF) Program. At this year’s conference, she was honored with a Triumph Over Trauma Award, recognized before more than 350 high school students, educators, community leaders and artists.

Photo of Khara Brown

Balancing academics with health challenges wasn’t simple.

In 2015, Khara Brown faced a devastating diagnosis after being hospitalized with catastrophic intestinal failure, leaving her paralyzed and barely able to speak. Doctors told her mother there was a 97% chance of fatality. Brown, determined to survive, whispered: “If God created the world from nothing, imagine what He could do with 3%.”

Reflecting on her journey, she says, “To be able to say that I’m in three honor societies, doing my best, graduating – He obviously did some magic with that 3%.”

But overcoming the odds wasn’t easy.

“Maintaining a steady momentum that allowed for proper mental and physical care was the hardest part,” Brown shares. “Finding that balance between what I want to do and what my body can allow me to do was hard as well. You want to be at the same pace as everyone else, but it’s okay if your path is different.”

Achievements and Future Plans

Brown’s academic work focused on free and formerly enslaved African American communities of the 18th and 19th centuries, research she presented at the Archaeological Society of New Jersey Conference.

With the help of her advisor, Christopher Matthews, Anthropology chairperson, Brown researched and compared three archaeological sites in Northern New Jersey and New York. She also participated in the prestigious working alongside descendants of enslaved people to map the Burial Ground for the Enslaved. This summer, she will continue that work through an internship with Montpelier’s Archaeology Department.

In addition to her archaeological work, Brown deepened her commitment to Indigenous studies through hands-on experiences at the Munsee Three Sisters Medicinal Farm, which provides traditional foods for the Turtle Clan of the Ramapough Lunaape (Lenape) Nation. The tribe can no longer safely farm its ancestral land in Upper Ringwood, New Jersey, due to industrial contamination.

Collage of photos of Khara Brown

Brown credits her success to a wide network of supporters.

“Big shout out to my EOF family, Dr. Danny Jean and the whole gang, my professors Chris Matthews and Mark Clatterbuck, and the whole Anthropology Department,” she says.

She also expresses deep gratitude to Chief Mann of the Turtle Clan and the Munsee Three Sisters Farm, her co-workers who kept her nourished during long study sessions, and her family and prayer communities.

“Khara is such an amazing person who has not only overcome so much to complete her college degree, but continues to see serving the greater good and, especially, underserved and marginalized communities as her purpose. Her impact as a student, archaeologist, educator and person will be profound,” Matthews says.

Words of Reflection

After graduation, Brown plans to move to Virginia for the summer and celebrate her 30th birthday – grateful for all she has overcome and excited for what lies ahead.

“Now that I’m at the finish line, I can sit back and say it was worth it. In some moments, it didn’t feel possible. But perseverance – that tenacity – is what keeps me going.”

The University will celebrate its graduates at Commencement exercises on Wednesday, May 7 and Thursday, May 8, 2025, at Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.

Story by Marilyn Joyce Lehren, University Communications and Marketing

Ready to Start Your Montclair Journey?

Prospective Students and Parents: Learn more about Montclair admissions, our Anthropology major and the College of Humanities and Social Sciences.

Journalists: Contact our Media Relations team to request assets or schedule an interview with a member of the Class of 2025.

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Mellon Foundation Awards Montclair $1M to Expand Native American and Indigenous Studies Program /religion/2024/12/06/mellon-foundation-awards-montclair-1m-to-expand-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-program/ /religion/2024/12/06/mellon-foundation-awards-montclair-1m-to-expand-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-program/#respond Fri, 06 Dec 2024 15:01:42 +0000 /religion/?p=1503 The Native American and Indigenous Studies (NAIS) program of vlog’s College of Humanities and Social Sciences has been awarded a three-year, $1 million grant from the to create a new center, the New Jersey Center for Indigenous Justice (NJCIJ), and to expand its programing.

