News from the Longhouse Education and Cultural Center

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sg w ig w ial? tx w House of Welcome in South Puget Sound Salish News from the Longhouse Education and Cultural Center Special Issue April 2009 In the Spirit Northwest Native Arts Market and Festival The Washington State History Museum and the Longhouse Education and Cultural Center are proud to present the fourth annual In the Spirit: Northwest Native Arts Market and Festival, happening in downtown Tacoma at the History Museum on August 8 and 9, 2009. In the Spirit features some of the Northwest s finest Native visual artists and performers in the region. All outdoor festival activities are free to the public. Exhibition Artists interested in being a part of the art exhibit must download and COMPLETE the application form found at http://www.evergreen.edu/ longhouse/nativeartsfestival.htm or call (360) 867-6413 to request an application by mail. Applications are due May 1, 2009 and must include digital JPEG format images of the pieces you would like to exhibit no larger than 1 MB, (One image per piece). You may submit up to two pieces for consideration. The art show will be on display July 9, 2009 through August 30, 2009. Pieces that you want to include should be available from June 12, 2009 through September 24, 2009. Cash prizes will be awarded for Best in Show, People s Choice, 2nd, and 3rd place as well as two cash prizes selected by participating artists. Northwest Pendleton and the Legacy Gallery sponsor the Pendleton Prize award and the Print prize award, respectively. Art Market Vendor applications are due June 1, 2009. Please download the application from the website at http:// www.evergreen.edu/longhouse/ nativeartsfestival.htm. Or you can call us at the Longhouse to have an application mailed to you. Booth fees are $150.00 per booth. W E L C O M E R E C E P T I O N for LONGHOUSE VISITING ARTIST Hiko ula Hanapi The House of Welcome is honored to host master story teller and visual artist Hiko ula Hanapi this spring (May 1st-24th). While in residence, Hiko will be offering workshops and presentations in Hawaiian history and culture through visual arts and storytelling. Please join us for a welcome reception and artist presentation on: Monday, MAY 11, 2009 at 4:00 PM Seminar II, E-1107 Hiko will be offering a Mo olelo presentation with the audience at the reception. Everyone is invited to bring one light color T-shirt, no pockets or any kind of fancy stitching on the shirt. We will use the T-shirts to print on as a gift to the audience from the artist! continued on page 2 Page 1

Mo olelo Workshop The Mo olelo, story telling, workshop was designed by artist Hiko ula Hanapi to meet basic visual arts and literary performance standards required by the Hawai i State Department of Education for grades K-12. The workshop essentially provides all ages the artist s visual and oral interpretation of Hawaiian history and culture. Hanapi, through his storytelling and images, challenges the audience to understand Hawaiian concepts and values as they pertain to the Hawaiian worldview. The workshop focuses on communication skills as well as participating with the artist to make an artist print through silk screen printing on a T-shirt. The image on the T-shirt will help the audience to remember the story they were told and aide in their own retelling to family and friends. This retelling perpetuates the traditional Hawaiian art of ha i mo olelo or storytelling, in these modern times. Kindly RSVP to Tina Kuckkahn if you plan to attend the welcome reception and Mo olelo workshop on May 11th, at 4:00 PM: (360) 867-5344 or kuckkaht@evergreen.edu. Page 2

Grandmothers Counsel the World at The Evergreen State College The International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers was formed almost five years ago out of a deep concern for the unprecedented destruction of our Mother Earth and the destruction of indigenous ways of life. The Council, which includes spiritual leaders from across the world, assembles to pray, share ancestral wisdom and counsel the world from multiple perspectives of distinctive cultures. The Evergreen State College welcomes four North American members of this council of leaders of nations. The Grandmothers will share their views on the environment, resiliency, peace and knowledge in a time of unprecedented global change. On Saturday, May 2, the week of events opens with a traditional Salish Welcome Ceremony and Presentation by the Four Grandmothers from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m., with reception following. The free, public event will take place at The Evergreen State College, Daniel J. Evans Library, 2nd Floor Lobby. On Tuesday, May 5, the visiting council members will pair up for two distinct, free public talks entitled Ancestral Teachings for Times of Unprecedented Change. Mona Polacca and Rita Pitka Blumenstein will deliver their message at Evergreen s Tacoma campus on May 5 from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. (This talk will be telecast live at Evergreen s Olympia campus in Lecture Hall 1.) Rita Long Visitor Holy Dance and Council Chair Agnes Baker Pilgrim will speak on that same theme May 5 from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. at Evergreen s Olympia campus, Lecture Hall 1. Closing Ceremony and Reception on Friday, May 8, from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. in the 2nd Floor Lobby of the Daniel J. Evans Library in Olympia. The concept of the council of elders is an ancient form of governance ruled by a circle rather than a hierarchy of command. Councils of elders are Page 3 emerging in Europe, Australia and the Middle East. The four elders are here as North American representatives of an international council formed out of concern for the destruction of Mother Earth, indigenous ways of life, and the wellbeing of humanity. They will visit and teach at Evergreen, local schools, and in the wider South Sound communities. The first council gathering was a time of hope and inspiration. The grandmothers are women of prayer and women of action. Their traditional ways link them with the forces of the Earth. Their solidarity with one another creates a web to rebalance the injustices wrought from an imbalanced world; a world disconnected from the fundamental laws of nature and the original teachings based on a respect for all of life. v Agnes Baker Pilgrim, Chair of the Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers, is the oldest known living female member of her tribe, the Takelma Indians, originally from southern Oregon. An alumna of Southern Oregon University, with a bachelor s degree in psychology and a minor in Native American Studies, she is a historian, storyteller and cultural instructor. She has been honored as a Living Treasure by her tribe the Confederated Tribes of Siletz, and as a Living Cultural Legend by the Oregon Council of the Arts. Continued on page 4

