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For more than a century, a quiet theft reshaped a continent.
Stolen Earth, Stolen Power exposes one of the most devastating and overlooked policies in American history, the Dawes Act, and the profound consequences it unleashed on Native nations and the women who once held power at the heart of their societies.
Before colonization, many Indigenous nations across North America honored women as leaders, land stewards, diplomats, and decision-makers. Land was not a commodity; it was a living relationship, protected by communities in which women often guided political and social life. But in 1887, the Dawes Act tore that system apart.
Under the guise of "civilizing" Native peoples, the U.S. government divided communal tribal lands into individual allotments, stripped millions of acres from Native ownership, and imposed patriarchal property systems that systematically erased women's authority. What followed was not just land loss, it was the dismantling of governance, culture, and the social balance that sustained Native nations for generations.
This is not just a story about land being stolen.
It is a story about power, who held it, how it was taken, and how Native women continue to reclaim it.
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