With its commitment to Indigenous rights, racial justice, decolonization and eco-justice, the NAIS program emphasizes the priorities of New Jersey’s state-recognized Native American tribes – the Ramapough Lunaape, Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape and Powhatan Renape nations – which include environmental justice, political recognition, cultural heritage and language revitalization.

The NJCIJ will be a center for communication, fundraising, events and gatherings that highlight the unique questions facing Montclair’s Indigenous students and New Jersey’s tribal communities. It will coordinate the University’s work to change public narratives, increase Indigenous student enrollment and pursue justice-oriented action on issues affecting Native people in the state.

“The NJCIJ will give focus to the varied work Montclair faculty and students are doing in partnership with New Jersey’s tribal communities,” says Anthropology Department Chair Chris Matthews, a co-director of NAIS and co-Principal Investigator of the grant. “[It] will be the first and only university-based project in New Jersey that aims to transform public understanding of Native people and to do so in partnership with Indigenous communities across the state.”

About the New Jersey Center for Indigenous Justice and NAIS Program Grant

In addition to Matthews, the co-Principal Investigators of the grant include Religion Professor Mark Clatterbuck, Anthropology Professor Maisa Taha and Educational Foundations Professor Lisa Lynn Brooks, all fellow co-directors of the Native American and Indigenous Studies program.

The grant funds will be used to establish the New Jersey Center for Indigenous Justice and achieve the following goals:

  • Deepen the impact of the NAIS program by providing additional resources and support for interdisciplinary collaboration and research.
  • Establish a digital repository of tribal knowledge and resources to ensure their preservation and availability to tribal members, and to Montclair faculty and students.
  • Hire a NJCIJ director who will promote increased engagement with the New Jersey tribes and with Indigenous issues, while also helping to recruit and mentor a growing number of New Jersey tribal members at the University.

Native American and Indigenous Initiatives at vlog

vlog is committed to increasing the awareness and knowledge of New Jersey’s Native American tribes and the issues they face.

As demonstrated by the adoption of a Land Acknowledgement Statement in 2022 that recognizes that the University occupies territory historically known as Lenapehoking, the homeland of all Lenape people, the University is committed to social justice and to offering learning opportunities and promoting Native American culture and history.

In addition to the Native American and Indigenous Studies minor, some of these initiatives include:

“The Mellon Foundation grant will significantly increase Montclair’s ability to fulfill our commitment to addressing the historical legacies of Indigenous dispossession and dismantling practices of erasure that persist today, as stated in our University Land Acknowledgement,” says Clatterbuck. “The new center, in tandem with our Native American and Indigenous Studies program, is focused on Indigenizing New Jersey while decolonizing educational, social and political legacies that continue to overlook Native people and exploit Native lands.”

About The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation is the nation’s largest supporter of the arts and humanities. Since 1969, the Foundation has been guided by its core belief that the humanities and arts are essential to human understanding. The Foundation believes that the arts and humanities are where we express our complex humanity, and that everyone deserves the beauty, transcendence, and freedom that can be found there. Through our grants, we seek to build just communities enriched by meaning and empowered by critical thinking, where ideas and imagination can thrive. Learn more at .

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2024 Native American and Indigenous Studies Field Summer School /religion/2024/02/14/2024-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-field-summer-school/ /religion/2024/02/14/2024-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-field-summer-school/#respond Wed, 14 Feb 2024 20:14:09 +0000 /religion/?p=1441 Montclair State’s Native American and Indigenous Studies (NAIS) program will be running a community-engaged summer field school from May 14 to June 7, 2024. Students will learn from tribal leaders and Montclair faculty about challenges facing NJ’s indigenous communities related to their recognition and survival.

The field school will include a blend of traditional classroom learning, fieldwork, hands-on learning, and working as part of a research team.

