Our Merchandise
If you'd like to order any of the merchandise below please email info@honorearth.org with your quantity and address and we can let you know the shipping costs and arrange payment and shipping. Miigwech for your support! All proceeds go directly to our programs.
This new publication from Honor the Earth makes clear the urgent need and provides how-to information for developing local clean energy and traditional food projects. We wrote this booklet to serve tribal college professors in designing curriculum, grassroots groups engaged in the resilience movement, tribal planners developing renewable and agricultural projects and others involved in re-localizing tribal economies. Written and research by Winona LaDuke and the staff of Honor the Earth and published in February 2010.
$10 ($8 each when purchasing 10 or more)
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Winona LaDuke's unique understanding of Native ideas and people is born from long years of experience, and her analysis is deepened with inspiring testimonies by local Native activists sharing the struggle for survival. All Our Relations features chapters on the Seminoles, the Anishinaabeg, the Innu, the Northern Cheyenne, and the Mohawks, among others.
$16.95

A powerful and poignant first novel that traces the lives of seven
generations of Anishinaabe (Ojibwe/ Chippewa). Beginning in the 1860s
and extending into the future, Last Standing Woman chronicles a
reservation and its people's struggle to restore their culture.
$16.95

This informative book contains history and present day stories about how our food is the medicine and economic staple of Indigenous people.
$8.50
Amy Ray and Emily Saliers of the Indigo Girls have recruited Bonnie Raitt, Soul Asylum, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Ulali, Indigenous, John Trudell, Keith Secola and the Wild Band of Indians, Joy Harjo and Poetic Justice, Sherman Alexie Frank Hyde, and Reversing Hour to donate new recordings for a benefit CD entitled HONOR.
$20

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Indigenous
peoples in the Great Plains, including Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho,
developed a unique and powerful medium to document their history:
ledger drawings. This image by Donald Montileaux (Oglala Lakota), a
master ledger artist following in the footsteps of his forefathers, was
designed to tell the history of Honor the Earth.
$20

"Honor the Earth", a poster print of a painting from a series by Betty LaDuke.
$15


