Showing posts with label Culture Icons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Culture Icons. Show all posts

Culture Icon | Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933-2020)

A hero of humanity has crossed over. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 1933-2020. She was a champion of human rights, an inspiration, and a role model to so many.

We will be writing a full Future-ish Culture Icon biography for Justice Ginsburg in the coming days but there is no doubt that she served as a shining example of how culture and gender should not and must not be a barrier to anyone achievieng success and contributing to society. In surpassing her own obstacles throughout her career, she was also a tireless champion in her work for achieving justice and human rights for so many others who faced - or would have faced - similar challenges.

Miss Next Century 2020 | Merritt Moore

Merritt Moore is an American ballerina and quantum physicist. Moore's love for math and dance started at a young age growing up in California. Moore dances professionally for ballet companies around the world and completed her PhD in Atomic and Laser Physics at Oxford in 2017 following her underaduate degree in physics at Harvard. In 2020, Moore began an innovative residency at Harvard's ArtLab exploring how AI can inspire human creativity through dance.

Moore was named Glamour's 'Top Ten College Women' in 2010. In 2017, Moore was a candidate on BBC Two's 'Astronauts: Do You Have What It Takes?'. In 2018, Moore started a unique Instagram profile and campaign called SASters Squad (Science-Art-Sisters Squad, @sasters_squad) to support and promote women pursuing both science and art. Moore was named one of Forbes 'Forbes 30 under 30' in 2020.

Merritt Moore was named Future-ish's 10th Miss Next Century in 2020.

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Additional Reading

Culture Icon | Brian Sims


Brian Sims is an American politician, policy attorney, and advocate for civil, women's, and LGBT rights. Sims is the first openly gay elected state legislator in Pennsylvania and the first (and so far only) openly gay college football captain in the NCAA when he was co-captain at Bloomsburg University in 2000. Sims is passionate about a broad range of LGBT issues and also happens to be an informed and enthusiastic advocate on environmental, diversity, and social justice issues.

Sims is the son of two Army Lieutenant Colonels and has lived in seventeen states, including Alaska, before settling in Pennsylvania. Sims received a BS in Business Administration from Bloomsburg University in 2001 and his J.D. Degree in International and Comparative law at Michigan State University College of Law in 2004.

Before his election to the Pennsylvania State House of Representatives, Sims served as staff counsel for policy and planning at the Philadelphia Bar Association. He as also a member of the national campaign board of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund and chairman of the Gay and Lesbian Lawyers of Philadelphia.

Sims is a frequent online contributor to The Huffington Post, The Advocate, and Philly.com and also appears regularly on MSNBC, NPR, and other media outlets. Sims currently is on the Boards of the Ben Cohen StandUp Foundation and Campus Pride. He is also a member of GLSEN Sports Advisory Council and a participant in Nike's Sports Summit.

Culture Icon | George Takai

George Takei is an American actor, activist, director, author. Most of us know him either as Lieutenant Sulu from Star Trek or more recently as an outspoken advocate of LGBT rights. Takei was born in LA to Japanese-American parents, Fumiko Emily Nakamura and Takekuma Norman Takei. Takai’s father named him George after King George VI of the United Kingdom, whose coronation took place in 1937, the same year of George’s birth. George Takai himself is quite the Anglo/Britanophile.

In the 1940s, the Takei family was forced to live in War Relocation Centers (essentially internment camps) with many other Japanese-American families. At the end of WWII, his family returned to Los Angeles where Takai became later became student body president at his junior high school.

Takai studied architecture at UC Berkeley for a short time and later earned a BA in Theater in 1960 and MA in Theater in 1964 at UCLA. After his MA, he attended the Shakespeare Institute at Stratford-upon-Avon in England, Sophia University in Tokyo, and the Desilu Workshop in Hollywood.

