ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 9月13日 21時25分


Susan Leopold, a member of the Patawomeck tribe of Virginia, watched the sun rise over an encampment where thousands were protesting an oil pipeline near Cannon Ball, North Dakota. When visitors drive into the Sacred Stone Camp, they thread through an arcade of flags whipping in the wind. Each represents one of the 280 Native American tribes that have flocked to the camp in what activists are calling the largest, most diverse tribal action in at least a century, perhaps since Little Bighorn. They’ve come from places like California, Florida, Peru and New Zealand. They are Oglala Lakota, Navajo, Seneca, Onondaga and Anishinaabe. Last Friday, the federal government announced that it would temporarily block construction of the pipeline at an important river crossing just up the road from the camp.@alyssaschukar photographed a few of the people who traveled to this remote rolling corner of North Dakota. Follow her or visit the link in our profile to read their stories.


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