Moving Breath Pilates
10/23/2024
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08/13/2022
White suffragists were fascinated by matriarchal power within tribes, but quickly forgot them by 1920. “The Indian woman rejoices with you,” one woman told Alice Paul, but she was quick to remind too that the fight was far from over. The 19th Amendment didn’t grant voting rights to Native women— at that point, they weren't even considered US citizens.
That woman who reminded Alice Paul was Zitkala-Ša (“Red Bird”), who spent her entire life straddling two cultures. Born and raised on a reservation in South Dakota, she was **taken by Quaker missionaries** to attend boarding school. Later, she wrote on her struggles with identity, the inner conflict she felt between the culture she came from, and the culture she was educated in— the joy of learning to read, write and play music, but also the pain of losing her heritage.
While studying at Earlham College and the New England Conservatory of Music, she began recording Native American oral histories and translating them into English. It was her belief that because many Indigenous customs were passed orally through music, opera would be a powerful way to share her cultural values with a new audience. So in 1913, she wrote the libretto and songs for the first Native American opera— composed in the romantic style, and based on a sacred Sioux dance deemed illegal by the US Government.
She argued that as the original people of America, indigenous people had a right to be citizens and be represented in government with the right to vote. Her relentless work in promoting a pan-Indian movement across all tribes for the cause of citizenship rights led to the passage of the 1924 Indian Citizenship Act. In 1926, she co-founded the National Council of American Indians, lobbying for Native suffrage rights. Her later books were amongst the first to bring traditional Native American stories to white audiences.
On International Women’s Day, it’s important to remember Zitkala-Ša’s call to remember Native women, and the full range of their political and cultural experiences.
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-Thanks very much! The incredible history of Native Americans is full of things that are not in the books and are not taught in schools! Hope you can share with your friends so we can all learn from this post! ❤️
We will be closed September 1-3, 2018 for Labor Day.
Virginia Nicholas will teach class this Saturday, 8/4 at 8 AM. Start your weekend off right! Book now.
We will be closed Monday, May 28th, in honor of Memorial Day.
Virginia Nicholas will teach class Saturday 4/7 at 8 AM.
Join us for class 3/31 at 8 AM! 🐰
Virginia Nicholas will teach class Saturday 3/17 at 8 AM. Sign up now! Happy St. Patty's 🍀
There will be class this Saturday 12/23 at 8 AM with Sarah Lisi! Book online, call or email us
Love Thanksgiving?? If you plan to overindulge - Moving Breath Pilates has private appointments available this Friday, 11/24! Call or email us to book 🦃
10/13/2017
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5861 S Kyrene Road #11
Tempe, AZ
85283
Opening Hours
| Monday | 8am - 6:30pm |
| Tuesday | 8am - 6:30pm |
| Wednesday | 8am - 6:30pm |
| Thursday | 8am - 6:30pm |
| Friday | 8am - 6:30pm |
| Saturday | 8am - 6:30pm |