Specific activities include:

  • working with tribal members to create a digital document archive related to the Ringwood Superfund site located in the Ramapough Turtle Clan homeland
  • identifying and recording features of Native cultural heritage which may include a cemetery clean up as well as documentation of the Lenape ceremonial stone landscape
  • creating resources to support tribal language learning and revitalization
  • working at the tribally operated Munsee Three Sisters farm to support of Ramapough food sovereignty

The field school will meet Tuesday-Friday 4 days/week for 4 weeks 8:30am – 4:30pm. Students are expected to commit to the project full time. We will meet on the MSU campus as well as other locations including the Munsee Three Sisters Farm in Newton, NJ and the Ringwood Public Library. Transportation and meals will be provided when we visit off-campus sites. Students accepted to the field school will receive a stipend to offset personal expenses.

Please complete the following form to apply:

Application deadline: Friday, March 8, 2024, 5:00pm
Questions? Contact the programs directors at nais@montclair.edu

Download the 2024 NAIS Field Summer School Flyer

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Montclair NAIS Co-Director, Mark Clatterbuck, Weighs In On Permit Hurdles Faced by Native American Sanctuary /religion/2024/01/31/montclair-nais-co-director-mark-clatterbuck-weighs-in-on-permit-hurdles-faced-by-native-american-sanctuary/ /religion/2024/01/31/montclair-nais-co-director-mark-clatterbuck-weighs-in-on-permit-hurdles-faced-by-native-american-sanctuary/#respond Wed, 31 Jan 2024 17:45:54 +0000 /religion/?p=1435 An organization with the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape Tribe of NJ recently purchased 63-acres of land in Salem County, NJ, to establish the to serve as a cultural education center and ceremonial site for the Tribe. However, township officials have so far refused to issue the necessary permits to open the site to the public. Despite the fact that officials readily issued continuing use permits to various Christian groups who purchased the property in the past, officials are requiring Indigenous leaders to begin the whole zoning and permitting process from scratch, which will cost a great deal of time and money.

interviewed , Professor of Religion and co-director of Native American and Indigenous Studies, to delve into the controversy and offer insights into the challenges surrounding understanding and respecting Indigenous practices.

 

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Montclairion Interviews Founders of Native American and Indigenous Studies Club /religion/2023/12/15/montclairion-interviews-founders-of-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-club/ /religion/2023/12/15/montclairion-interviews-founders-of-native-american-and-indigenous-studies-club/#respond Fri, 15 Dec 2023 21:18:05 +0000 /religion/?p=1430 In a the Montclairion explores the dynamic journey of vlog’s Native and Indigenous Studies Club, a student-led initiative born out of the newly introduced Native American and Indigenous Studies minor. Founded by senior anthropology major Farrah Fornarotto, the club champions Indigenous voices, delving into issues of food sovereignty, environmental justice, and legislative challenges while creating an inclusive space for all students to learn, engage, and amplify the vital narratives of Indigenous communities.

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Indigenous People’s Day Lecture Event /religion/2023/10/04/indigenous-peoples-day-lecture-event/ /religion/2023/10/04/indigenous-peoples-day-lecture-event/#respond Wed, 04 Oct 2023 20:34:32 +0000 /religion/?p=1416 Join NAIS on Indigenous Peoples Day
Topic: The Struggle of Indigenous People to Obtain Recognition on their Ancestral Lands.
Oct 9 11:15-12:30
University Hall 1020

Guest Lecturer:
Brianna Dagostino, a member of the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape and Montclair alum

We will be celebrating Indigenous People’s Day with a presentation and panel discussion about tribal recognition and sovereignty in New Jersey. Our lead speaker is Brianna Dagostino, M.A.,  a member of the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape tribe and MSU Alum. Panelists will include MSU faculty.

Sponsored by NAIS and the CHSS Dean’s office

View and download event flyer here!

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Revitalizing Kutiikiitowaakanun: Our Nanticoke Language /religion/2023/09/14/revitalizing-kutiikiitowaakanun-our-nanticoke-language/ /religion/2023/09/14/revitalizing-kutiikiitowaakanun-our-nanticoke-language/#respond Thu, 14 Sep 2023 17:30:14 +0000 /religion/?p=1411 Please join us for a presentation and conversation with Karelle Hall, a PhD candidate in anthropology and predoctoral fellow at U Penn. As a member of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe, Ms. Hall has been instrumental in helping to revitalize her community’s ancestral language, which has not been spoken in the Delaware River valley and surrounding areas since the mid-1800s. All are welcome at this talk, to learn about the groundbreaking work in Indigenous language revitalization that the Nanticoke community has undertaken!

