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  1. In March 2010, her husband announced that Mankiller was terminally ill with pancreatic cancer. Mankiller died on April 6, 2010, from cancer at her home in rural Adair County, Oklahoma .

  2. 28 de ene. de 2014 · The docudrama, directed by Wilma’s husband and longtime community development partner, Charlie Soap, follows a young Mankiller as she works to bring water to the rural, primarily Cherokee community of Bell, Ok.

  3. Wilma Mankiller. Wilma Perla Mankiller (18 de noviembre de 1945 - 6 de abril de 2010) fue una activista cheroqui, trabajadora social, promotora de la comunidad y la primera jefa de la Nación Cheroqui. Nacida en Tahlequah, Oklahoma, vivió en Oklahoma hasta los 11 años, momento en que su familia se trasladó a San Francisco dentro del programa ...

  4. Charlie Soap was Wilma Mankillers husband and community development partner for more than thirty years, as well as a leader in the Bell Waterline Project that inspired the film. Charlie is a full-blood bilingual Cherokee who has a Bachelor’s Degree in Education from Northeastern State University.

  5. Wilma Mankiller, who was chief of the Cherokee from 1985 to 1995, put much of her focus on education, health and housing. J. Pat Carter. In 1963, she married Hugo Olaya, an Ecuadorean...

  6. In 1962, at age 17, Mankiller had married Hector Hugo Olaya de Bardi, an Ecuadoran immigrant with whom she would have two daughters. He had expected a traditional marriage, and protested her growing involvement in political movements as well as her desire to improve her education.

  7. This video was created by the New-York Historical Society Teen Leaders in collaboration with the Untold project. Wilma Pearl Mankiller was born on November 18, 1945, at the W. W. Hastings Indian Hospital in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, the capital of the Cherokee Nation. Her father was Cherokee, and her mother was a white woman.