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 * Home
 * Living Cultures
 * In Our Hands
 * Past Projects
 * Contact
 * About

 * Videos >
    * Box of Treasures Videos
    * 2016 Kickstarter Videos

 * The Personal Art: Portraiture
 * Auntie Ethel
 * Stanley Hunt
 * Chief Beau Dick

 * Headman Jim Thomas, Tlingit
 * Reconciliation Pole >
    * VIDEO 1 Reconciliation Pole
    * Copper Nails

 * 2016 Paddle to Nisqually >
    * VIDEO: Paddle to Nisqually

 * Lummi Pole Journey
 * Alert Bay - June Pageantry
 * Lalakenis >
    * Tea with Chief Beau Dick >
       * Tlingit Story of the Copper
       * Raven Story
   
    * Lalakenis - Box of Treasures
    * Lalakenis - Fashion Show
    * Lalakenis - Second Day

 * Glacier Bay Big House
 * Opening Hearts

  Dos Polacas: Photography, Heart and Stories


DOS POLACAS:
PHOTOGRAPHY,
HEART &
STORIES


A SNEAK PEEK AT PAGES FROM
IN OUR HANDS: THE KEEPERS OF THE BOX OF TREASURES

As we finish the preparation of the book
In Our Hands: The Keepers of the Box of Treasures
we will be sending out updates to supporters and posting a few of the pages
(below). 
Enjoy! Please let us know what you think by contacting us.


2024 IS GOING TO BE A GREAT YEAR FOR OUR BOOK PROJECT!

The following letter was sent to our supporters on January 14, 2024
Hello Friends, Supporters and Fellow Paddlers,
We have very good news and very sad news.
First the very good news! The long-awaited publishing of In Our Hands: The
Keepers of the Box of Treasures will soon be more than wishful thoughts we send
to you on a regular basis. This year the book will be published!
November 2024 (exact date to be determined) we will be in Alert Bay, British
Columbia at the U'Mista Cultural Center to celebrate the grand opening of an
exhibit of In Our Hand's portraits and pages. The book will act as the exhibit
catalogue as well as a stand-alone book. 
It is with great sadness we send you news of the death of T̓łaḵwagila, Chief
Bill Cranmer of Alert Bay.
This is an immeasurable loss to the Alert Bay community and to all those who
recognize the importance of indigenous language and culture.
To read more about his public persona, please visit the following links: 
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bill-cranmer-obit-1.7076468
For us, Dos Polacas, Chief Bill was our friend and supporter.
Chief Bill worked with Andrea Sanborn at the U'Mista Cultural Center in 1999 at
the Reopening of the Big House. They designated Sharon as the primary
photographer for the huge event. Alert Bay was the first to build a community
Big House after the ban on potlatching was lifted in 1951. In 1997, that house
burned down. In 1999, the community celebrated the ReOpening of the Big House on
the same land. 


Chief Bill Cranmer at the Reopening of the Big House in Alert Bay, British
Columbia in 1999.
Chief Bill with fallen totem pole behind the U'Mista Cultural Center, Alert Bay,
BC, Canada.
In 2008, the film In The Land Of The Headhunters was reissued with an opening
night at the Moore Theater in Seattle. We were there. Sharon was the primary
photographer.
Chief Bill in Seattle in 2008 at the opening of "The Land Of The Headhunters."

Throughout the years, Chief Bill handled situations with a calm and diplomatic
hand. His sense of humor and the constant twinkle in his eye lightened up the
room. He encouraged community members to work with us on this book project and
spoke up at the U'Mista and elsewhere for the book to be published. His deep
connection to his culture encouraged us to be true to everyone we photographed
and interviewed. Working in indigenous communities can be fraught with long-held
fears, prejudices and suspicions, stemming from centuries of abuse. We were
blessed with the far-seeing eyes of Chief Bill. He envisioned how this book
would broadcast stories of the Kwakwaka'wakw people, helping create a bridge
between elders and future generations. Chief Bill epitomized just such a bridge.
Chief Bill, 2008
Here is the interview from our book with Chief Bill Cranmer:
The main responsibility today of a chief to his people is to keep your history
alive.
I guess I was fortunate to be able to see some of the potlatches when I was just
little in the remote villages. And as I say I was always interested in our
history, and that had a lot to do with how our family was and our extended
family. There was still potlatching from my mother's side and also from her
connections with the Kwalgiulth in Fort Rupert. They were still potlatching even
though in secret right up until the first official public potlatch, held by
Mungo Martin in Thunderbird Park in Victoria in 1953. I was 15 years old, and
joined my dad and my brother and some of the chiefs from northern Vancouver
Island that went to Victoria to attend that potlatch. The prohibition to
potlatch was not lifted until 1951. I used to come back every opportunity to
attend potlatches in the late 60's, 70's. Then my great uncle saw that I was
interested in the potlatches so he said to the old people at the time that he
wanted to pass on his name to me. At that first potlatch he said, you have to
get up now and say something and of course I'd never done that. He said it
doesn't have to be long, just as long you get up to say something. So I got up
and said something very short. So that was the start, and then I got better and
better and spoke more and more so now I act as master of ceremonies, speaker at
the potlatches. Mungo Martin invited the people that were really knowledgeable
about potlatches - people from Blunden Harbour, people from Fort Rupert, my dad,
Dan Cranmer was invited to be master of ceremonies because he was quite
comfortable in English and Kwalwala. We took part in some of the dances. We
performed the animal kingdom there. When our family had the memorial potlatch
for my dad, my oldest brother Doug took over my father's name. We were quite
involved in the planning of that potlatch. That was when I first initiated as
a hamatsa. And so from there I always took the opportunity to sit in when the
old people were planning the potlatches. Before potlatch the old people would
get together and talk about what the host wanted to do. They would come to an
agreement - Yeah, this was proper to do. And if it wasn't proper, they would
also say that. The main responsibility today of a chief to his people is to keep
your history alive. Insure that the names you have are passed from generation to
generation, the dances are passed on from the older to the younger, the songs
that go with dances, the names that go with those dances. That's how we pass on
our history. In the late 40's the Department of Indian Affairs started saying we
don't want the hereditary chiefs to be in charge. We want them to go into the
elected system. So that's what happened. They started going to a vote and the
elected system. Now the elected chief works with the other elected council
members to look after the interest of your members in everything from economic
development to education to your children's health care. In the earlier days the
hereditary chiefs would have been responsible for making sure that was
happening. Today when we have our ceremonies, you have your family, your
extended family and your friends whether they be in the immediate village or
some other village. They all get together and help you when you're planning.
That's one really good thing about our people - they all just seem to get
together.
I think the elders expect me as a hereditary chief to work hard to try to keep
our history alive, to keep our language alive.

