Biskinik Explained

Biskinik
Type:Monthly newspaper
Owner:Choctaw Nation
Founders:-->
Language:Choctaw and
English
Publishing City:Choctaw Nation Tribal
Complex
Durant, Oklahoma
Publishing Country:United States
Oclc:28288034

The Biskinik is the monthly newspaper of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. It is sent free to registered Choctaw Nation tribal members upon request.[1] It is published in Durant, Oklahoma by the Choctaw Nation.[2] It was first published in 1978.[3] The Library of Congress shows a record of its publication from 1978 to 1981 and from 1983 to the present.[2]

The publication shares the name Biskinik with the Choctaw word for the yellow-bellied sapsucker, a speckled, scissortail species of woodpecker.[4] According to Choctaw legend, the Bishinik was one of two birds to escape the Great Flood and was known as the "little Chahta news bird".[4] The bird was said to warn Choctaws when someone was approaching by tapping out messages on trees.[4]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.choctawnation.com/News/dsp_Bishinik.cfm Bishinik
  2. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn93050493/ About this Newspaper: Bishinik
  3. Hughes . Bethany . Little Chahta News Bird: Indigenous Periodicals and the Performance of Nationhood . American Periodicals: A Journal of History & Criticism . 2023 . 33 . 2 . 172–191 . 10.1353/amp.2023.a911655 .
  4. http://www.turtletrack.org/Issues04/Co07312004/CO_07312004_Chata.htmname Bishinik, The Little Chahta News Bird