
AI Summary
The United States this year is celebrating its 250th anniversary, and President Donald Trump is turning 80. The site of the party may be a sacred site in the Black Hills - and Indigenous activist Nick Tilsen is in no mood to join in.
The United States this year is celebrating its 250th anniversary, and President Donald Trump is turning 80. The site of the party may be a sacred site in the Black Hills - and Indigenous activist Nick Tilsen is in no mood to join in. [Source: Der Spiegel International, 17 Mar 2026]
Analysis
The report analyzes the perspectives and geopolitical implications of this event, highlighting the significance of the Indigenous activist Nick Tilsen's presence in the Black Hills. It also examines the potential impact on the ongoing conflict between the United States and Mexico regarding the genocide against indigenous nations. The report concludes by emphasizing the importance of respecting cultural heritage and upholding human rights.
The summary and perspectives above are AI-generated from the source articles listed below. They may contain errors or omissions. Always verify with the original sources. NewsPro is a news aggregation platform and does not produce original journalism.
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Their Angle
The United States this year is celebrating its 250th anniversary, and President Donald Trump is turning 80. The site of the party may be a sacred site in the Black Hills - and Indigenous activist Nick Tilsen is in no mood to join in.
Full Article
Sie können den Artikel leider nicht mehr aufrufen. Der Link, der Ihnen geschickt wurde, ist entweder älter als 30 Tage oder der Artikel wurde bereits 10 Mal geöffnet. You can read Tilsen’s dream on his fingers. On his knuckles, the 43-year-old has had the letters L-A-N-D and B-A-C-K tattooed in ornate script. Land back. He means the land of his ancestors: the Black Hills in South Dakota. For centuries, they were home to several Indigenous nations before white settlers, swept up in a gold rush, and U.S. soldiers brutally drove them out. That was almost 150 years ago, but the last word on the matter is still a long way off, Nick Tilsen believes. He is a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation and, as the founder of the NDN – pronounced "Indian” – Collective, one of the most influential champions of Indigenous rights and networking in America. Tilsen receives visitors in his office in Rapid City, crammed with evidence of small triumphs: a photo of him with former President Barack Obama; another with the long-imprisoned Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier, whom then-President Joe Biden released from prison shortly before Donald Trump took office. With Trump, Tilsen says, dark times for America’s Indigenous peoples have returned. Then he talks about ideas for how to take on this president. Listening to him, you get a sense of where Tilsen’s Lakota name comes from: TaBloka Waketa – Forward-Looking Bison. DER SPIEGEL: Mr. Tilsen, the United States will be celebrating its 250th birthday this year. Are you going to be joining the party? Nick Tilsen: No. Instead of glorifying the violent history of the United States, I am much more interested in talking about what the next 250 years will look like. Especially at a time when democracy here is crumbling. Donald Trump’s regime has nothing to offer for the future and is only celebrating false narratives about the past. The article you are reading originally appeared in German in issue 12/2026 (March 12th, 2026) of DER SPIEGEL. DER SPIEGEL: It’s possible though that your home of South Dakota will become a central location for this celebration. Trump has commissioned a gigantic sculpture garden full of 250 "American heroes.” It could end up being established next to the iconic stone faces of four U.S. presidents at Mount Rushmore. Tilsen: We don’t call it that. We call the mountain Tȟuŋkášila Šákpe, Six Grandfathers. It was a sacred site for the Lakota people and other Indigenous nations for centuries before white people came along to put up these four white men who were responsible for slavery, murder and the rape of Indigenous people. This has always been and still is our land. The United States has admitted that they broke their own laws in stealing the place. DER SPIEGEL relies on support from its readers. To enjoy the rest of this story, please consider signing up for a subscription to The German View, our English-language channel on Substack. The article can be found here and our Substack channel can be found here . Alternatively, you can sign up for a SPIEGEL+ subscription below. DER SPIEGEL: You are referring to the Supreme Court decision from 45 years ago, in which the justices ruled that the government broke a treaty with the Indigenous population of the Black Hills in 1877 and confiscated the entire territory, including Mount Rushmore. Tilsen: And I think it’s a bit rich to celebrate the birth of a nation which we never wanted on our stolen land. Didn’t they always tell us that the American democracy is founded on the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution? Article VI states that treaties are the supreme law of the land. The stealing of the Black Hills was one of the worst violations of the U.S. Constitution in history. And a deliberate act of humiliation. Sie haben bereits ein Digital-Abo? Zum Login Sie haben bereits ein Print-Abo? Hier rabattiert Digital-Zugang bestellen SPIEGEL+ wird über Ihren iTunes-Account abgewickelt und mit Kaufbestätigung bezahlt. 24 Stunden vor Ablauf verlängert sich das Abo automatisch um einen Monat zum Preis von zurzeit ¤ ein Jahr zum Preis von zurzeit ¤. In den Einstellungen Ihres iTunes-Accounts können Sie das Abo jederzeit kündigen. Um SPIEGEL+ außerhalb dieser App zu nutzen, müssen Sie das Abo direkt nach dem Kauf mit einem SPIEGEL-ID-Konto verknüpfen. Mit dem Kauf akzeptieren Sie unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen und Datenschutzerklärung.

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