Cover
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Opening Protocols and Land Acknowledgment
Foreword: “I Didn’t Give Them Permission” / Eloisa García Taméz
Acknowledgments
A Note on Ndé Mizaa (Ndé Language)
Timeline: Indigenous Place, Dispossession, and Resistance in El Calaboz
Introduction / Margo Tamez, Cynthia Bejarano, Jeffrey P. Shepherd
PART I. MEMORY AND BELONGING IN EL CALABOZ (THE DUNGEON)
1. Some Memories Leave a Mark / María de Jesús García Atkinson
2. My Story: A Path to Self-Determination / Eloisa García Taméz
3. Ndé Peoples’ Resistance Against the U.S. Separation Wall, Dispossession, and Settler-Colonial Erasure: Place, Memory, Rights, and Self-Determination / Margo Tamez
4. Women from the Mountains: Ndé Women’s Leadership Since Time Immemorial / Henrique Maestas
PART II. THE EL CALABOZ DISPOSSESSION TRIBUNAL
5. Indigenous in the Shadow of the Wall: A Gathering in El Calaboz / Shannon Speed
6. Testimonial: Enrique Madrid (Jumano Apache)
7. Testimonial: April Cotte
8. Testimonial: Teresa Leal (Ópata-Mayo)
9. Testimonials: Hawk Mendoza (Ndé), Milpa Mendoza (Ndé), Maura Tamez (Ndé), Indigenous Ndé Youth (Anonymized)
PART III. ORAL HISTORY, REMEMBERING, AND DOCUMENTATION AS RESISTANCE
10. Reflection on the El Calaboz Gathering / April Cotte
11. Reflection on the El Calaboz Gathering: “Don’t Ever Forget” / Lori Riddle
12. Caging Cultures Along the Texas-Mexico Border to El Calaboz, South Texas / Cynthia Bejarano and Jeffrey P. Shepherd
13. Brick by Brick: Using Human Rights and Critical Perspectives on Indigenous Peoples’ Social Movements to Build Momentum Against the Texas-Mexico Border Wall / Denise Gilman
14. A Community-Based Lawyer’s Perspective: On Being, Belonging, and Lipan Apache Women’s Spiritual Resistance to the Wall / Aurora Vasquez
15. Decolonizing the Archive: Reflections from the Border of an Identity / Rosalva Resendiz
16. El Muro: An Early Case Study on Archival Resistance Beyond Borders, Walls, and Settler-Colonial Visuality / Ramón Resendiz
17. Decolonize the Erasure of Texas Indigenous History at UTSA’s Institute of Texan Cultures: A Call for Indigenous-Centered Storytelling Practices / Annette Portillo
18. “despite this intolerable and ridiculous wallness, a humanness prevails” [email, post-gathering reflection] / Teresa Leal
RESISTANCE ARTWORK
Artist’s Statement
“Not One More Inch”
“Ni Una Pulgada Más”
Artist’s Statement
“History Lesson”
“Reunión Seguimiento en El Calaboz: La Defensa Femenil Lipan Apache”
“The Wall”
“Made in America”
They Inspired Indigenous Peoples to Action: A Reflection as a Language Translator on Understanding Key Actors in Movements
My Hero
The Wall
Prisoner
Before your name becomes a wound
The B word
Testimonio
“Documenting the cage construction”
“No al muro”
“The border wall makes me sick”
“When I asked my elderly Momma what she thought about our homelands”
PART IV. BÉNÁOŃZIINÍ | EMBODYING INDIGENOUS RECOGNITION
19. Healing Savage Souls, Re-creating, and Belonging: Indigenous Tattoo Revival as a Contemporary Form of Indigenous Embodied Biography of Continuing Independence and Resistance / Dion Kaszas
20. Máashdlógee | Butterfly / Milpa Mendoza
21. Hadndín | Pollen / Maura Tamez
22. Shits’ís | I Am / Myst Tamez-Hrabovsky
23. Shash hant’á | Bear Chief / Hawk Mendoza
PART V. EPISTEMOLOGICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL INTERVENTIONS FOR DECOLONIZED FUTURES
24. The Wame Still There / Koyana Flotte
25. Dispossession in El Calaboz and the Ndé Women’s Digital Movement: Creating Digital Knowledge Tools Through the Analytical Lenses of Indigenous Feminism and Decolonization / Kelly Panchyshyn
26. Coyotl Interventions: Chicanx Indigenous Decolonial Research Methods / Rosalva Resendiz and Ramón Resendiz
27. Settler-Colonial Visions, Texas Mythmaking, and Indigenous Resistance to “the Wall” / Jeffrey P. Shepherd
Conclusion: Ha’dée áíńzi? What Do You Think?
Contributors
Index