Grandmothers Counsel the World v Rita Pitka Blumenstein serves as the first certified tribal doctor in the state of Alaska. She is a Yup ik mother, grandmother, great grandmother, wife, aunt, sister, friend, and tribal elder. Well known as a traditional healer, teacher, and artist, she has spent over forty years investigating, producing, and passing on many aspects of Alaska Native culture such as song, drumming, skin sewing, basketry, storytelling, and use of plants for dyes and medicinal purposes. She has traveled and taught in 167 countries. v Rita Long Visitor Holy Dance is a Lakota keeper of the traditional ways, great grandmother, Native American Church elder, and bead worker. She lives with her sister, Beatrice Long- Visitor Holy Dance on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. With her sister, Grandmother Rita initiated the The past is not a burden; it is a scaffold which brought us to this day. We are free to be who we are to create our own life out of our past and out of the present. We are our ancestors. When we can heal ourselves, we also heal our ancestors, our grandmothers, our grandfathers and our children. When we heal ourselves, we heal Mother Earth. - Rita Pitka Blumenstein Council s Youth Ambassador program. She is involved in the Grandmothers efforts to encourage the Vatican to rescind several Papal Bulls and edicts that set the stage for the doctrine of conquest that has had such farreaching effects on the treatment of indigenous peoples. v Mona Polacca is a Hopi/ Havasupai/Tewa elder. She has a Master of Social Work degree from Arizona State University where she is working on her Ph.D. in interdisciplinary justice studies. She is also on the faculty of the Turtle Island Project, a non-profit program dedicated to promoting a vision of wellness by providing trans-cultural training to individuals, families, and healthcare professionals. Grandmother Polacca has worked on issues of Native American alcoholism, domestic violence and mental health for the elderly native peoples. T H I R T E E N G r a n d m o t h e r s Clara Shinobu Iura, (S. America); Rita Long Visitor Holy Dance, (N. America); Rita Pitka Blumenstein, (Alaska); Tsering Dolma Gyaltong, (Asia); Beatrice Long Visitor Holy Dance (N. America); Aama Bombo, (Asia); Agnes Baker-Pilgrim, (N. America); Maria Alice Campos Freire, (S. America); Julieta Casimiro, (C. America); Margaret Behan Red Spider Woman, (N. America); Bernadette Rebienot, (Africa); Mona Polacca, (N. America); Flordemayo, (C. America). L O N G H O U S E Staff Temporary ReLOCATION Until September 2009 SEM II, Bldg D: Tina Kuckkahn Laura Grabhorn Rm: 4106 / 867-5344 Rm: 4108 / 867-6413 Bonnie Graft Bobbie Bush Rm: 4110 / 867-6718 Rm: 4110 / 867-5367 Page 4

