POPULARITY
Teil 2 von einer Miniserie über die Geschichte vom Bundesstaat Oregon. Diese Folge handelt von materielle Güter und Bräuche, usw, von den Stämme der Konfederierten Stämme von Grand Ronde— Urbewohner Oregons, und zum Teil Washington, British Columbia, und Kalifornien.In den ersten zwei Folgen kommen auch die Geschichte von Chinuk Wawa vorhttps://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinook_Wawaeine Handelsprache die überlebte als die Meisten Sprachen der Urbewohner ausstarben.Ich habe ein Wörterbuch bei podcastnik.com angefangen (hoffentlich auch bald auf Deutsch).Ich habe ein altes Buch wiederbelebt (Englisch) “How Oregon Natives use Oregon Flora” von Edith Hensolt https://a.co/d/g4IPXFvUnd hier ist mein Buch über mein Leben :) https://a.co/d/7vde9ODBücher (für die Miniserie):Native Peoples of the NorthwestKalapuyansOregon and the collapse of the illaheeThe Oregon Trail (Parkman)River Pigs and CayusesRankin CrowCowboys, Mountain Men, and Grizzly BearsWillamette LandingsCultural Center: https://chachalu.org/Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde: https://www.grandronde.org/♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦☞ podcastnikshop.com☞ Weitere Projekte: podcastnik.com☞ Unser neustes Projekt, Past Access!Twitter Travis Dow twitter.com/travisjdow★ Unterstützen: PayPal | Patreon | Podcastnik Shop ★ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Die Geschichte Oregons - Teil 1: IskanumTeil 1 von einer Miniserie über die Geschichte vom Bundesstaat Oregon. Diese Folge handelt von die Urbewohner wie die Chinuk (Chinook), Kalapuya, und sonst die Stämme der Konfederierten Stämme von Grand Ronde.In den ersten zwei Folgen kommen auch die Geschichte von Chinuk Wawa https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinook_Wawaeine Handelsprache die überlebte als die Meisten Sprachen der Urbewohner ausstarben.Ich habe einen Wörterbuch angafangen. Hoffentlich auch bald Chinuk Wawa - Deutsch : podcastnik.comIch habe ein altes Buch wiederbelebt (Englisch) “How Oregon Natives use Oregon Flora” von Edith Hensolt https://a.co/d/g4IPXFvUnd hier ist mein Buch über mein Leben :) https://a.co/d/7vde9OD“wik kʰəltəs-tilixam a ɬaska,”“aɬqi ɬaska-iskam mawich,”“kakwa ɬaska aɬqi.”nicht einfache leute.sie werden jaeger sein.so wird es sein.“Bücher (für die Miniserie):Native Peoples of the NorthwestKalapuyansOregon and the collapse of the illaheeThe Oregon Trail (Parkman)River Pigs and CayusesRankin CrowCowboys, Mountain Men, and Grizzly BearsWillamette Landingshttps://chachalu.org/https://www.grandronde.org/Weistere Links:http://publichistorypdx.org/projects/chinook/oral-tradition-thunderbird-origin-chinook/https://www.sacred-texts.com/nam/nw/chinook/index.htmhttps://www.flutopedia.com/refs/Boas_1888c_ChinookSongs_FP.pdfhttps://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaskaden-Vulkane ♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦♠♥♣♦☞ podcastnikshop.com☞ Weitere Projekte: podcastnik.com☞ Unser neustes Projekt, Past Access!Twitter Podcastnik twitter.com/podcastnikTwitter Americana für Euch twitter.com/americanapodTwitter Travis Dow twitter.com/travisjdow★ Unterstützen: PayPal | Patreon | Podcastnik Shop ★ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
LINKS: Confederated Tribes of Grande RondeKalapuya WeavingStephanie Craig is an enrolled member of The confederated Tribes of Grande Ronde Community of Oregon.It is comprised of Umpqua, Molalla, Rogue River, Kalapuya and Chasta peoples.She educates and documents cultural heritage and traditions, committing herself to preserving traditional practices for future generations.Her BA is in cultural anthropology where she fulfilled her language requirement with her Native language- Chinuk Wawa.Her studies have included museum and folklore studies.She works at the Chuchalyu Tribal Museum where she consults and contracts with city and state entities on museum work- presentation, exhibit design. She has been chosen for internships at the Smithsonian Institute's National Museum of American Indian Archives Department, the University of Oregon's Museum of Natural and Cultural History, Tamástslikt Cultural Institute for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian ReservationShe owns a business called Kalapuya Weaving where she teaches basket weaving, materials gathering and preservation.
