Sister Vivian Mae Jewell
(Cherokee-African-American)


Passed away on April 29, 2003, and left behind her children, Carol Sims and her husband Donald, Linda Smith of Emeryville, Lawarence Jewell of Aurburn, Washington, Jeff Jewell and his wife Patriacia Of Oakley.

Birds in Autumn
The sun is shining with all its might;
The leaves are gleaming in colors bright.
The birds are flying far away.
And we wait their return the first spring day.


Vivian was a member of the Black Native American Association and loved to attend Pow Wows. We will miss her dearly.

Eli Bojack Blackfeather
(October 3, 1942 - September 23, 2004)


Eli Bojack Blackfeather, a retired Native American Hollywood stuntman, was once referred to in Hollywood as "Dead Man Walking" because of his amazing comeback from an aneurysm.
Actor Audey Murphey discovered Blackfeather in Texas when Blackfeather was 11 years old. Already a junior world rodeo champion, he was riding small steers when Murphy liked what he saw and took him under his wing. Blackfeather went on to appear as a stuntman in more than 200 movies, appearing with John Wayne, Elvis Presley and a host of other stars.
Over 30 years Blackfeather gave out more than 25,000 awards to Native Americans who excelled in all walks of life and to those who helped Native Americans. His awards have gone to a president of the U.S., members of Congress, and some international leaders. Blackfeather has been honored with an Emmy by the Motion Picture Council of Hollywood for non-violent stunts that he performed from 1955-82. In September 1996 he was also awarded an Emmy from the Stuntman's Association and the Widows of Hollywood. Additionally he has received awards from the Oakland City Council and San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown for helping the poor in those communities. "I'm in the history books now. If I die tomorrow, at least I got these awards," he once said. "It just shows that it's nice to be nice and those who are nice get paid back."
Bojack was a great supporter of the Black Native American Association and will be greatly missed.

 

James Howard Scott
(Kiowa/Seminole/Cheyenne/Arapaho)

James was also known as Scotty. He was in the Red-Black project and served as an advisor to ANASCA. The last few weeks of his life, he did the gourd dance in a wheelchair. He was a nice and gentle guy.

 

Susie Wright Winford
(1865-1955)

Mississippi Choctaw great grandmother of Yvonne Almore, Choctaw Nation of MS.

 

Zenobia Embry-Nimmer
(Cherokee-Wolf Women)


It was raining and bitterly cold on the morning Zenobia Embry-Nimmer stepped into a half-constructed house in East Oakland to find street minister Henry Robinson dying on his couch, kitchen stove burners cranked up high in a vain attempt to ward off the chill. Ms. Embry-Nimmer had heard her old friend had AIDS, and on this rainy day when she found it was true -- and that nobody was helping -- fury filled her face. "This is so very, very wrong, and, by God, I'm going to do something about it," she seethed, stomping away from the house. That was in December 1991. In short order, Robinson was placed in a hospital with round-the-clock care -- and when he died a month later, he did so with dignity, instead of shivering in his house alone. "Zenobia is an angel," he whispered to a reporter a day before his death. A lot of people thought that of Ms. Embry-Nimmer, one of the most ardent advocates for the poor and homeless in Alameda County for the past two decades. When her time came to die Monday at 1:45 a.m. at Summit Hospital in Oakland, at age 57 after a two-year battle with cancer, they couldn't find enough adjectives to describe her. "She was a warrior in the truest sense," said Boona Cheema, executive director of the Berkeley-based nonprofit Building Opportunities for Self-Sufficiency. "In moments like now, after Hurricane Katrina, is when her spirit comes forth for me -- you know, to speak the truth. That's what she did extremely well, no matter how influential the people were who she was talking to." Ms. Embry-Nimmer was perhaps best known as the executive director of the Emergency Services Network from 1989 to 1993, an organization routing the resources of nearly 200 poverty-aid agencies in Alameda County. When the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake shattered more than 1,000 units of low-income housing in the county, Ms. Embry-Nimmer was in a key position to push for it to be rebuilt with governmental disaster aid -- and she did so with a vengeance, becoming the best-known voice for the poor, the homeless and their housing needs. In the end, millions of dollars, including $10 million from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, went into replacing the units with double the numbers that were there before. "She was a tireless fighter for individuals who in most cases didn't have a public voice to go to decisionmakers," said Alameda County Board of Supervisors Chairman Keith Carson, who during the quake was an aide to then-Rep. Ron Dellums, D-Oakland. "She was consistent and articulate and to the point as their spokesperson, and even if it made policymakers uncomfortable, she made us take in the information." One of her chief skills was that she was equally at home with the poor and in the halls of power. "Zenobia felt extremely comfortable around people in the street, who felt angry -- but she also had a background of being educated and knowing how to approach government," Carson said. "She was unique that way." Former Oakland Mayor Elihu Harris remembered Ms. Embry-Nimmer being especially adamant about the creation of Oakland's Henry Robinson Multi-Service Center, which opened in 1993 in memory of her street-preaching friend and offers the homeless everything from housing to job counseling. "One reason we don't have the problem with homelessness in Oakland that you see in San Francisco is because of that center," Harris said. "Now, I wonder who will be inspired to take up the baton after she is gone?" Ms. Embry-Nimmer was born in Emporia, Kan., to Robert and Katherine Embry. She recalled in the book, "Black, White, Other," by Lise Funderburg, seeing a black man burned to death when she was 8 - and that experience, combined with being homeless herself in the Bay Area for two years after moving here in 1967, ignited her life's passion. "How can anyone walk by and not help?" she told a reporter, eyes moist, while walking through Loma Prieta rubble passing out food to the homeless. Ms. Embry-Nimmer earned a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University Without Walls in the early 1970s and over the next two decades became a counselor or director at several Bay Area agencies aiding substance abusers or the impoverished, including the Drug Awareness Program and Upward Bound. Proud of her mixed Cherokee and African American heritage, she was also active in Native American community, one of the founders of the Black Native American Association and other black organizations, including helping re-form the Black Panther Party in the 1990s. "She loved to say that when she was a kid and watched cowboy and Indian movies, she always rooted for the Indians," said her husband of 27 years, Richard Nimmer.

After leading the Emergency Services Network, Ms. Embry-Nimmer was a director at Satellite Senior Homes, Dignity Housing West and the Workforce Development Collaborative. In 2003 she was diagnosed with cancer and quit working to try to beat the disease at home in Oakland. "She made most people she knew into better people, right up to the end," said Richard Nimmer. In addition to her husband and her parents, Ms. Embry-Nimmer is survived by two daughters, Lynn Marie Embry-Nimmer of Northridge (Los Angeles County) and Michelle Smith of Los Angeles; a sister, Lynn Marie Barnes of Alaska; and a brother, Robert Embry of Antioch. She will forever be missed by the BNAA but we know that she is here in Spirit and maybe doing the Two Step. ( By Kevin Fagan, Chronicle Staff Writer)