So, dear Supporters, with your help, we are working to live up to the confidence
Chief Bill Cranmer had in us. Thank you for supporting the links in the human
network this book project represents.
All our best,    Sharon and Pamela


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The following letter was sent to supporters on September 26, 2022.

Hello Friends, Supporters and Fellow Paddlers,
 
We returned to Alert Bay in April 2022 but things were topsy turvy. We
accomplished more than we thought we would in Port Hardy with the help of
Richard George, our liaison with the Kwakwaka’wakw elders there. On the other
hand, many of the people we had assumed we could meet with in Alert Bay were
unavailable due to various complications from COVID: some were sick, others had
family members in quarantine and still others were reticent to meet with anyone
outside the community. Through all of this, like every time we visit, we
continued to receive a lot of encouragement and great affection for our project.
We enjoyed a lot of laughter with whoever we met as we basked in a feeling of
homecoming.
 
Homecoming celebrations happen on a regular basis, right? Once again, we are
headed up to Canada, crossing the border at the end of March 2023 to spend a
week tying up loose ends and meeting with the individuals and/or the families of
those involved in In Our Hands: The Keepers of the Box of Treasures. Their
enormous generosity in allowing us, as non-natives, to bear witness to their
stories deepens the understanding on both sides of the cultural bridge. We have
a solemn responsibility to them and their families. When we enter Alert Bay, on
our 3rd ferry boat of the day, we will be prepared. Prepared to not be always in
control of the following seven days. Sometimes stuff just happens! Prepared to
listen to concerns, questions, and more stories. Prepared to be joyful, reverent
and productive. Prepared to be a part of the Alert Bay community.
 
The following update is from the page of one of the Beans family: Herman Beans.
Although Herman had passed by the time we wanted to interview him, his brother
Stevie and sister-in-law Stella filled in the details. We laughed so much
talking with them. One of our dreams is to go with Stevie and Stella to “grease
camp” to harvest t’lina or eulachan oil.

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HERMAN BEANS
"THIS IS THE ONLY THING LEFT WHERE WE DON’T NEED A PIECE OF PAPER"



Stevie Beans, Herman Beans’ brother: I told Andrea [Sanborn] as long as you pay
Herman you can use the mill for the lumber that goes to the Big House. The last
big project Herman’s mill did was that board walk along the shore. Herman would
cut lots of firewood. He was a fisherman, but he went against the grain in every
company he fished for. He was kind of a stubborn one. [laughter] He was 83 when
he passed away.
Stella Beans: Yes, he would walk down to the wood [to the mill] until he
couldn’t do it anymore.
Stevie: He was a playboy [laughter] He was a playboy and he loved to do his
wood. We were all uncomfortable in that Long House. My dad always told us it was
no good for you. Don’t do it. Don’t go in there. Don’t do it. That was us. Then
they lifted the ban on potlatching and he was the first one to start it and he
expected us to embrace it! To this day we can’t feel comfortable in there. When
my mom started to do memorials and all that kind of stuff, my brother Herm would
be helping get everything ready. Then he would be on the first ferry the next
morning when it was time to go to the potlatch. He’d take off. Left me standing
there. [laughter] That’s how I ended up doing it. He’d have nothing to do with
it.
Stella: That was your mom, Stevie. Yes, Stevie was in regalia, too.
Stevie: I stood there for my mom. My brother wasn’t there. The old people said
it might as well be me. We can’t depend on Herman. That is how I ended up being
the chief. It was supposed to be him. That’s how I ended up in the video Barb
[Cranmer] made, too. Herman was supposed to it. He said “I’ll be back.” Then he
went to get t’lina [eulachon oil or “grease”]. He was just looking the other
way, going down the river. I said “Shoot, I guess I can do it.” That’s how I
ended up in those videos!
Stella: Herman always had some ladies riding around with him. [laughter]
Stevie: You make the caption on the photo with the chain saw, “This is his toy.”
[laughter] The last time he went up Knight’s Inlet, he was right pissed off
because we went and cut wood and he said, “That’s my job!” He was pouting all
day. “They left me behind and that’s my job!” They didn’t want him to go up
because he was sick. I remember one Christmas we were all having dinner and he
said to me, “My hands are shaking, I want to cut wood.” He’d rather be cutting
wood than having dinner. [laughter] He jogged every morning, all the way into
his eighties.
Stevie: Herman would go to Dzawadi (Knight's Inlet) every year to make t’lina.
He loved Dzawadi for the river, the mountains, the family time and the peace and
pure air. He was concerned about losing our rights to Knight's Inlet.
Herman always said "We have to keep this sacred. This is the only thing we have
left where we don't need a piece of paper".

