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Cherilyn Yazzie saw a need in the Navajo Nation: access to healthy food. She started a farm to offer just that. Local Sports Things To Do Politics Travel Advertise Obituaries eNewspaper Legals.
In the middle of the Arizona desert, within the 27,000-square-mile Navajo Nation, sits a half-acre garden oasis, bustling with fresh-grown veggies and flowers. Planted in 2016 as part of Coffee ...
The Phoenix Indian Center is collecting donations for those affected by the Oak Ridge Fire, which has burned over 10,000 ...
Navajo food traditions aim to revive historic Southwest peach orchards and farming practices. Reagan Wytsalucy works to restore these traditions, highlighting their cultural and dietary significance.
This year the nonprofit organization, which promotes, preserves and protects the Navajo way of life, has been hosting workshops that focus on traditional Navajo food.
The Navajo Nation started taxing junk food and soda. No other tribe has passed such a law. But half of the tribe is unemployed and say they can't afford expensive food.
This lack of access to fresh, whole foods has predictable consequences: Native Americans have the highest rate of diabetes in the country, according to the Indian Health Services and National Health ...
Begay said the group is using a $27,000 grant from First Nations Development Institute for the sessions and to develop a cookbook with traditional Navajo recipes, which they plan to have available ...
Many have dreamed of taxing Cheetos and soda. The Navajo Nation is now doing both. The first-in-the U.S. tax measure aims to raise revenue for health programs and make wholesome food more affordable.
NAVAJO NATION, Ariz. — The Navajo Nation spreads across more than 27,000 square miles, but its citizens, the Diné — as many prefer to be called — are served by fewer than a dozen grocery ...
Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren, 25th Navajo Nation Council Speaker Crystalyne Curley, and Law and Order Committee Chair ...
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