Jacob examines the connections between Saint Kateri and environmentalism, spirituality, and Native feminism."" - Choice ""Jacob sketches compelling portraits of Indian people who have internalized the gospel (despite the shortcomings of missionary efforts associated with different churches). Their stories acknowledge the painful history of culture-contact, but go beyond that Calvary experience, and show how contemporary people create an 'Indigenous Catholicism.'"" - American Catholic Studies""An excellent new contribution to Native and Indigenous studies, and the author's innovative approach promises to open up a powerfully important set of new conversations about the colonial and settler-colonial relationships between Native Christians and women who are producing counterhegemonic acts of resistance to Christian colonial traumas within the space of the Catholic Church."" - Andrew Jolivette, author of Research Justice: Methodologies for Social Change""An important contribution to both Native feminism and Native Christianity."" - Andrea Smith, author of Native Americans and the Christian Right: The Gendered Politics of Unlikely Alliances""Indian Pilgrims focuses on Saint Kateri as the heart of worldwide Indigenous efforts to heal communities from the destruction of colonization, to care for Mother Earth, and to emphasize the Indigenous feminist views, and it highlights the importance of Indigenous activism as a vehicle for healing. This book represents a new view, a pioneering cultural depiction of a Catholic saint as a crucial core of Indigenous strength and healing.""- Gayle Skawen:nio Morse, editor of the Journal of Indigenous Research