After several roles in movies and television series in the 1960s, Takai landed the role of Lieutenant Sulu on Star Trek in 1965. He continued on in the Star Trek series but continued to add other movies, plays, and television series to his list of accomplishments through the 1990s and 2000s. His appearance in the hit series Heroes garnered much attention and his participation in several reality television shows such as the Apprentice increased his visibility in pop culture even further.

Takai has been active in the public sphere for many years. From being an alternate delegate from California to the Democratic National Convention in 1972 and an unsuccessful run for the LA City Council in 1973 to his role on the board of directors of the Southern California Rapid Transit District through the 1980s, he has remained active in both pop culture and politics. Takai has released several public service announcements, some humorous and some quite serious, response to anti-gay statements or legislation.

Although there was speculation for many years, Takei officially came out as gay in a 2005 issue of Frontiers magazine revealing his 18 year partnership with Brad Altman; it was a direct response to California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's veto of same-sex marriage. Takei serves as a spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign "Coming Out Project". Takai and Altman were the first same-gender couple to apply for a marriage license in West Hollywood.

Takai has received many awards and honors in his work on Japanese-American relations and LGBT rights. Takai received the Order of the Rising Sun from Japan in in 2004 and 2012 he received the LGBT Humanist Award from the American Humanist Association. In 2014, he received the GLAAD Vito Russo Award. Perhaps most impressive to Future-ish fans, NASA named Asteroid 7307 in Takei’s honor.

George Takai was named our Queen of The Smart Set for 2015.

>> Facebook
>> IMDB
>> Twitter: @georgetakai
>> Wikipedia

Culture Icon | Áile Jávo

Áile Jávo is President of the Saami Council, an organization established in 1956 to protect and promote Saami rights and interests in the four countries where the Saami are living: Norway, Sweden, Russia and Finland. Jávo is a frequent participant and presenter in events that involve traditional Saami culture and lands, the Arctic, and natural resource policy that affects the Saami people.

Jávo was added to our PISA List in 2014.

>> Twitter: @ailejavo

Design Idol, Culture Icon | Majora Carter


Majora Carter is an American social entrepreneur, environmental justice activist, urban revitalization strategist, real estate developer, and radio host.

Carter graduated from the Bronx High School of Science and later received a BA at Wesleyan University. She then completed her MFA at NYU in 1997 and has received multiple honorary doctorate degrees from universities including Wesleyan, Knox, and The New School.

Carter founded Sustainable South Bronx in 2001, a nonprofit organization created to provide environmental justice solutions to challenges facing the community. Her initiatives have included multiple green-infrastructure projects and urban revitalization policy development, as well as diversity-focused green and technology industry development in inner-city areas.

Carter's TEDtalk in 2006 was one of the initial six presentations that launched the TED website. Other accolades include: the Goldman Sachs' "100 Most Intriguing Entrepreneurs", a Peabody Award from the University of Georgia, the Liberty Medal for Lifetime Achievement from the NY Post, the Rachel Carson Award from the National Audubon Society, the Martin Luther King Jr. Award for Humanitarian Service from NYU, and the Environmental Advocate of the Year from NRDC. Carter is also a McCarther Genious Fellow.

Carter is a Board Member of the US Green Building Council and the Andrew Goodman Foundation.

Carter was added to our PISA List in 2014.

Twitter: @majoracarter

Culture Icon & Sceleb | Yvette Roubideaux

Yvette Roubideaux, a member of the the Rosebud Sioux Tribe in South Dakota, is a Native American physician and public health administrator. She is currently the Director of the Indian Health Service (IHS).

Roubideaux completed her BA degree at Harvard and continued on to earn her MD at Harvard in 1989. She then completed her residency requirement in internal medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston in 1992 followed by four years of clinical practice. Roubideaux then returned to Harvard to earn a MPH in 1997 and carried out a Commonwealth Fund/Harvard University Fellowship in Minority Health Policy.

Roubideaux served as assistant professor of family and community medicine at the University of Arizona where her research and teaching focused on diabetes in American Indians/Alaska Natives and Indian health policy. She also served in a faculty role at the University of Colorado in the Native Elder Resource Center Native Investigator Program.

