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The Wolakota Buffalo Project

5m 51s

The Rosebud Indian Reservation is moving forward on their Wolakota Project to bring the buffalo home to restore the Buffalo Nation. Wolakota means "The Lakota way of life." 40 square miles of ranchland owned by the reservation is being converted to a buffalo range. SDPB visits the leaders working on this monumental effort.

Corporate funding for The American Buffalo was provided by Bank of America. Major funding was provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and by The Better Angels Society and its following members: The Margaret A. Cargill Foundation fund at the Saint Paul & Minnesota Foundation; Diane and Hal Brierley; The Keith Campbell Foundation for the Environment; John and Catherine Debs; Kissick Family Foundation; Fred and Donna Seigel; Jacqueline Mars; John and Leslie McQuown; and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tudor Jones. Funding was also provided by The Volgenau Foundation.
Extras
Homecoming follows Jason Baldes as he leads historic transfers of bison to Tribal lands.
These short films weave together Native voices and perspectives relating to buffalo.
An intimate look at the only indigenous tribal-led buffalo drive in North America.
Iniskim follows a young woman’s journey to recovery by reconnecting with the buffalo.
The 1913 Buffalo Nickel raises important questions how we think of the American West.
Grinnell fought the destruction of birds and other wildlife, including the buffalo.
More than 250 Lakotas – mostly women and children – were killed by U.S. soldiers.
By 1889, Buffalo Bill Cody was the most famous American in the world.
Ken Burns, Julie Dunfey and Dayton Duncan on creating their latest documentary.
Examining the center of one of the country’s most mythic and heartbreaking tales.
America’s national mammal, once numbering millions, is driven to near extinction.
An unlikely collection of Americans rescues the national mammal from extinction.