Spílya Táimu November 2, 2022 Page 5 In October, the Museum at Warm Springs welcomed Oregon Rep. Greg Smith, Dist. 57. This year, the museum received a $336,000 congressional grant, helping fund an overhaul of the museum heating, ventilation and air conditioning system (HVAC). Welcoming Rep. Smith (second from left) were Robert Brunoe, Secretary-Treasurer; Elizabeth Woody, museum executive director; Michael Mason, tribal lobbyist; and Jim Souers, chief executive officer, Warm Springs Economic Development. Courtesy MAWS Native American Heritage Month at the museum by Elizabeth A. Woody, Executive Director, Museum at Warm Springs In 1990, United States President George H.W. Bush signed Joint Resolution 577 designating November as the first National American In- dian Heritage Month. The joint resolution read: “American Indians were the original inhabitants of the lands that now constitute the United States of America.” It was the first such official statement, which has been signed every year by a sitting president. At the Museum at Warm Springs, we celebrate our unique cultures, traditions, histories, arts and languages every month. Indeed, our staff is dedicated to uphold- ing the museum’s mission of “preserving, advancing and sharing the traditions, cultural and artistic heritage of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, and other In- digenous peoples” every day of the year. We do this joyfully, with purpose, and with the knowl- edge and, even more impor- tantly, the satisfaction that we are gifting our visitors with information and an experi- ence they may not receive anywhere else. The people of the Warm Springs Reservation have al- ways looked to the landscape around us for our knowl- edge. Languages and land have been intertwined for thousands of years. With each vision quest, an individual brought back to the community a new under- standing learned from the environment. Our land be- stowed knowledge and prac- tical intimacy through its processes and qualities. This cultural practice—a personal journey deep into myth for reclamation of ancient ele- ments and acclamations of respect for all life to come— potently binds us to endur- ing values. I want all of you who visit the Museum at Warm Springs to note the word in- scribed above the museum’s entrance. It is ‘Twanat,’ which means ‘to follow.’ We follow these prac- tices, teachings and actively follow our ancestors to pre- pare for tomorrow. “This land is for you to know and live upon and pass on to the children.” It is ‘Ticham,’ a concept in the War m Springs culture that con- nects an individual to the ancient activity on the land and is of the land. The beautiful and con- tinuing cultures of the Co- lumbia River Plateau speak of time immemorial — the beginning of this world, the demise of previous epochs, and what is to come—a vis- ceral prophecy. As much as language, the patterns of the War m Springs people have docu- mented, preserved and car- ried on our culture. Our leaders and culture bearers bring the new into the po- tency of image. This is ‘Tananawit,’ (‘Peoples’ Way of Life’), re- ferring to a culture that our people had in the past, is practiced today, and some- thing that can be taught for the future. In the past the artists, sto- rytellers and teachers of our traditional ways carried our collective knowledge, rights and sovereign nationhood from generation to present, to the future. Please plan a visit to the museum in November. We will be opening a new exhibit on Tuesday, November 15—T h e Wa r m S p r i n g s Twenty-Ninth Annual Tribal Member Adult and Youth Exhibit. This popular annual ex- hibit will combine Tribal member adult and youth art into one spectacular display. The exhibit will include many generations of beautiful art- istry in paintings, drawings, mixed-media, beadwork, weavings, video, photogra- phy and more, in two catego- ries of Traditional and Con- temporary Art. Plan your visit to coincide with your holiday plans and spend some time in the museum’s popular Gift Shop, where you will find something for everyone on your list. We look forward to seeing you here and celebrat- ing our arts and cultures with you during National Native American Heritage Month!