Welcome to Indians.org
Dr. Wil Rose the former CEO of the American Indian Heritage Foundation was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery, November 9th 2011. More
The American Indian Heritage Foundation was establised in 1973 to provide relief services to Indian people nationwide and to build bridges of understanding and friendship between Indian and non-Indian people. Through informative materials, special events, cultural sharing opportunities and this website, we have reached multiplied millions with positive and proper representations of contemporary Indian culture as well as preservation of the old and treasured.
Most visitors to Indians.org come to learn more about the American Indain and ultimately themselves through our Resource Directory comprised of the following categories:
Search these pages for Authentic Hand Crafted American Indian Jewelry from the Hopi, Zuni, Navajo and other Southwest Tribes.
Indians.org webmaster has been getting a lot of private requests from businesses and government agencies wanting to expose their jobs to our unique visitors, these employers, Government and Private Corporations desire minorites to apply for these jobs. This new website Jobs4Natives.com is being developed as Government Agencies and Private Companies submit thier Career Opportunies to be posted. Bookmark the following link, you may find your future Career of a lifetime on Jobs4Natives.com
Most Searched American Indian Topics
How Do I Trace My Indian Heritage - To determine if you are eligible for tribal membership, contact your ancestral tribe. Individual tribes determine tribal membership. Additional resources links to trace Indian ancestry are provided in this article. More...
Beginner's Genealogy Lesson - Using family group sheets and a pedigree chart, write down what you know. Try to keep your records in an orderly fashion, so you can locate them in the future. Make a file or notebook for each family name. Whatever works for you. More...
How to Establishing Your American Indian Ancestry - Some people want to become enrolled members of a federally recognized tribe. Others want to verify a family tradition (belief, fact or fiction, passed from generation to generation) that they descended from an American Indian, either in their distant or near past. While others might want just to learn more about from whom and where they came. More...
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