Roubideaux's career in IHS started when she served as medical officer and clinical director on the San Carlos Indian Reservation and in the Gila River Indian Community. In was in 2009 when President Obama nominated Roubideaux for the position of Director of IHS and she was confirmed in the position in May of that year becoming the first female to be appointed to the position.

Roubideaux was added to our PISA List in 2013.

Culture Icon | Pope Francis

Pope Francis, born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, is the 266th and current Pope of the Catholic Church. He was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina to Italian immigrant parents Mario José Bergoglio and Regina María Sívori.

Prior to entering the Villa Devoto Seminary in 1955, Bergoglio had earned a diploma as a chemical technician and then worked as a lab technician for a few years. He earned a graduate degree in philosophy in 1963 and then from 1964 to 1966 taught literature and psychology first at Colegio de la Inmaculada, a high school in the Santa Fé province, and then at the Colegio del Salvatore in Buenos Aires. In 1970 completed also theology degree at the Colegio of San José.

In 1958 Bergoglio became a novice in the Society of Jesus. He was ordained a priest in 1969 and took his perpetual vows in the Society of Jesus in 1973. Begoglio became Archbishop of Buenos Aires in 1998, and then a cardinal in 2001. In March 2013, he was elected Pope by the papal conclave and chose the papal name Francis in honor of Saint Francis of Assisi making him the first Jesuit pope, the first pope from the Americas, and the first from the Southern Hemisphere.

Bergoglio is also a fan of the San Lorenzo de Almagro football club, enjoys the films of Tita Merello, neorealism, tango dancing, and milonga (the traditional music of Argentina and Uruguay).

Pope Francis was added to our PISA List in 2013.

>> Official Vatican Biography
>> Twitter: @Pontifex
>> Wikipedia

Culture Icon | Adrienne Keene

Image credit: Melanie Rieders via Harvard Gazette

Adrienne Keene (Cherokee) is a Native American researcher and blogger. Keene received her BA in Cultural & Social Anthropology and Native Merican Studies from Stanford University in 2007 and earned her Doctorate in Education from Harvard in 2014. Keene's graduate research focused on Native (American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian) access to higher education and the role of pre-college access programs in Native student success. Keene was a recipient of the Harvard University Presidential Scholarship and her dissertation was selected for the 2013-2014 National Academy of Education/Spencer Dissertation Fellowship. She was also the first recipient of the Harvard Graduate School of Education Kolajo Paul Afolabi Award for Educational Justice in 2013.

Keene has volunteered with College Horizons, a nonprofit organization that assists Native students with college applications for over 10 years.

Keene's website and blog, Native Appropriations is a forum for discussing representations of Native peoples. Keene and Native Appropriations have received international praise for challenging stereotypes, misrepresentations, and cultural appropriations of Native peoples in fashion, media, and popular culture. Keene has also written for Racialicious, Sociological Images, Bitch Magazine, Indian Country Today, as well as other print and online media outlets.

Keene was added to our Citizens of the Next Century List in 2013 and was named as our fourth Miss Next Century in 2014.

>> Facebook: Native Appropriations
>> Website/Blog: Native Appropriations
>> Twitter: @NativeApprops

Culture Icon | Sia Figiel


First and foremost, Sia Figiel is a single parent to 2 growing sons and an aunt to 3 nieces and 7 nephews. Ms. Figiel is also a beloved Samoan novelist, performance poet, and artist.

Ms. Figiel grew up in the village of Matautu Tai, Samoa where traditional Samoan song, dance, and poetry were key elements of her community and upbringing. She attended schools in Samoa and New Zealand and later began university studies in New Zealand and completed her BA in History at Whitworth College in the United States. She has also held residencies at the Institucio de les Lletres Catalanes in Spain, the Pacific Writing Forum at the University of the South Pacific, the University of Technology in Sydney, and the East West Center – Center for Pacific Islands Studies at the University of Hawaii.

