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  1. Activism with the American Indian Movement. Annie Mae Aquash (Mi'kmaq name Naguset Eask) (March 27, 1945 – mid-December 1975 [1] [2]) was a First Nations activist and Mi'kmaq tribal member from Nova Scotia, Canada. Aquash moved to Boston in the 1960s and joined other First Nations and Indigenous Americans focused on education and resistance ...

  2. May 8, 2024 · Anna Mae Aquash (born March 27, 1945, near Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia, Canada—found dead February 24, 1976, northeast border of Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota, U.S.) was a Canadian-born Mi’kmaq Indian activist noted for her mysterious death by homicide shortly after her participation in a protest at Wounded Knee.

  3. Apr 30, 2014 · Johanna Brand, a Canadian journalist and the author of “The Life and Death of Anna Mae Aquash,” spent a year in the late 1970s talking to Aquash’s friends and family. Brand’s brief biography vividly describes Aquash’s early years in a community of Mikmaq Indians in Nova Scotia, where she lived in a small hut without electricity or ...

  4. Dec 13, 2021 · Anna Mae Aquash (1945 – 1975) Anna Mae Aquash was a First Nations activist and teacher. Born into the Mi'kmaq First Nation at Indian Brook, Nova Scotia, she moved to Boston in 1962 and became involved with the emerging Native American civil rights movement. An outspoken critic of both the American and Canadian governments for their treatment ...

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  6. Aquash, Anna Mae (1945–1976) Native American, Micmac activist. Name variations: Anna Mae Pictou; Annie Mae. Born March 27, 1945, in Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia, Canada; murdered on February 24, 1976, on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota; third daughter of Mary Ellen Pictou and Frances Levi; attended Wheelock College; scholarship to Brandeis University (unused); married Jake Maloney ...

  7. Annie Mae Aquash was a First Nations activist and Mi'kmaq tribal member from Nova Scotia, Canada. Aquash moved to Boston in the 1960s and joined other First Nations and Indigenous Americans focused on education and resistance, and police brutality against urban Indigenous peoples. She was part of the American Indian Movement, participated in several occupations, and participated in the 1973 ...

  8. Aquash’s assassination. Further, AIM alleged that the federal government conspired to cover-up the murder. The FBI, on the other hand, suspected that AIM was responsible for Aquash’s death. For the next three decades, the federal government and 1 Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Norman Zigrossi, Anna Mae Aquash Murder

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