Smoke Signals 7 Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow; Cultural Program Works On Many Projects MARCH 15, 2003 LindyTrolan Cultural Department continued from front as audio and visual remembrances. And while part of the process is to collect all existing examples that can be located, the department also catalogues all these items for cross-referencing and makes them available to Tribal members and the public in a variety of ways. If more than 10,000 years of history have shown us anything, it is that important cultural sites are spread far and wide. Federal law now requires any project using federal funding whether road or building or golf course consult with Tribes to make sure important cultural sites are protected. The Site Protection team works on these issues. Language is a most basic component of the cul ture. The pre-school Chinuk wawa immersion pro gram and adult language classes are examples of ways the department is resurrecting and preserv ing this language and preparing the community to use it and pass it on. Overall, said Olson, the idea is "to help Tribal people reclaim traditional ideas about life so they can teach that to their children." The department's on going projects are almost constantly interrupted by short- and long-term projects. Some of the cur rent ones include the Fort Yamhill project (See SS, 9102); possible cre ation of an exhibit at the casino to tell the Grand Ronde story; the Mission Mill Museum basket exhibit and the Summers Col lection (see stories this issue). CULTURAL COLLECTIONS The Tribes' cultural collections include 1,100 ob jects, 3,500 historic (pre 1950) photographs, more than 20,000 pages of archi val documents and historic records, 385 bound vol umes of local history books, and 110 oral history (au dio and visual) pieces, ac cording to Cultural Col lections Specialist Lindy Trolan. She and Cultural Projects As- Kim Mueller sistant Kim Mueller are responsible for acquiring, maintaining, preserving and sharing this cultural heritage. Keeping track of all this requires photographing each piece and recording as much information about the piece as is available. The department is mak ing an effort to share information with Tribal mem bers and the community. "We have this wealth of information," said Olson. "It is important that we start sharing this." Current projects for Trolan include an upcoming reprinting of the Harold Mackey book, The Kalapuyans. Published originally in 1974 and be ing reprinted later this year, the book this time will have some 50 pages of interpretive material devel oped by the Grand Ronde Tribes from the Tribal perspective. Ultimately, the department foresees a Tribal museum for these collections, but in the meanwhile, creating exhibits for exist ing venues enables the Tribes to share parts of the collection with the commu nity. The department also sponsors and often leads cultural classes for Tribal members. Two students from a Tribal basket-making class Tribal Elders Sam Henny and Connie Graves are now teach ing the skill to others. SITE PROTECTION Cultural Protection Specialist and Tribal member Perri McDaniel heads the section charged with evaluating sites for cultural significance and suggesting ways to preserve them in the face of an ticipated development. page. V, I 1 ml madfe Perri McDaniel . -.Mm ;y i Connie Schultz jfyr v, Josh Levy "We're responsible for pro tecting and preserving cul tural resources that are really J - i. A iU rr ! J H ( J&'-i i off Tribai knds" said Cui- ""JUT " tural Protection Special ist and Tribal member Connie Schultz. "One of the things that I think is really key to revital izing our culture here is get ting the people back in touch with our traditional ancestral homelands," said McDaniel. "Connection with the land is key." These lands she said, extends "from the Columbia River to the Cali fornia border, from the crest of the Coast Range to the crest of the Cascade Range." As information about a project or a potential project comes in, GIS Specialist Josh Levy takes the lo cation and feeds it into the Geographic Information System (GIS), a mapping program that already is packed with information about important cultural and historical sites and other projects (See story on page 5). And from the or derly way that this infor mation is collected and stored, McDaniel and Schultz can use it to effec tively consult with those involved with the project in question. For example, a current project on Sauvie Island is within a mile or two of culturally significant sites already in the system. Last year, the department received almost 300 notifications. "There are thousands of cultural sites in western Oregon," said Levy. "Currently, 1,500 are in the system." Occasionally, the Tribe and a building authority disagree on how to deal with certain sites and these rare disputes go to the state Historic Preservation office for mediation. Schultz also works with the Tribe's cemetery employ ees on the restoration of an old stone, for example. She