Ms. Figiel won the Polynesian Literary Competition in 1994 for her poetry and wrote her first book, Where We Once Belonged, in 1996 for which she was awarded the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for fiction, South East Asia/South Pacific region in 1997. Where we Once Belonged was followed by the novels The Girl in the Moon Circle and They Who Do Not Grieve along with a collection of prose-poetry To A Young Artist in Contemplation. Ms. Figiel has also recorded performance poetry with the poet Teresia Teaiwa in the CD TERENESIA.

Ms. Figiel's work has been translated into many languages and she has presented her work in cities including Paris, Berlin, Barcelona, New York, and Honolulu. She is the first Pacific Islander to perform poetry at the Shakespeare Globe Theater, London. Ms. Figiel continues to travel extensively, representing Samoa and the Pacific Islands in literary festivals around the world.

In 2013, Figiel also began working as a diabetes activist, launched with her in-your-face (literally and figuratively) YouTube video, Sia at the Dentist in which her teeth are removed due to her own diabetes-related health issues. She focuses much of her advocacy work on Pacific Islander communities but - like her creative works - her experience and message have universal appeal. Figiel also serves as a role model by including her entire family in eating healthier and becoming more active. She has become a triathlete and has lost well over 100 pounds in her efforts to challenge her diabetes.

We are pleased and honored to have Sia Figiel as a contributor to our online magazine, Confab.

>> Follow Sia Figiel on Future-ish

Culture Icon | Manalani Mili Hokoana English

Manalani Mili Hokoana English is a Hawaiian college student and Hula Dancer under the direction of na kumu hula Napua Greig and Kahulu Maluo of Kula, Hawaii located on Maui. English won the title of Miss Aloha Hula 2013 at the 50th annual Merrie Monarch Festival that takes place in Hilo, Hawaii located on the Big Island. Winning the title at age 24, English started dancing with her hula hālau 16 years earlier at the age of nine. English was runner up for the same title in 2011. In addition to winning the title of Miss Aloha Hula 2013, English was also awarded the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) Hawaiian Language Award. English is studying radiation technology at Kapiʻolani Community College in Honolulu. English is a scholar in the Maui-based Liko A'e Native Hawaiian Leadership Program program and - given the great cover of Landslide we found on YouTube - she is a fantastic singer too.

English was named as our third Miss Next Century in 2013.

Culture Icon | Ellen DeGeneres

Ellen DeGeneres is an award-winning American actress, author, comedian, spokesperson, and television host. In addition to her extensive acting and comedy career, since 2003 she has hosted The Ellen DeGeneres Show (aka "Ellen") which features celebrity interviews, musicians, new products, games, and many human-interest stories.

DeGeneres has won numerous awards, including Daytime Emmy Awards, Emmy Awards, and People's Choice Awards. She has also hosted the Emmy and Academy Awards. DeGeneres received the Tulane President's Medal in 2009 and the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor from the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in 2012. She landed her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2012.

DeGeneres and her partner, Portia de Rossi, are vegans and DeGeneres has regular segments on her show called "Ellen's Healthy Living" that feature tips and recipes for going vegan. She has raised awareness and money for issues ranging from animal rights and bullying to breast cancer and relief efforts after Hurricane Katrina. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton named DeGeneres a Special Envoy for Global AIDS Awareness in 2011.

The groupies of Studio F here at Future-ish are HUGE fans of DeGeneres for several reasons. She has had many STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) guests on her show ranging from actress Danika McKeller to young inventor Peyton Robertson. She also often highlights the work of outstanding teachers across the US which will always get a big gold star and an A+ from us. She is also an admirer of great design both on her show and in her personal life. Even more fabulous...DeGeneres came out publicly as a lesbian in 1997 and she has been an outspoken advocate and role model for the LGBT community ever since. She is a champion of diversity in every way and her sign-off for each show, "Be kind to one another!" has become a mantra here at Future-ish.

