Acknowledgements

We would like to recognize all of those who have helped us create and develop this exhibit. Before that, we would like to acknowledge that the land this exhibit sits on is the traditional homeland of the Quinnipiac people which is predicated on histories of settler colonialism and oppression. We would like to thank Bill Landis and the staff at Yale Manuscripts and Archives for helping us with our archival research and securing reprographics for the exhibit. We also thank Trip Kirkpatrick for his help with the digital component of our exhibit on the Omeka platform. We would also like to thank all four Yale cultural centers, the African American Cultural Center, the Asian American Cultural Center, La Casa Cultural Julia de Burgos, and the Native American Cultural Center, for access to their archives and for supporting indigenous students and students of color. Our gratitude to the ER&M program for generously funding this exhibit and the support they provide us. Special thanks to the Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration, ER&M, and the Resource Office on Disabilities for allowing us to use the shared space at 35 Broadway for our physical exhibit. Thank you to Professor Quan Tran for engaging us in conversation throughout our seminar and for guiding us through this exhibit process. Finally, we would like to thank all indigenous students and students of color who have come through this university and transformed it through their activism.