ON PARADE – Children dressed as their favorite animals hold a Sitka Spruce Tips 4-H Club banner as they march down Lincoln Street on Earth Day, Monday. The Parade of Species was held in recognition of Earth Day. It was hosted by Sitka Conservation Society, University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service and the Sitka Sound Science Center. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)

Tax Break Approved for YAS Building
24 Apr 2024 15:48

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The Assembly its regular meeting Tuesday approved dou [ ... ]

Public Ideas Sought for School Budget
24 Apr 2024 14:53

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    “We want to hear from the public, what they value i [ ... ]

School Threat Ruled Out
24 Apr 2024 14:52

By Sentinel Staff
Sitka schools were notified at around noon today that the city administrator had re [ ... ]

Lady Wolves Win Ketchikan Track Meet
24 Apr 2024 14:10

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Sitka High’s track and field athletes faced off aga [ ... ]

2 Alaska Solar Projects Get $125M EPA Grant
24 Apr 2024 14:05

By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
    Alaska is getting an infusion of nearly $125 million to build and [ ... ]

On Earth Day, Senate OKs Solar Power Deal
24 Apr 2024 14:02

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    The Alaska Senate voted unanimously on Monday to make it easier f [ ... ]

House Panel Says No To Raising Age of Consent
24 Apr 2024 13:47

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
The Alaska House’s Rules Committee has eliminated, at least temporaril [ ... ]

More States Join Effort To Limit DEI Programs
24 Apr 2024 13:47

By DAVID A. LIEB
The Associated Press
A conservative quest to limit diversity, equity and inclusion in [ ... ]

Alaska Delegation Backs Proposed Donlin Mine
24 Apr 2024 13:46

By NATHANIEL HERZ
Northern Journal
Alaska’s three-member, bipartisan congressional delegation is sid [ ... ]

April 24, 2024, Sitka Police Blotter
24 Apr 2024 13:11

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
April 23
At 3:14 a.m. a downtown bar report [ ... ]

April 24, 2024, Community Happenings
24 Apr 2024 13:05

Vaughn Blankenship
Dies at Age 91
Vaughn Blankenship, a longtime Sitka resident, died Tuesday at SEARH [ ... ]

Stedman's Priorities are Budget and Land
23 Apr 2024 15:07

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    With about a month left before the end of the regular [ ... ]

Meeting to Seek Comments on Street Projects
23 Apr 2024 15:05

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The city will hold a public meeting Wednesday for pub [ ... ]

MEHS Athletes Set for Native Youth Olympics
23 Apr 2024 15:04

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    With only days to go before the statewide Native Yout [ ... ]

Sitka Sentinel, Raven Radio Win Alaska Press Club ...
23 Apr 2024 13:12

By Sentinel Staff
    The Daily Sitka Sentinel and KCAW-FM Raven Radio won awards Saturday at the  [ ... ]

April 23, 2024, Police Blotter
23 Apr 2024 13:10

Police Blotter:  

Senate Looks at Plan For Teen Mental Health Care
23 Apr 2024 13:08

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    To address a surge in mental health problems among young Alaskans [ ... ]

House Gets Tougher On Labeling Water Tier III
23 Apr 2024 13:07

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    A bill passed Thursday by the Alaska House of Representatives wou [ ... ]

April 23, 2024, Community Happenings
23 Apr 2024 12:59

City to Conduct
Relay Testing
The city electric department is conducting systemwide relay testing  th [ ... ]

WFC Hatchery Suit Called Threat to SE
22 Apr 2024 15:35

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Another lawsuit that has implications in Southeast Al [ ... ]

Car Rentals, City EVs on Assembly Agenda
22 Apr 2024 15:34

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The Assembly on Tuesday will consider final reading o [ ... ]

Lady Wolves Face Rivals in Home Tournament
22 Apr 2024 14:32

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Competing in their first home games of the season, Si [ ... ]

Ambler Road Rejection Brings Protests, Cheers
22 Apr 2024 13:52

By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
    Citing what they characterized as unacceptable risks to wildlife  [ ... ]

Climate Change Driving Village to a New Site
22 Apr 2024 13:50

By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
The Yup’ik village of Newtok, perched precariously on thawing permafro [ ... ]

