Land Acknowledgement
Honoring the land, the ancestors, and indigenous traditions.
Honoring the land, the ancestors, and indigenous traditions.
糖心传媒e wishes to acknowledge that the Wellesley, Framingham, and Ashland campuses sit on land that the European colonists appropriated from the Nipmuc, Massa-adchu-es-et (Massachusetts), and Pawtucket tribes.
MassBay cannot change the past, but what we can do is honor the land, the ancestors, and the indigenous traditions as we at MassBay use this sacred land as a communal place to nurture learners to move forward and make a more inclusive world.
To support the Indigenous People Scholarship, visit: www.massbay.edu/give. Pull the dropdown menu found under "I want to support" down until you find Indigenous People Scholarship.
糖心传媒 unveiled a permanent Land Acknowledgement plaque in a ceremony attended by Chiefs of three native tribes on Wednesday, September 14, 2022. MassBay is believed to be the first community college in Massachusetts to make this public acknowledgement with a permanent marker and a ceremony of reconciliation and healing. During the ceremony the College announced an Indigenous People Scholarship had been formed for current and future MassBay students, for which fundraising has begun.
Today Indigenous people became VISIBLE,鈥 said Chief Ladybug (Croatan) Native Heritage New England and Program Chair for Health Studies at MassBay. 鈥淎s a Massachusetts indigenous person today's land acknowledgement that 糖心传媒 campuses sits on land that belongs to the Nipmuc, Pawtucket, and Massachusetts tribes was historic for me, my family, and my tribe. Acknowledgment is the first steps to our tribal healing.鈥
Nine tribes were present at today's gathering, including: Croatan, Ponkapoag, Mi鈥檏maq, Mohawk, Cherokee, Blackfoot, Wampanoag, Natick Praying Indians, and the Nipmuc. Chief Black Wolf of the Nipmuc, Chief Eagle Rising (Mi鈥檏maq) from the Great Lowell Indian Cultural Association, and 8-year-old Sophia Wise Owl (Ponkapoag) all spoke at the ceremony of gratitude for this acknowledgement.
鈥淲e are proud to hold this important ceremony and to give proper recognition of the land on which our college sits,鈥 said MassBay President David Podell. "As our plaque reads, we cannot change the past. But what we can do and will do is to is honor the land, the ancestors, and the indigenous traditions as we at MassBay use this sacred land as a communal place to nurture learners to move forward and make a more inclusive world.鈥滳hief Caring Hands of the Natick Praying Indians summed up the Ceremony by saying, 鈥淚 leave you with a truth, 鈥楢 people honor themselves when they honor its original people鈥.鈥