Karelle Hall is a PhD candidate in anthropology at Rutgers University. She received her bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College in Anthropology with a minor in Native American Studies. Her dissertation research explores embodied and distributed Lenape diasporic sovereignty in public and performative spaces. She has taught classes in both cultural and linguistic anthropology at Rutgers University and has presented her preliminary research at conferences and colloquiums. As a member of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe, she has represented her nation at numerous events as both a speaker and dancer. She is actively working on Nanticoke language revitalization, including writing a children’s book and developing lessons for community classes. Using her experience and connections in the legal field, she assisted the Nanticoke Tribe with ratifying their recognition in the state of Delaware. She continues to work as an activist and representative for her community, promoting visibility, decolonization, and education.

Date and Time: September 20, 12:00 – 1:15 p.m.
Location: SBUS 011

If you have any questions, please contact Professor Maisa Taha.

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Students Plant Seeds to Revive a Native American Language /religion/2023/04/11/students-plant-seeds-to-revive-a-native-american-language/ /religion/2023/04/11/students-plant-seeds-to-revive-a-native-american-language/#respond Tue, 11 Apr 2023 18:15:12 +0000 /religion/?p=1376 A month ago, with fields on the Munsee Three Sisters Medicinal Farm empty and snow-covered, a group of vlog students and their professors began the work of getting the farm ready for spring. Hand painting garden signs, they joined efforts to advance Indigenous food sovereignty, and – in writing on those signs “pehpeechkweekush” for “carrot” and other crops in the Munsee language – they were also planting seeds to help revive a Native American language.

“It’s definitely a great place to start, but hopefully it’s not where we stop,” says Farrah Fornarotto, a junior majoring in Anthropology, with minors in Archaeology and the new Native American and Indigenous Studies. “There’s a lot to tackle.”

The challenges date back decades. Munsee Three Sisters Farm provides traditional food for the Turtle Clan of the Ramapough Lunaape (Lenape) Nation, a tribe that can no longer safely farm its own land in Upper Ringwood, New Jersey. Environmental and health issues caused by industrial dumping have led to a generational decline in the Turtle Clan members’ ability to practice their culture, including the Munsee language, which is at risk of becoming as dormant as the winter fields.

An intensive, field-based partnership with the Turtle Clan Ramapough includes work at the Munsee Three Sisters Farm, where Montclair students and professors are helping the tribe’s Indigenous food sovereignty and language revitalization efforts.

A key aspect of Montclair’s contributions are organizing the tribe’s records and documents related to the industrial dumping on ancestral land. Students are at work to help gather the scientific evidence documented at the Superfund site, the health impact and oral histories from eyewitnesses, and with University resources, creating a single, digitally accessible repository for future researchers and the tribal members who continue to fight for proper cleanup of the land.

More than 300 pages of newspaper articles detailing the dumping of toxic paint sludge from a Ford Motor Co. factory have been indexed by students. “My students are going through and creating a table of contents identifying the names [of key players], the toxic chemicals listed in reports, physical sites that are listed, agencies that are listed, and creating a searchable tool for that whole collection of news articles,” says Mark Clatterbuck, associate professor of Religion and co-director of the Native American and Indigenous Studies program.

Montclair students taking part in the class projects say they share a commitment for helping Indigenous communities. Jala Best, a senior Psychology major, says her drive comes from her experiences as an Afro-Indigenous woman.

“Oftentimes the issues of Native communities are ignored or Native people are spoken about in the past tense, like we are not still living, breathing, surviving and fighting for justice …. You can’t even conceptualize that there are atrocities happening today because you believe that it’s a thing of the past,” Best says.

