Makah Rez Featured in the Seattle Times Travel Section

To read the story, see the pictures, and watch the audio/video clip (featuring narration by my cousin Janine!) go to the paper’s site here.

From the Seattle Times:

When Polly DeBari looks at Tatoosh Island, she sees the historic lighthouse, the crumpled old weather station and the crane clinging to the rocky terrain.

In her mind, she also sees the generations of Makah who once paddled out to the tiny coastal island off Cape Flattery for summer halibut and whaling seasons.

“You think about years and years ago, your parents, your great-grandparents, your ancestors were on that island,” she said. “It’s just kind of special to know you could be so close.”

In the summer, DeBari has a regular perch with a clear vantage of the island. She is a cultural interpreter for the Makah Cultural & Research Center, and spends summer days high above the sea at Cape Flattery, where the Pacific Ocean and the Strait of Juan de Fuca joust for territory.

She welcomes people to the Makah reservation and the most northwesterly point in the contiguous United States.

Go Hoopa!!!!

From Indianz:

White House honors library on Hoopa Reservation

Monday, January 14, 2008

The White House today presented a public library on the Hoopa Reservation in northern California with a 2007 National Medal for Museum and Library Services award.

First Lady Laura Bush honored the Kim Yerton Branch of the Humboldt County Library with $10,000. The library was the only one in California, and the only one in Indian Country, selected to receive the award. Continue reading