DeGeneres was named our Queen of The Smart Set for 2014.

PS. And yes...Ellen's occasional and outrageous guest DJ, Loni Love, was indeed our Queen of the Smart Set for 2013.

Design Idol & Culture Icon | Patricia Michaels

Patricia Michaels (Taos) is a Native American fashion and textile designer. Michaels is a finalist on Project Runway, Season 11. She studied graphic and jewelry design at the Institute of American Indian Arts and later worked at Field Museum in Chicago and apprenticed with a tailor in Milan. Michaels then spent two years working in New York's garment district culminating in show at New York Fashion week.

Known for her creativity and technical abilities in designing and manipulating textiles, in our minds Michaels and her designs are a perfect composition of science, design, and culture.

Culture Icon | Stephen Farrelly (aka "Sheamus")

Stephen Farrelly is known by several other names...Sheamus, Sheamus O'Shaunessy (S0S), the Celtic Warrior, the Irish Curse, and the Great White. That comes with the territory though when you are a professional wrestler with World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). Farrelly has held many wrestling championships in Ireland and the US, including World Heavyweight Champion twice, and is huge fan favorite whenever he steps into the ring wherever he may be in the world.

What sets Farrelly apart from other sports entertainers is that he has an information technology degree and speaks fluent Gaelic. He also sang in choir until he was thirteen and was a star athlete in Irish football and rugby during his school and college years.

In addition to keeping up his championship wrestling, Farrelly has also recently taken on several causes. First, he joined other WWE stars and the Creative Coalition in the be a STAR project, an anti-bullying initiative that promotes tolerance and respect through education and awareness. Having been bullied as a child himself and later standing up against bullies for friends, the project is of personal importance to him. Farrelly is also a major advocate for education and particularly for young people to attend college. Finally, he is working hard to break stereotypes of Irish people and culture. For his stage persona he intentionally chose to stay away from kitchy Irish elements. Instead, he tapped into his background in Irish history, culture, and tradition to create a role model that would honor Celtic warriors and his own ancestry.

Below is a short video featuring the Muppets on bullying...



And an interview with Farrelli on The Late Late Show in which he talks about breaking Irish stereotypes...



The full interview (with some Gaelic and a cameo of Farrelly's choir boy days) can be found here.

Culture Icon | Sonia Marie De León de Vega

Maestra Sonia Marie De León de Vega is a LA-based American symphony and opera conductor. Born in San Antonio, TX, De León de Vega is the daughter of actress/producer Sonia De León and singer/guitarist Reynaldo Sanchez. De León de Vega began her musical training at age four. She excelled in school and later at university where she focused on conducting studies with Dr. David Buck. She continued her training with Herbert Blomstedt, Otto Werner Mueller, Maurice Abravanel, Pierre Boulez, Andre Previn, Zubin Metha, and Ricardo Muti.

De Leon de Vega has been a guest conductor for many orchestras and opera companies and has developed concerts and children’s music workshops for the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles. At the Santa Cecilia Orchestra she developed the Discovering Music program that takes orchestra members into elementary schools in underserved Latino neighborhoods to introduce children to classical music, the instruments of the orchestra, and choir. The program has worked with more than 40,000 students in 35 schools introducing thousands of children to classical music, orchestral instruments, and the magic of the orchestra.

De Leon de Vega has accumulated many and diverse accolades. She was the first woman in history to conduct a symphony orchestra for the Pope, she was named named Outstanding Latina of the Year in 2000 by Univision, Mervyns, and Target, and she was voted one of the 100 most influential Hispanics in the US twice. In April 2005 Hispanic Business Magazine named her in their “80 Elite Women” list. Also in 2005, she was named “Business Woman Of The Year in Arts And Entertainment” in the State of California.

Below is a NBC Nightly News segment on De León de Vega and the Santa Cecilia Orchestra...