Mark Clatterbuck, right, oversees the garden signage with students Camille Howard, Julia Rodano and Farrah Fornarotto. “It’s the small things that build up, and eventually over time, the Turtle Clan’s language will be more visible to them and also to the public,” Fornarotto says.

Montclair has initiated a field-based partnership with Turtle Clan Chief Vincent Mann of the Ramapough Lunaape Nation. The University support includes students working directly with the tribe on food sovereignty, the language revitalization effort and ongoing environmental concerns as part of Montclair’s new minor in Native American and Indigenous Studies.

“The issues and the challenges of the Turtle Clan, they’re huge, they’re varied and there’s no shortage of them,” says Clatterbuck.

The program is closely tied to the University’s Land Acknowledgement Statement. Clatterbuck, along with History Professor Elspeth Martini and Anthropology Professor Chris Matthews consulted with New Jersey’s three state-recognized tribal nations – the Ramapough Lenape, Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape and Powhatan Renape – in drafting the statement, and also considered how it could represent a commitment from Montclair to working with and for their communities.

“It’s not just about making some sort of historical reference. It’s really about saying, ‘What is our responsibility to those communities?’” Clatterbuck says.

Mark Clatterbuck, associate professor of Religion and co-director of the Native American and Indigenous Studies program, constructs signage as part of the field work helping promote the preservation of Native American land and culture.

The program is intentionally community-engaged, hands-on and focused on problem-solving, including finding creative ways to support community-driven language revitalization and environmental recovery. “The Ramapough understand that part of their healing and survival is really dependent on recovering key aspects of their cultural ways,” Clatterbuck says. “Language is on par with restoring foodways and their access to clean water, land and air.”

Munsee language expert, Nikole Pecore, a member of the Stockbridge-Munsee Nation in Wisconsin, has guided Montclair students studying Linguistic Anthropology in building a digital repository of instructional materials that will be used to train new Munsee teachers and support community learners.

“We’re looking at language as a key to culture, to bringing back Munsee speaking cultures, as well as other Lenape languages belonging to original peoples in the state of New Jersey,” says Associate Anthropology Professor Maisa Taha.

Work on the farm also includes students preparing the fields and helping deliver the organic, healthy, medicinal healing crops to the community. “It’s doing the nitty-gritty work with local communities and following their lead,” Clatterbuck says.

Meryem Teke, a senior Religion major, paints a garden sign at the Munsee Three Sisters Farm. The work is among the creative ways Montclair is supporting the Turtle Clan’s language revitalization and environmental recovery.

“It might be challenging to figure out how all of these different pieces fit together. But the fact of the matter is they are all intimately connected,” Taha says. “You can’t have language without culture. You can’t have culture without tribal sovereignty. You can’t have tribal sovereignty without environmental justice. What we’re bringing to our students and frankly, to ourselves as well, is this huge opportunity to work with our tribal partners in trying to understand those connections and come up with reasonable, impactful solutions that will serve them for years to come.”

Clatterbuck adds, “We’re all passionate about this on a personal level, and we see this as a matter of justice and addressing – you hear the buzzword ‘decolonization’ thrown around a lot – but as far as I’m concerned, this is what that work looks like. It’s messy, and it’s trial and error, and we’re figuring all this out as we go. But that is the work.”

Photo Gallery

Montclair’s new minor in Native American and Indigenous Studies is focusing on issues of indigenous sovereignty, cultural revitalization, environmental justice and language reclamation. Some of the field work is happening at the Munsee Three Sisters Medicinal Farm in Newtown, New Jersey.

Montclair students have created signage for the Three Sisters Farm in the Munsee language. The illustrations will help tribal members as well as visitors to the farm visually connect the pictures and actual plants with the Munsee word. Efforts are also underway to create audio files so that learners can hear those words when accessed by QR codes added to the signs.

A rooster at Munsee Three Sisters Farm.

Story by Staff Writer Marilyn Joyce Lehren. Photos by John J. LaRosa.

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