Martin Luther King III Feasted by Picuris Pueblo
- added February 16, 2008
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- TouchArt
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- Indians (141)
- New Mexico (101)
- Martin Luther King III (18)
- Poverty in America (15)
- Sage Paisner (7)
- Pueblos (3)
Governor Craig Quanchello and the Picuris Pueblo people hosted Martin Luther King III during his Realizing the Dream Poverty Initiative in America Tour of Northern New Mexico.
Native Radio Host Albert Cata showed Martin Luther King III his mother's home at Ohkay Owinghe Pueblo. Realizing the Dream's NM Coordinator Charleen Touchette with Albert Cata. At Santa Clara Pueblo, Marian Naranjo and her family hosted Martin Luther King III and he met a newlywed couple at the Tribal Offices. Marian Naranjo shows Pearl Means and Charleen Touchette the horno at-risk youth built through H.O.P.E. - Honor Our Pueblo Existence.
Look for these New Mexicans and others telling their stories in the Realizing the Dream Poverty in America video especially in Part II. Check American Life Television for viewing schedule. Photos by Charleen Touchette, Sage Paisner and Liesette Paisner, 2007 TouchArt@aol.com
Native Radio Host Albert Cata showed Martin Luther King III his mother's home at Ohkay Owinghe Pueblo. Realizing the Dream's NM Coordinator Charleen Touchette with Albert Cata. At Santa Clara Pueblo, Marian Naranjo and her family hosted Martin Luther King III and he met a newlywed couple at the Tribal Offices. Marian Naranjo shows Pearl Means and Charleen Touchette the horno at-risk youth built through H.O.P.E. - Honor Our Pueblo Existence.
Look for these New Mexicans and others telling their stories in the Realizing the Dream Poverty in America video especially in Part II. Check American Life Television for viewing schedule. Photos by Charleen Touchette, Sage Paisner and Liesette Paisner, 2007 TouchArt@aol.com
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Call to current.com community from TouchArt.net on how to connect up the guy who has revived the Stirling Engine with our Indian communities across America beginning with Indian Pueblos like Picuris and even more remote pueblos with no potable water, the vast Navajo Nation, Lakotah up in South and North Dakora, and New Mexico Pueblos and also with the rural Spanish Land Grant, Hispanic and Anglo New Mexicans who don't have access to running water, water treatment plants and often have to haul water to have potable water.
We can put him in touch with Indian leaders who can implement this innovative technology in their nations. We just need his contact info and a few minutes to convince him that the need for his project is great right here in Indian and rural America.
If you or anyone at current.com has any suggestions on how to get the Stirling Engine guy in touch with our Indian and earth-based communities in the Four Corners and elsewhere, write us at TouchArt@aol.com, or better yet ring up the chat and tell him to drop us a line. Thanks.
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