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SOU Celebrates Indigenous People’s Day

Dancers with Mending Wings from the Yakama Reservation in Washington State visited Southern Oregon University to perform during Indigenous People's Day.
Erik Neumann / JPR
Dancers with Mending Wings from the Yakama Reservation in Washington State visited Southern Oregon University to perform during Indigenous People's Day.

On the native land of the Shasta and Takelma people, a group of teenagers wearing bright dance regalia and fur headdresses swirled around the Southern Oregon University student union building on Monday.

Members of the Mending Wings group with the Yakama Reservation danced with audience members on the SOU campus.
Credit Erik Neumann / JPR
Members of the Mending Wings group with the Yakama Reservation danced with audience members on the SOU campus.

The members of Mending Wings, a nonprofit from Washington State’s Yakama Nation, was one of several tribes celebrating Indigenous People’s Day on the SOU campus.

“I think it’s important to celebrate indigenous people, rather than Columbus,” said Jeidah Dezurney, “[To] have indigenous people reclaim this day as their own to share their history, to show that we’re still here, that we’re thriving, and share everything that we’ve accomplished and all that we are experiencing today.”

Dezurney is a member of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians, who she represented with a table showing traditional basket weaving and plants used to make them. Next to it, was her other project, a group called We R Native, a non-profit that provides holistic health resources for native youth with the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board.

In downtown Ashland, the town known as a theater destination, costumes worn by native cast members were on display at the Black Swan Theatre. Inside a stark room the exhibit ranged from brightly patterned textiles to rawhide dresses. According to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival’s Amber Ball, the display was meant to show the variety of native identity in theater.  

Native American themed costumes worn during Oregon Shakespeare Festival productions on display at the Black Swan.
Credit Erik Neumann / JPR
Native American themed costumes worn during Oregon Shakespeare Festival productions on display at the Black Swan.

“We’ve only had three native plays at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in its full span,” Ball said. “This is a time to really have a place to take up space and acknowledge the work that has been done, but also encourage that there’s a need to do more work as well.”

SOU emeritus faculty member David West was the emcee during the Indigenous People’s Day celebrations, which included a salmon bake, speeches and more performances.  

“It’s no longer a day of mourning, it’s a day of life,” West said. “It’s a day to celebrate who we are as indigenous people.”

Copyright 2019 Jefferson Public Radio

Erik Neumann is a radio producer and writer. A native of the Pacific Northwest, his work has appeared on public radio stations and in magazines along the West Coast. He received his Bachelor's Degree in geography from the University of Washington and a Master's in Journalism from UC Berkeley. Besides working at KUER, he enjoys being outside in just about every way possible.
Erik Neumann
Erik Neumann is an experienced radio producer and reporter who grew up alongside the Puget Sound. He's passionate about telling the human stories behind America's health care system, public lands and the environment, and the arts. He got his Masters degree at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. Erik joined JPR after several years as a staff reporter at KUER, the NPR station in Salt Lake City, where he focused on health care coverage. He was a 2019 Mountain West fellow with the Association of Health Care Journalists and is a contributor at Kaiser Health News, a non-profit news service committed to in-depth coverage of health care policy and politics.