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Since 1993, Honor the Earth has worked with the Grammy Award winning Indigo Girls and a host of Native musicians, including Indigenous, Ulali, John Trudell and Keith Secola and the Wild Band of Indians. These tours have raised significant funds and awareness for grassroots Native environmental projects.
1993
The first Honor the Earth tour with the Indigo Girls stopped in Minnesota,
Wisconsin, and Iowa and focused on secret radioactive waste dumping on Inupiat
land in Point Hope, Alaska.
1995
This year, the Indigo Girls toured with us for a month with a total of 21
stops through the states of Alaska, Oregon, California, Arizona, New Mexico,
Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, South Dakota, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
and Manitoba, Canada.
1996
In cooperation with Daemon Records, Honor the Earth released Honor, a benefit
CD, featuring 20 artists including Bonnie Raitt, Matthew Sweet, Ulali,
Indigenous, John Trudell, Indigo Girls and Rusted Root. Click on the link
to view promotional materials and to hear the artists speak about Honor
the Earth and their environmental commitment.
1997
Honor the Earth toured along the East Coast to raise awareness about the
Nuclear Waste Policy Act, a federal proposal to store radioactive waste
at Yucca Mountain, in sacred Western Shoshone territory. President Clinton
vetoed the bill early in 1998, but in 2002
Yucca Mountain was eventually approved as a nuclear
storage site.
2000
On the first half of the tour the Indigo Girls, Joan Baez, and Bonnie Raitt
toured through Montana to raise awareness about the “Get Out the
Indian Vote-Save the Yellowstone Buffalo” campaign. In partnership
with local grassroots groups, we successfully registered and mobilized
Indian voters all across the state. Throughout the rest of the tour, a
mix of artists including Jackson Browne, David Crosby, Shawn Mullins, and
others toured with the Indigo Girls and Honor the Earth to protest unjust
energy policies in Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.
2002
In August, Bonnie Raitt and Lyle Lovett gave a concert in Duluth that raised
money for Honor the Earth and the White Earth Land Recovery Project. In
December, the Indigo Girls and Aimee Mann kicked off Honor the Earth’s
Energy Justice Campaign with a concert in Boston.
2003
In April, Honor the Earth hosted a speaking tour with the theme “Wind
Not War” featuring Winona LaDuke, Native activists, and the Indigo
Girls. This format allowed more substantive information to be presented and
resulted in increased engagement by the audience. Later in the year, the
Indigo Girls co-headlined an Honor the Earth benefit concert with the Dixie
Chicks and Ben Folds.
2004
In October, Honor the Earth and Indigo Girls visited Salt Lake City, Utah
to call for renewed resistance to a nuclear waste storage facility on the
Skull Valley Goshute Reservation.
2005
In September, Honor the Earth and Indigo Girls went to Guilford College in
Greensboro, North Carolina to speak out against the U.S. nuclear revival
and to raise funds for our wind initiative on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
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