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T’akdeeintaan Clan v. University of Pennsylvania Museum Recording

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

DVD recording of the 17-19 November 2010 NAGPRA Review Committee Hearing.

Photocopies of press clippings about the 17-19 November 2010 NAGPRA Review Committee Hearing’s findings from the Anchorage Daily News, Juneau Empire, the Inquirer, and Sealaska Corporation news release on the same.



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T’akdeeintaan Clan v. University of Pennsylvania Museum Recording, 2010 | Sealaska Heritage Institute Archives

By Mary M. Brooks, UAS Student Intern

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Collection Overview

Title: T’akdeeintaan Clan v. University of Pennsylvania Museum Recording, 2010Add to your cart.

ID: MC/024

Primary Creator: Sealaska Heritage Institute

Extent: 1.0 Boxes

Date Acquired: 12/15/2010

Subjects: Tlingit art., Tlingit Indians--History.

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

This collection consists of a DVD recording and press clippings associated with the repatriation efforts and the Native American Graves & Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) Review Committee hearing held in Washington, DC from 17-19 November 2010 regarding the Tlingit T’akdeeintaan Clan’s repatriation request against the University of Pennsylvania Museum.

From the 17-19 November 2010 hearings held in Washington DC on this issue, and after review of evidence presented, based on the laws outlined in the Native American Graves & Repatriation Act of 1991, the NAGPRA Review Committee determined that the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology did not have legal right of possession to the disputed 40 cultural objects then at the museum facility.

Biographical Note

The Sealaska Heritage Institute (SHI) is a regional Native non-profit organization founded for the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people of Southeast Alaska. SHI was established in 1981 by Sealaska Corp., a for-profit company formed under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA). SHI, formerly Sealaska Heritage Foundation, administers Sealaska Corp.'s cultural and educational programs.

SHI was conceived by Clan Leaders, Traditional Scholars and Elders at the first Sealaska Elders Conference in 1980. During that meeting, the Elders likened Native culture to a blanket. The late George Davis (Kichnáalx—Lk’aanaaw) of Angoon, spoke these memorable words: “We don’t want what you did here to only echo in the air, how our grandfathers used to do things…  Yes. You have unwrapped it for us.  That is why we will open again this container of wisdom left in our care.” These wise traditional leaders told the new leaders that their hands were growing weary of holding onto the metaphorical blanket, this "container of wisdom." They said they were transferring this responsibility to the Corporation. In response to this directive, Sealaska Corporation created its non-profit arm, Sealaska Heritage Institute, to administer cultural and educational programs for the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian.

During its first decade of operation, under the leadership of David Katzeek, SHI began to administer its Scholarship Program from funds set aside by Sealaska Corporation for this purpose. The second major focus at that time was the documentation of oral traditions, a project led by Tlingit scholar Dr. Nora Marks Dauenhauer and her husband, Dr. Richard Dauenhauer. Over nearly a 20-year period, these efforts led to several major publications by the Institute of the Dauenhauer’s work, including:  “Because We Cherish You…” Sealaska Elders Speak to the Future, in 1981; Haa Shuká, Our Ancestors, Volume I of our Tlingit Oral Narratives (1987); Haa Tuwunáagu Yís: for Healing our Spirit. Vol. 2, Tlingit Oral Narratives. (1990); the Third Edition of Beginning Tlingit in 1991; Haa Kusteeyí, Our Culture: Tlingit Life Stories (1994); and Aan Aduspelled X’úx’, Tlingit Spelling Book in 1999. A number of these publications were co-published by the Institute and University of Washington Press. During this period, the Institute also created Naa Kahídi Theater, which won national acclaim for its dramatic presentation of Native legends.

One year after SHI was founded the Institute sponsored the first United Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian Traditional Celebration, held in Juneau. Celebration '82 was so popular that our Board of Trustees decided the festival should become a biennial event. New dance groups began to form in response to Celebration, and every other year, the festival grew. Today, nearly every community in Southeast as well as Anchorage, the Seattle area, Hawaii and Canada, are represented by roughly two-thousand dancers in nearly fifty dance groups. During Celebration, workshops on various aspects of traditional culture and history also occur. Because SHI is the only major region-wide organization dedicated to cultural preservation, its Board of Trustees has mandated that Celebration be dedicated solely to honoring our traditional culture.

More recently, while continuing to honor the Institute's mission statement, “To perpetuate the Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian cultures,” the Trustees in 1997 adopted language restoration as the foremost priority of the Institute. Few funds were available initially for this objective, but the Institute launched an aggressive fund-raising campaign, and today, SHI sponsors and supports numerous language and culture programs across Southeast Alaska. The Institute also sponsors archival projects, historical research, and new publications. Since SHI’s founding, it has had four presidents; David Katzeek (1980-1991), Dennis Demmert (1992-1996), Ted Wright (1996-1998), and Rosita Worl (1998-present).

Subject/Index Terms

Tlingit art.
Tlingit Indians--History.

Administrative Information

Repository: Sealaska Heritage Institute Archives

Acquisition Source: Sealaska Heritage Institute

Acquisition Method: The material in the collection was transferred from SHI’s Media and Publications Department to SHI archives on December 15, 2010.  This recording was created by the SHI staff.


Box and Folder Listing


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[Folder 1: DVD recording of the 17-19 November 2010 NAGPRA Review Committee Hearing.],
[Folder 2: Photocopies of press clippings about the 17-19 November 2010 NAGPRA Review Committee Hearing’s findings from the Anchorage Daily News, Juneau Empire, the Inquirer, and Sealaska Corporation news release on the same.],
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Folder 1: DVD recording of the 17-19 November 2010 NAGPRA Review Committee Hearing.Add to your cart.


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