Red Haircrow

Red Haircrow
Born Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Occupation Poet, writer, publicist
Nationality American (Native)
Period 1980-Present
Genre Poetry, Contemporary, Non-fiction, Native American
Notable works Silence Is Multi-Colored In My World, The Agony of Joy
Notable awards Rainbow Award 2012, Best LGBT Biography/Memoir, Global E-Books Awards 2013, Best LGBT Fiction
Website
redhaircrow.com

Red Haircrow (born 1972) is a writer, poet, journalist and activist of mixed Chiricahua Apache and Cherokee descent. His work has included poetry, short stories, novellas and full-length books. His novel The Agony of Joy won Best LGBT Fiction in Global Ebooks Awards 2013, and the biography Silence Is Multi-Colored In My World about a young deaf, gay Russian, was a winner of a Rainbow Award 2012 in the category, Best Biography/Memoir. His non-fiction and current events articles are often on Native American activism, issues and concerns, intercultural relations, and living and working in Germany. Haircrow is also a freelance news correspondent for Indian Country Today Media Network, and has written several articles on current Native American concerns and rights, as well as having appeared by invitation at the red carpet opening of the 2013 film release The Lone Ranger starring Johnny Depp, in Berlin, Germany. His profile is also listed at the Native American Encyclopedia.[1]

Life and career

Red Haircrow was born in Frankfurt, Germany, and resides in Berlin, Germany, and previously worked in law enforcement. He is also a chef, psychologist (holding a BSc Psychology from Columbia Southern University), press agent, and owns and operates the multi-media management and writer cooperative Flying With Red Haircrow, which opened on 31 October 2010. Current clients include Uli Lenz and the 105 Lenz-Kubach-Johnson Jazz Trio.

Red Haircrow's photography and graphic art skills have been used to create several cover images for his work and the work of others including Welsh author Nephylim's Enigma series and photography for Mexican/Belgian musician/composer and sound therapist, Ana Cristina Caelen's.[2]

On April 10, 2014, Red Haircrow appeared in a Deutsche Welle video broadcast,[3] explaining why Native American cultures in general would wish the return of human remains kept by the Karl May Museum in Radebeul, Germany. A video of the interview is also available on YouTube.[4] Since the end of 2013, Native American tribes had been lobbying for the repatriation of native scalps alleged to be kept at the museum.[5]

Haircrow has been connected with the Native American Association of Germany, and has often been asked to comment by news sources and media on native cultural appropriation by German or Europeans "Indian" hobbyists or in pop culture and fashion, which has been the source of controversy and debate. Jason Overdorf, senior German correspondent at Global Post, interviewed Haircrow for the 10 June 2014 article: "Dressing Up As Cowboys and Indians is Big in Germany"[6]", which was republished in the Arizona news source Tucson Sentinel.[7] DeinPULS for "Indianerfedern als Modeaccessoire Hirnloser Trend oder bewusste Provokation?",[8] also included a detailed interview with Red Haircrow,[9] which was broadcast by Bayerischer Rundfunk. On July 29, 2014, Ex-Berliner Magazine featured commentary by Red Haircrow.[10]

As an advocate and counselor, addressing and helping other natives, Red Haircrow was also quoted in the South Dakota newspaper Madville Times,[11] on the case of Robert Alan Packard, a Yankton Sioux actor, sculptor and former Jean Paul Gaultier model, who in June 2014, was wrongly convicted of a far right crime in Germany. An article at Ex-Berliner magazine first detailed the story of when he gave the Hitler salute, accusingly crying "Sieg Heil" to attackers who were destroying his art and medicine wheel at his home studio in Berlin, Germany.

As a public speaker and educator, Red Haircrow was requested for workshops at "Tages des Indigenen Films 2014" in Rostock, Germany, which was a film festival dedicated to showing native films produced by natives. The annual event took place November 16–18, 2014, with Mr. Haircrow addressing topics of stereotyping and native misrepresentation in Hollywood films and around the world, in a presentation titled, "Against the Myths".

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