Kodiak Public Library, Kodiak, Alaska
May 12, 2023
Team Leaders: Kelli Hix & Moriah Ulinskas
Team Members: Afsheen Nomai, CK Ming, and Marie Lascu
Workshop Partners:
- The Alutiiq Museum (host) preserves and shares the heritage and living culture of the Alutiiq people. Our vision: Celebrating heritage through living culture. Our strategy: The Alutiiq Museum’s work spans the globe, but we have a deep commitment to the Kodiak Archipelago–the museum’s home and the geographic center of the Alutiiq world. We work diligently to involve people of all heritages in educational programming and original research–archaeological studies, language documentation, and collections investigations. By engaging everyone in the celebration of Alutiiq heritage, we reduce cultural isolation, reawaken cultural traditions, build intergenerational ties that broaden cultural understanding, and create a welcoming environment for discovery. We believe that rekindling cultural traditions also depends on the commitment and involvement of community organizations, agency partners, and supporters like you.
- The mission of The Kodiak Museum is to facilitate exploration of the natural, cultural, and artistic heritage of Kodiak Island and surrounding communities to create opportunities for the public to discover, share, and exchange knowledge using the collections and resources made available through the operation of the Kodiak History Museum.
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The Goldbelt Heritage Foundation is a not for profit organization that was initially established in 2001 by the Goldbelt, Inc. Board of Directors. Goldbelt, Inc. is Juneau, Alaska’s urban Alaska native corporation that was formed under the 1974 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. Initially created to administer higher education scholarship opportunities to Goldbelt shareholders and descendants, GHF has evolved its mission to include promoting and preserving the Tlingit culture, language, stories, and art, create opportunities that provide pathways for Tlingit language learning across all age groups, and develop curriculum and trainings that foster Native student success from preschool through college. GHF is committed to offering cultural enrichment opportunities that will safeguard Southeast Alaska Native culture, heritage, and traditions
Number of workshop participants: 7
Kinds of organizations participants are from: Museum, historical society
Number of items inventoried: 155
Formats of items inventoried: Grooved audio disc, miniDV, Compact audio cassette, VHS, DVD, Mini disc, ¾” u-matic
Content of items inventoried: Tlingit language revitalization training, panel discussions with Tlingit elders, Tlingit language and cultural documentation, documentary footage, documentation of Native culture ways, recordings of traditional songs
Number of items digitized: N/A
Other Activities during workshop: film inspection demonstration, audio digitization demonstration demonstration.
Image Gallery