Longhouse National Native Grant Program 2009 LETTER OF INQUIRY DEADLINE JUNE 1, 2009 The Longhouse Education and Cultural Center, with funding support from the Ford Foundation, announces its third round of national funding for Native Artists (American Indians, Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians) in the U.S. There are two grant programs available through the Longhouse. The first program is the National Native Creative Development Program, which will award funds (up to $2,000) to 28 individual Native artists. This program was designed to address the professional development needs of individual artists, such as training in marketing, purchasing or harvesting supplies and materials, professional portfolio development, apprenticeships and other opportunities for advancement as an artist. The second program is the National Native Master Artist Initiative: Artist Teaching Artists will award 6 grants (up to $5,000). The program is designed to promote Native arts and cultures within urban and rural Native communities throughout the United States. This grant provides an opportunity for a Master Native Artist to teach other Native artists, whether established or emerging, within a community setting. Forms and guidlines for both programs are available at the following Web address: http://www.evergreen.edu/ longhouse/grantprograms.htm, or if you would like more information, please contact Bobbie Bush, Native Grants Program Coordinator at (360) 867-5367, or bushb@evergreen.edu. STORYTELLING Contextual Conceptual Relationship Building Via Repetitive Experience 4/1/2009 by Bobbie Bush - Why do our children like to hear the same stories over and over again? It may be when we first read them good night stories that we notice they always ask for that one, you know, the one I like. Then later we are thoroughly aware that they like to watch the same movies, videos - CDs or television programs over and over and over again. There is a purpose for the repetition; it is not merely to annoy us. What is the purpose of the repetition? Our kids are developing neuro pathways in their brains to help them understand the world. As they build these pathways between what they know and what they are learning, new neuro pathways are constructed; these in turn allow for a deeper understanding of the concepts, values, and messages, so that through a repeated experience, either auditory, visual or kinesthetic, with the story a deeper understanding is built. This pathway building, is continuous to humans as they experience learning processes. Why is it necessary for the kids to repeat and be allowed to repeat the same stories through these media? An introduction to a concept is necessary to lay the foundation for further development within the child s brain. As the introduction passes and the concept is internalized, new neuro pathways are constructed, which allow for further development. Deeper expanded understandings of concepts are built and internalized. There then comes a time for the students to externalize or synthesize their ideas into creations of their own, through their stories, art expressions, social experiences, families, or to the world. Is it important to filter the stories we and our children are exposed to? In this day and age we are constantly inundated with images of sorrow, Page 5 horror, trauma, war, and degradation. We should protect ourselves first from these images. What we think about and conceptualize internally is what we create externally. Be selective in the stories that you allow into your being. This is sometimes a hard task. As a writer I often watch the news. I used to create a Tribal newspaper for the Skokomish Tribe and an Intertribal Newspaper for South Puget Intertribal Planning agency. So it is natural for me to watch the news. But the culture of fear that surrounds mainstream media is degenerative to my spirit. So, many times I just watch the weather and then change the program. Lately, I have been thinking of killing my TV, but then I like my stories, too. How can I watch Hidalgo, Lord of the Rings, Star Trek, Friends, or PBS with a dead TV? So, I let my TV live, for now. Maybe that s why I like to tell and hear traditional and contemporary stories, see live theater, experience traditional singing and dancing, and live music; because the socially interactive quality of a live performance is lost through the medium of TV.

The Longhouse Education & Cultural Center The Evergreen State College Tina Kuckkahn (Ojibwe) Director Laura Grabhorn (Tlingit/Haida) Assistant Director Bonnie Graft, (Muckleshoot/Skokomish) Program Assistant Bobbie Bush (Chehalis) Grants Coordinator Longhouse Logo Design Diane Devlin (Chehalis) Direct any inquiries to: (360) 867-6718 Fax (360) 867-6699 Email: longhouse@evergreen.edu www.evergreen.edu/longhouse/ Upcoming Events 13 Grandmothers Welcome Ceremony May 2, 2009 TESC Library Lobby (2nd floor) Saturday: 1-5 pm Grandmothers Counsel the World: Ancestral Teachings for Times of Unprecedented Change May 5th Tacoma campus 11 am to 1 pm (live telecast at Olympia campus in the Lecture Hall-1) Evergreen campus 7 pm to 9 pm Lecture Hall-l (see page 3 for details) Mo olelo Workshop and Presentation May 11th 4 pm TESC Seminar II E1107 In the Spirit Northwest Native Arts Festival August 8-9, 2009 Washington State History Museum Saturday: 10-5 pm and Sunday: 12-5 pm NOTE: Due to budget constraints THERE WILL BE NO SUPER SATURDAY at Evergreen this year MISSION As a public service center of The Evergreen State College, the Longhouse exists to provide service and hospitality to students, the college and the surrounding Native communities. With a design based in the Northwest Indigenous Nations philosophy of hospitality, its primary functions are to provide classroom space and host cultural ceremonies, conferences, performances, art exhibits and community events. The primary work of the Longhouse as a public service center is the administration of the Native Economic Development Arts Program (NEDAP). The mission of the Longhouse is to promote indigenous arts and cultures. The L O N G H O U S E Education and Cultural Center The Evergreen State College 2700 Evergreen Parkway NW Olympia, WA 98505 Non profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Olympia, WA Permit No. 65