Other Articles

Daily Sitka Sentinel

Clans Give Views On Events of 1867

By SARAH C. GIBSON
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The “Sharing Our Knowledge” Conference of Tlingit Tribes and Clans wrapped up today after a weekend that focused on the theme “Our History, We Are Healing Ourselves.”
     More than 200 people attended the Conference. Events ranged from dozens of workshops and presentations at the Sitka Fine Arts Campus to a ceremony in downtown Sitka on Sunday that commemorated the loss of Tlingit land in 1867.
    The event’s timing before Alaska Day was no coincidence. Conference Executive Director Gerry Hope said that for the past 20 years he has wanted to organize a Tlingit gathering that coincided with Alaska Day.
    The idea first occurred to Hope when he became president of the Alaska Native Brotherhood Camp No. 1 in 1999. 
    “Within the Native community, I heard pain, frustration, and anger.” Hope remembers some neighbors talking about Alaska Day: “‘Why should we be in the parade? What are we celebrating?’”
    “There’s an underlying truth about having land, language, culture, resources, and food severely restricted and we’re left with—what?” Hope said. “We need to at least start that discussion.”
    Some of that discussion began publicly on Sunday, when members of the Kiks.ádi clan gathered at the foot of Castle Hill, called Noow Tlein in Tlingit. Prior to Russian arrival, it was the site of Kiks.ádi clan houses.
    Dionne Brady-Howard led a group of about ten in a sorrow song and a discussion about the hill’s significance. One singer carried the bronze peace hat given by the Russian American Company, and Gerry Hope carried a clan hat from his mother’s Sik’nax.adi clan as a symbol of support.
    Dionne Brady-Howard said this was the first time they had marked the Treaty of Cession with a Tlingit ceremony. She acknowledged that some Sitkans with Tlingit heritage regularly join the Alaska Day festivities.
    “Not to detract from that, but we are basically celebrating when we lost our land.”
    Brady-Howard said this is also the first year that the Alaska Day organizing committee sought to incorporate Tlingit perspectives. The committee invited her and others to participate on Wednesday, but Brady-Howard says she’s not sure whether to accept.
    “I can see why the people who received this vast land would celebrate it,” she said. “But for us, it marks the selling of our land. It’s something we go through every year.”
    The theme of healing - and renewal - permeated the conference throughout the five days since it started on Friday. At a workshop on languages, participants said much of their healing has come from learning and teaching Native languages.
    Alfie Price shared his experience of gathering Sm’algyax (Tsimshian) learners in Juneau.
    “I never intended to be a language guy. I’m a bookworm. I thought I was going to be rocking out and playing video games”, he laughed.
    But instead, at age 48 he decided to relearn the language he had heard growing up in Metlakatla. There are only six fluent speakers of Sm’algyax in the world. Price also attends Haida and Tlingit classes.
    “Our language informs our worldview and teaches us how our people saw the world,” Price said. “It’s not just yet another way to say ‘Hi, how are you?’ In Sm’algyax we greet each other by saying ‘How is your name?’”
    Price started an Instagram account for his language learners’ group to document words and to recruit learners from afar. Now, people of Tsimshian descent Skype into their weekly meetings from California and North Carolina.
    Tlingit language teacher Selina Everson remembered how Sheldon Jackson High School, despite its reputation for providing a strong education, punished her family members for speaking Tlingit.
    “Deep in my heart I carry the hurt that they were trying to westernize us, after 10,000 years of civilization,” Everson said. She then congratulated her young students in the room, who have worked with her for years through the Sealaska Heritage Institute’s Mentor-Apprentice program.
    Other elders shared medicinal recipes and stories in Tlingit, which Everson’s students recorded for the conference’s archives. Recipes included spruce pitch for healing cuts and a tonic of seal grease and warm salt water to flush out stomach infections.
    A group from the Tlingit village of Teslin, in the Canadian Yukon, also attended the workshop. As the participants introduced themselves, one woman stood up and said, “It’s good to finally be here and see your faces. I feel like I’m finally home.”
    The conference ended this afternoon with a panel at Mt. Edgecumbe on Russian, American, and Alaska Native perspectives on the Treaty of Cession. Videos of the event will be shared on the conference’s website next year: www.sharingourknowledge.org.





You have no rights to post comments

Login Form

 

20 YEARS AGO

April 2004

Photo caption: Luke Johnson helps Kathy Fournier as she removes trash from Swan Lake Saturday.
The Citywide Spring Cleanup this year included the lake cleanup by volunteers and was organized by Parks and Recreation Coordinator Lynne McGowan.

50 YEARS AGO

April 1974

A 12-hour dance marathon sponsored by Sheldon Jackson College students will be held Saturday at Blatchley Junior High. .... Added attractions include twist and limbo contests. The city curfew will be extended until 1 a.m.

Calendar

Local Events

Instagram

Daily Sitka Sentinel on Instagram!

Facebook

Daily Sitka Sentinel on Facebook!