works with the Natural Resources Department, too, when cultural site protection issues come up. "And we get a lot of calls from people who say they Tony Johnson have found something. Josh or I will go out on these calls," she said. Levy brings to the department a background in plants as well as the programming essentials for operating the GIS system. On one day, you might find Levy bent over the computer, but on another, he might be working on a traditional huckleberry picking area in the Willamette National Forest. He has been thinning trees, removing noxious weeds and experimenting with a variety of management techniques to see how traditional huckleberries respond best. LANGUAGE AND CULTURE When Education Coordinator Tony Johnson stepped to the door to speak English during the Chinuk wawa immersion class, pre-schoolers Michael Reyes and Lauren Lucio told him in the Chinuk language in apparently no uncertain terms that he had no business speaking Boston wawa (English) in this Chinuk wawa immersion class. We stepped completely outside of the classroom. With some 3,600 words in Chinuk wawa to choose from, the nine four and five year olds in the pre-school class have a grasp on a lot of them. (See SS, 12-15-02.) The key, going forward, according to Olson and i - - j j I f fSf H r f ... .... ''''.-Itaft JJl Jackie Whisler Johnson, is to develop the program so that it follows these children into kindergarten and on into grade school. As it is, parents of these students sign a contract to work with the children at home on the language and the department offers adult Chinuk wawa classes on Monday nights from 5:30-8:30 p.m. For Language Specialist Jackie Whisler, whose focus is the pre-school program, "feelings" are the start of her teaching efforts. "I watch their faces," she said. "We use so much love in there." Not a teacher by trade, Whisler keeps her eyes and ears open for the experience and wisdom of other teachers, in and out of the immersion program, to help her develop. . Exposed to words from the language like muk-muk (eat) all her life, Whisler remembered her interest growing in her twenties. She held language classes in her home during the time of Restoration. Elders would teach and then young parents would pass the words on to their children, she said. Language Specialist Bobby Mercier works across many programs including pre-school, Before and After programs and adult classes. Like Whisler, Mercier has been exposed to elements of the language as long as he can remember and though he now recog nizes that "it kind of came natural for me," the key to getting him studying it was a very personal experience. "Grandma (Tribal Elder Arthelia Clark) wasn't doing too good (Arthelia passed away in December of 1999). I always wished I had learned (the language) so I could talk to her but I never did." Bobby Mercier He also saw that there were "good things happen ing in it (the language program) and good people doing it." "I really wanted my kids to have that opportunity to talk like the old people." Every week the entire team is involved with de veloping the lesson plans and creating activity sheets. As this story developed, Mercier was working on some class displays that put pictures together with words. Although Chinuk wawa "was the language that was used inter-Tribally," said Johnson, "no other com munity is using this language the way we are. Grand Ronde is the only community where this language has survived." In addition to the language classes, this section of the department facilitates a number of other cul tural classes for Tribal members. Drum, basket, moccasin, adz-making and beading classes are among them. Development of a Chinuk wawa dictionary is also underway, but perhaps still a year or two from pub lication, according to Johnson. Like any language, Chinuk wawa is growing every day as people use it and struggle with naming things that did not exist years ago. While the language is strong and de scriptive of so much in nature, it is constantly catch ing up with technology. In addition, the department has developed "a con siderable archive of all the languages of all of the original Tribes associated with early Grand Ronde," said Johnson. The archive includes original docu ments that refer to more than 25 dialects, some un intelligible to us today. Looking toward the future, the department has for years been developing ways to make the wealth of material available not only to Tribal members in the local area but to Tribal members everywhere. "My role," said Olson, "is looking at the demograph ics of our people and figure out how can we achieve that. "The far out dream," she said, "is that all Tribal members can teach their children the Native view of life and be part of those day-to-day life ways." The department has been working for years to bring that vision to life via the Internet and full deploy ment may still be a few years off, according to Olson. "We're no longer in a village situation," she said "We are a modernized Tribe."