Best Activist
Betty Osceola
Ever since she roamed barefoot in the wetlands of Big Cypress as a child, Miccosukee Tribe member Betty Osceola has spent her days fighting to protect her tribe’s land and heritage. Over the past year, however, that advocacy has taken on a slightly different focus. Since the highly controversial Alligator Alcatraz immigration detention center opened last summer in the middle of the Everglades, the 58-year-old has become one of its loudest critics, arguing that it threatens fragile wetlands and continues a long history of harm to Indigenous land, among other issues. Osceola, who lives just a few miles from the sprawling tent city, has organized weekly interfaith vigils outside the detention center and joined round-the-clock community efforts to monitor the property. Despite her tireless work, she says she doesn’t see herself as a leader. In her own words, “I’m just doing what needs to be done.”