This audio is a portion of an original multimedia story produced as part of a collaboration between NPR's Next Generation Radio and the Native American Journalist Association. This "postcard" style podcast shares Zoey Holsclaw's experience as Grand Ronde's Chinuk Wawa language teacher and outreach coordinator. The full story is available at https://naja-nextgen2021.nextgenradio.org/grand-ronde-woman-revitalizing-native-language-chinuk-wawa/ or https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/youth-carrying-the-language-through-a-pandemic?fbclid=IwAR0GdECPVFgY59qiKFRhDVObkAGUsey2or7w4zE8XPOfxSc1LZOS8mfrjEg. The full story will also be published in the March 1, 2021, edition of Smoke Signals.
Shilo George is Southern Cheyenne-Arapaho and Scottish international speaker, trainer, and owner of Łush Kumtux Tumtum Consulting, which means “a great awakening of the heart and spirit” in the Chinuk Wawa trade language. She has lived her life in a body that transgresses and violates Western standards of beauty, size, sexuality, and health. Shilo interweaves cultural traditions and spirituality with an anti-oppressive and decolonizing lenses to promote healing and empowerment in herself and others in the communities she is a part of. Her workshops and presentations explore the intersections of race, sexuality, body size, and trauma (both individual and inter-generational). Shilo trains others on systems of oppression, trauma informed care, and proactive ways that businesses and organizations can create policies and environments that that promote diversity, equity, and healing. Shilo received her Bachelor of Science in Art Practices in 2012 and a Masters of Science in Educational Leadership and Policy with a specialization in Postsecondary Adult and Continuing Education in 2017, both from Portland State University. She was named Higher Education Student of the Year by the Oregon Indian Education Association in 2013 and in 2015 was honored with the Queer Indigenous Scholar Activist & Alumni Award by the Indigenous Nations Studies Department at Portland State University. In addition to her consulting business, Shilo works as a Parent Advocate at the Native American Youth and Family Center and is an Affiliated Adjunct Instructor of the Indigenous Nations Studies at Portland State University. She can be contacted at shilomgeorge@gmail.com. Health and Wellness Philosophy Document
This will be the last episode for the season and the year! I wanted to spend it talking about the importance of Fat Acceptance and Body Acceptance when it comes to individual health, and also to community health. The Fat Acceptance movement itself focuses on reducing and eliminating fat bias and fat stigma, thus improving overall health. I was joined by Shilo George who really added so much to this episode. Shilo George is Southern Cheyenne-Arapaho and Scottish international speaker, trainer, and owner of Łush Kumtux Tumtum Consulting, which means “a great awakening of the heart and spirit” in the Chinuk Wawa trade language. She has lived her life in a body that transgresses and violates Western standards of beauty, size, sexuality, and health. Shilo interweaves cultural traditions and spirituality with an anti-oppressive and decolonizing lenses to promote healing and empowerment in herself and others in the communities she is a part of. Her workshops and presentations explore the intersections of race, sexuality, body size, and trauma (both individual and inter-generational). Shilo trains others on systems of oppression, trauma informed care, and proactive ways that businesses and organizations can create policies and environments that that promote diversity, equity, and healing. Shilo received her Bachelor of Science in Art Practices in 2012 and a Masters of Science in Educational Leadership and Policy with a specialization in Postsecondary Adult and Continuing Education in 2017, both from Portland State University. She was named Higher Education Student of the Year by the Oregon Indian Education Association in 2013 and in 2015 was honored with the Queer Indigenous Scholar Activist & Alumni Award by the Indigenous Nations Studies Department at Portland State University. In addition to her consulting business, Shilo works as a Parent Advocate at the Native American Youth and Family Center and is an Affiliated Adjunct Instructor of the Indigenous Nations Studies at Portland State University.
Shilo George (she/her/hers) is a Southern Cheyenne-Arapaho and Scottish international speaker and owner of Łush Kumtux Tumtum Consulting, which means “a great awakening of the heart and spirit” in the Chinuk Wawa trade language. Her workshops and presentations explore the intersections of race, sexuality, body size, and trauma (both individual and inter-generational). She seeks to educate on systems of oppression, trauma informed care, and proactive ways that businesses and organizations can create policies and environments that that promote inclusion, diversity, and healing. Enjoy! Sponsor: Annie Weller, Business Coach & Consultant http://www.annieweller.com Produced and edited by Greg Nibler Recorded at the Funemployment Radio Studios in beautiful Portland, Oregon
Shilo George (she/her/hers) is a Southern Cheyenne-Arapaho and Scottish international speaker and owner of Łush Kumtux Tumtum Consulting, which means “a great awakening of the heart and spirit” in the Chinuk Wawa trade language. Her workshops and presentations explore the intersections of race, sexuality, body size, and trauma (both individual and inter-generational). She seeks to educate on systems of oppression, trauma informed care, and proactive ways that businesses and organizations can create policies and environments that that promote inclusion, diversity, and healing. Enjoy! Sponsor: Annie Weller, Business Coach & Consultant http://www.annieweller.com Produced and edited by Greg Nibler Recorded at the Funemployment Radio Studios in beautiful Portland, Oregon