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Culture Icon | Misty Copeland

In the summer of 2007, American ballet dancer Misty Copeland became the first African American female soloist at the American Ballet Theatre in two decades. Copeland had her first ballet lesson at the San Pedro Boys & Girls Club at 13, won first place in the Los Angeles Music Center Spotlight Awards at 15, and joined ABT at 19...all while maintaining a 3.8 GPA through her junior year of high school. Since that time Copeland has performed in dozens of ballets as well as many other dance and artistic projects. She inspires many young ballerinas but is a role model particularly to African-American and other minority girls who face challenges in reaching their dreams. Copeland will be inducted into the Boys & Girls Club of America Alumni Hall of Fame in 2012.

Future-ish Remembers | Culture Icon | Elouise Cobell

Elouise Pepion Cobell (1945-2011), whose Indian name was Yellow Bird Woman, was a a member of the Blackfeet Indian Tribe of Montana and a great-granddaughter of Mountain Chief. Her parents were Polite and Catherine Pepion. Cobell was an Elder, Native American activist, banker, environmentalist, and rancher.

Cobell graduated from Great Falls Business College and later attended Montana State University. Throughout her career, Cobell lead many companies and organizations, from banks to conservation nonprofits, and served on many Native and non-Native boards of directors. Cobell established the Blackfeet National Bank, the first national bank to be located on an Indian reservation and to be owned by a Tribe. After decades of seeking reform and an accounting of the trust funds belonging to individual Indians, she became the was plaintiff in the groundbreaking lawsuit, Cobell v. Salazar, which challenged the United States' mismanagement of trust funds belonging to more than 500,000 individual Native Americans. In 2010, the Obama administration offered a settlement of $3.4 billion to end the class-action suit. Cobell died of cancer at age 65 in Great Falls, Montana.

Articles on the passing of Elouise Cobell:
Capriccioso, R. 10/17/11. Elouise Cobell, 65, Walks On. Indian Country Today.

Cates, K. 10.17.11. Elouise Cobell, Blackfeet woman and pioneer of Indian trust lawsuit, dies. Great Falls Tribune.

Indian Country Today Media Network Staff. 10.17.11. Elouise Cobell Remembered by Many. Indian Country Today.

Klinkenborg, V. 10.17.11. Plaintiff for the Past. New York Times.

McKie, S. B. P. 10.18.11. Indian Country mourns passing of Elouise Cobe. Cherokee One Feather.

Nelson, V. J. 10/17/11. Elouise Cobell dies at 65; Native American activist. LA Times.

Rave, J. 10.17.11. Elouise Cobell — Died Oct. 16, 2011: A warrior woman will be laid to rest. Buffalos's Fire.

Shapiro, T. R. 10/17/11. Elouise Cobell, American Indian who championed class-action lawsuit against U.S. government, dies at 65. Washington Post.

The Telegraph. 10/17/11. Elouise Cobell

Volt, M. 10.17.11. Native American leader Elouise Cobell dies at 65. Boston Globe.

Culture Icon - Arvel Bird

Arvel Bird is an award-winning classically trained violinist of Paiute and Scottish heritage. He was born in Idaho, and raised in Utah and Arizona. In addition to studying music at Arizona State University, he studied violin under Paul Roland at the University of Illinois Champagne/Urbana, a renowned Hungarian violinist. Bird performs and records in a number of diverse music genres, including Native American, Celtic, classical, world fusion, blues, jazz, bluegrass, New Age, folk, Cajun, Western swing, Appalachian, and American roots and toured the world with Glen Campbell, Loretta Lynn, and Ray Price before starting his own solo career focusing on Native American and Celtic music. Bird has released 16 albums, two DVDs, and has scored several film projects.

