PHOENIX — Former Governor Doug Ducey declared November 2019 Native American Heritage Month in Arizona to recognize the many historical, cultural and economic contributions of Native Americans in Arizona and across the nation.
View text of the proclamation below
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WHEREAS, Arizona is situated in a diverse and culturally rich region of 22 various Tribal Nations and communities; and
WHEREAS, these homelands have existed since time immemorial, we acknowledge the contributions of Native Americans long before the formation of the United States and the entry of the State of Arizona into the union; and
WHEREAS, the State of Arizona recognizes the right of these 22 Tribal Nations to exercise sovereign authority, as defined by federal law, over their members and their territory; and
WHEREAS, the land of these 22 Tribal Nations comprises approximately 28 percent of Arizona's land base; and
WHEREAS, these tribal members are citizens of our great State, possess all the rights and privileges afforded by Arizona to its citizens, and, along with other American Indians, comprise approximately five percent of Arizona's population; and
WHEREAS, we revere the memory of fallen patriots who have fought to ensure the freedoms afforded to all citizens of the United States; and
WHEREAS, we acknowledge the unique challenges faced by American Indians, historically and in the present; and
WHEREAS, it benefits the State of Arizona to partner with tribal nations on issues affecting all of Arizona to ensure the vitality of tribal communities and its members.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Douglas A. Ducey, Governor of the State of Arizona, do hereby proclaim November 2019 as
NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused to be
affixed the Great Seal of the State of Arizona
GOVERNOR
DONE at the Capitol in Phoenix on this seventeenth day of October in the year
Two Thousand and Nineteen and of the Independence of the United States of America
the Two Hundred and Forty-Fourth
ATTEST:
SECRETARY OF STATE
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