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Totem pole carved in Washington heading to the White House

KXLY May 23, 2021 4:13 PM 4 News Now Staff Updated: BELLINGHAM, Wash. A 24-foot totem pole is on its way from Washington to Washington, D.C. It’s a gift to the Biden Administration, crafted by the Lummi Tribal Nation which lives north of Bellingham. A team of 14 carvers worked over the 400-year-old red cedar. “We have to come together. We’ve got to put our differences behind us,” said Douglas James, a Lummi master carver. “What that means is we’ve got to come together with one heart and one mind.” After its journey ends in Washington, D.C. it will be displayed in the fall at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian.

Oklahoma Hall of Fame names Roscoe Dunjee, Jim Stovall to 2021 class

He chairs the education committee for the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission and serves as local curator of its new history center, Greenwood Rising, which will be dedicated on June 2 as part of the centennial commemoration. He recently published his 10th book, Black Wall Street 100: An American City Grapples With Its Historical Racial Trauma.   In addition, the Tulsa author, attorney and independent consultant was named Thursday to the 2021 class of the Oklahoma Hall of Fame.  I am humbled and honored to join the Oklahoma Hall of Fame. Much of my work centers on building community through education and shared experiences. That work is its own reward. This added, high-level recognition is like icing on the cake, Johnson said in an email to The Oklahoman. 

» Totem pole created by Lummi carvers continues journey to sacred lands

» Totem pole created by Lummi carvers continues journey to sacred lands
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Santa Fe Indian Market Announces Indigenous Editor for 2021 Publications

Santa Fe Indian Market Announces Indigenous Editor for 2021 Publications News provided by Share this article Share this article SANTA FE, N.M., May 10, 2021 /PRNewswire/  The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA) is pleased to announce that Nina Sanders (Apsáalooke) will be the guest editor of both the official Santa Fe Indian Market Magazine, produced by Native American Art Magazine, and the Live & Virtual Artist Booth Guide published by Hutton Broadcasting. Sanders will commission Indigenous writers and artists under the age of 40 to write each publication s feature articles. Her vision extends to educating and inspiring a new generation of collectors of Native American art.

Your Guide to the Perfect Mother s Day Weekend: May 5–11, 2021

Your Guide to the Perfect Mother’s Day Weekend: May 5–11, 2021 Mothers, markets, mini golf and more! This weekend is all about brain power, music, celebrations and eating shrimp. No really, shrimp. May 5, 2021   Saturday, May 8, 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Mom deserves something special. Mom deserves something thoughtful. Mom deserves something cute AF. Where are all of these things rounded up in one open-air, family- and pet-friendly space? Why, Aloha Home Market’s Mālama Yo Momma Market in Kailua, of course. Shop for furniture, local art, home goods, self-care goodies (like the new hibiscus and wild orange body scrub from Guava Mama), jewelry, handcrafted gifts (looking at you, macramé rainbows from

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