Native Legendary

Native Legendary

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01/28/2026

When the Sky Turned Blue and the Guns Fell Silent
Window Rock, Arizona – November 22, 1973.
It was Thanksgiving morning, but the land was heavy with pain.
The echoes of Wounded Knee were still fresh.
Young men stood outside the chapter house with rifles in their hands, arguing about what would happen next.
Across from them, old women in velvet skirts prayed quietly in their own language, asking the young men to remember who they truly were.
Then, at exactly 11:07 a.m., something impossible happened.
The sky changed.
Not with clouds.
Not with smoke.
The entire sky turned the glowing blue-green of a turquoise stone held to the sun — a living, shining color no words could fully describe.
Every voice fell silent.
Every rifle lowered.
People stepped out of homes, trucks, shops, and hogans. They all looked up. The sky grew deeper in color, so rich it felt like it had come down to rest on the red earth and listen.
Then the wind carried a sound.
An old woman’s voice began to sing the Blessing Way — soft, steady, and ancient. No one could see her. The song seemed to come from everywhere at once, as if the sky itself were singing.
For twenty-three minutes, the sky stayed turquoise.
For twenty-three minutes, the song never stopped.
When the final note faded, the color slowly drained back into normal blue.
But the people were not the same.
The young men placed their rifles in the backs of trucks and went home to eat with their grandmothers.
The old women wiped their tears and began to prepare food for the feast.
There were no speeches.
No meetings.
No headlines.
Only peace.
Years later, when people asked what really happened that day, the elders would only say:
“The sky remembered the color of forgiveness.”
And every year on November 22, at 11:07 a.m., Diné people stop wherever they are in the world. They don’t speak. They simply look up at the sky and nod, as if greeting an old friend who once saved their lives.
Jewelers still tell a quiet story too — that on certain Thanksgiving mornings, when the light is just right, the finest turquoise turns the exact shade of the sky from the day the rifles went quiet.
They call that color Window Rock Blue.
And no one has ever been able to copy it.
[❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🪶]

01/25/2026

I hope I get wishes, today is my birthday Proud to be Native American
[❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🪶]

01/24/2026

𝐇𝐚𝐩𝐩𝐲 𝐁𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝐂𝐇𝐄𝐑 🌹
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(ʙᴏʀɴ ᴄʜᴇʀɪʟʏɴ sᴀʀᴋɪsɪᴀɴ; ᴍᴀʏ 𝟸𝟶, 𝟷𝟿𝟺𝟼)
In 1961, Your mother Holt married bank manager Gilbert LaPiere, who adopted Cher (under the name Cheryl LaPiere) and Georganne, and enrolled them at Montclair College Preparatory School, a private school in Encino, whose students were mostly from affluent families. The school's upper-class environment presented a challenge for Cher; biographer Connie Berman wrote, "[she] stood out from the others in both her striking appearance and outgoing personality." A former classmate commented, "I'll never forget seeing Cher for the first time. She was so special ... She was like a movie star, right then and there ... She said she was going to be a movie star and we knew she would." Despite not being an excellent student, Cher was intelligent and creative, according to Berman. She earned high grades, excelling in French and English classes. As an adult, she discovered that she had dyslexia. Cher's unconventional behavior stood out: she performed songs for students during the lunch hours and surprised peers when she wore a midriff-baring top.She later recalled, "I was never really in school. I was always thinking about when I was grown up and famous.
Make American Again 🇬🇧🇬🇧
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