Below is a 2007 interview by Bill Merickel, a photojournalist in Oklahoma City, OK:

Future-ish Remembers | Sceleb, Culture Icon | Wangari Maathai

(Image: Ricardo Medina)

Dr. Wangari Maathai (1940-2011) was a Kenyan environmentalist, women's rights advocate, author, politician, and Nobel Laureate. Maathai received science degrees from Mount St. Scholastica, the University of Pittsburgh, and received her Ph.D. in Veterinary Anatomy from the University of Nairobi in 1971. She became a professor of Anatomy at University of Nairobi that same year, a senior lecturer in 1974, chair of the Department in 1976, and associate professor in 1977. She was the first woman in Kenya to earn a Ph.D and many of her subsequent positions. She earned honorary doctorate degrees from Williams College, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, University of Norway, Yale University, Willamette College, University of California at Irvine, and Morehouse University.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, she joined and lead many women's rights and environmental organizations in Kenya. In 1986, the work she began in 1976 working with women to both reduce poverty and restore ecosystems by planting millions of trees progressed to the become the Green Belt Movement that would spread across much of Africa. Maathai was elected to Kenya's parliament with an overwhelming 98 percent of the vote in 2002 and from 2003- 2007 she served as Assistant Minister for Environment and Natural Resources.

Maathai received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 2004 for her "contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace" becaming the first African woman and the first environmentalist to win the Nobel.

In addition to the Nobel, she received many other prizes and awards for her efforts for democracy, human rights, and the environment including the Goldman Environmental Prize, Conservation Scientist Award from Columbia University, Edinburgh Medal (for "Outstanding contribution to Humanity through Science"), Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun of Japan, and the Legion d’Honneur (France). Maathai was listed 6th in the Environment Agency's Top 100 Eco-Heroes, included in UNEP's Global 500 Hall of Fame, honored by Time Magazine as one of 100 most influential people in the world, and by Forbes Magazine as one of 100 most powerful women in the world.

Future-ish added Dr. Maathai to our PISA List in 2010.

Culture Icon, Esteemed Expert | Oren Lyons

(Image: AP Photo/The Post-Standard, Mike Greenlar)

Oren Lyons is a Native American Faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga and Seneca Nations of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy), as well as a member of the Council of Chiefs of the Haudenosaunee, professor, author, publisher, advocate of Indigenous and environmental causes, and honorary chairman of the Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse team.

Lyons was given the name Joagquisho, Bright Sun with a Strong Wind, at birth and grew up on the Seneca and Onondoga reservations where he was raised in the Iroquois traditional ways of thinking, being, and knowing. In 8th grade, he dropped out of school and later became a talented amateur boxer. In 1950, at age 20 he was drafted into the US Army where he continued to excel in boxing. He returned to the reservation in 1953 where he was recruited by the coach of the Syracuse University lacrosse team. Lyons once again proved an outstanding athlete and was named an All-American lacrosse goalie while at Syracuse and his post-college lacrosse activities helped get him elected to the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame in the US and Canada. He was named 'Man of the Year in Lacrosse' by the NCAA in 1989. Lyons maintains his close connections to lacrosse and continues to be an inspiring role model to both Native and non-Native lacrosse athletes. Lyons graduated from Syracuse in 1958 with a degree in Fine Arts and then lived and worked as a commercial artist in New York City.

In 1970, Lyons returned to the Onondoga Nation during which time he accepted the role of Faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga and Seneca Nations of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) and began his advocacy work on Indigenous and environmental issues. In addition to his duties as Faithkeeper, Lyons is a professor at SUNY - Buffalo where he directs the Native American Studies program within the department of American Studies. Lyons also co-founded Daybreak, a national Indian newspaper, with John Mohawk, a Seneca teacher and journalist. Lyons actively participates in many national and international forums including the Human Rights Commission of the United Nations. Lyons has received many awards and honors, including an honorary law degree from Syracuse University, the Ellis Island Congressional Medal of Honor, the National Audubon Society's Audubon Medal for service to the cause of conservation, and the first International Earth Day Award from the United Nations. In 1992, Lyons became the first Indigenous individual to address the U.N. General Assembly. Lyons serves on the board of the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development and has been a Native American representative to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting since 1974.

Future-ish added Oren Lyons to our PISA List in 2010.