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




NORMAN AND HELEN GLENDALE
"LET THE PEOPLE KNOW HOW PROUD WE ARE OF THE KIDS
AND HOW GOOD THEY ARE."


Norman Glendale: My role is to speak on behalf of the group, to welcome everyone
and thank our elders before us for hanging on to what we have. Even there were
dark times when the government banned us from potlatching for those years. Let
the people know of how proud we are of the kids, and how good they are. To teach
them respect and give them respect. Like what was given to us by our parents.
Taught to us by our parents. It gives us something to do, to teach our kids
about our culture and try to keep our language alive. I am fluent [in Kwawala]
but I’m still learning. I learn new words. We’ll get a few people together, some
from out of town, like the ones that teach at the Fort Rupert, some from Port
Hardy. We have a good time doing it. Enjoy one another’s company. The people
that speak Kwakwala are the Kwagiulth, people from Fort Rupert. The rest of the
tribes, we call them bakum-kwala. I was asked if I was raised by an elder
because I spoke our language and I said yeah, speaking our language, Kwakwala.
They said, We don’t Kwakwala, we bakum’wala because we are bakum. Only the
Kwagiulth kwakwala. I grew up on New Vancouver in the village before coming to
the Residential School. I miss it. There were times that I’d go in the rowboat
and rowed across to Village Island to go visit my brother Art Dick Jr. Took me
about 15 minutes. Just next door neighbors. And then Turnour and Gilford Island
over the other way. And Kingcome way up there. We would visit one another at
night. They’d have a gas lamp. We’d have tea and toast or whatever. Good
memories. My late mother had a raspberry patch. She’d make jam and huckleberries
and salmon berries and salal, whatever she could get a hold of, she’d make jam
and prepare for the winter. Jarred fish and smoked fish and preserve it. Mostly
salmon. If we got some clams, she’d preserve clams, too. People hunt deer during
the winter months. We used to walk the logging roads. We just packed the deer
home because we didn’t have any wheels back then. There was a little farm on the
backside of the village for apples and things like that. There used to be a guy
that lived there for a while. I can’t remember his name. There was a creek there
for fish out back. We used to go what we used to call creek-robbing at night.
We’d bring home what-
ever fish we could find, smoke it. We’d come out every two weeks, take the
thing, get a little bit of groceries and go back. We didn’t have much groceries
but we survived. I was logging for 33 years. Over in Beaver Cove. Just across
here on the island by Telegraph Cove. 33 years on the water, running those
side-winders, dozer-boats. We used to sing with a group but it kind of faded
out. With William, Wah. The kwakwadah group.
Helen Glendale: Our house would be just packed when we would have singing nights
with William, with Wah. People on stairs and chairs all everywhere. They loved
coming here because I had snacks every night. [laughter] I thought when it first
started that I was going to be the first place and then we’d move onto the next
home and keep going. We never moved from here. [laughter]
Norman: We enjoyed having people here. It was fun.
Helen: All ages. Even the little kids. Specially if there was potlatches coming
up – they’d all come and practice the songs of that family that they have.
Norman: We heard different songs and see different dances from different people
that have potlatches. Things we’ve never seen before.
Helen: We should have more language for our kids while they’re young.
Norman: We did that book – Love You Forever. It took us a while to do it but we
had fun doing it.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





LIVING CULTURES: BEYOND THE FRAME

A Photograph of a Kwakwaka’wakw Chief by Edward S. Curtis
A Photograph of Kwakwaka’wakw Chief Beau Dick by Sharon Eva Grainger

The last year and a half has been an extraordinary experience as an artist and a
photographer welcomed into the world of Indigenous communities. I have traveled
the length of the Northwest Coast from Alaska to the San Juan Islands,
photographing in preparation for my participation in the Beyond the Frame
project sponsored by the Seattle Public Library. This project includes two
shows: one of color images and a second that includes 15 original Edward S.
Curtis Photogravures from one of the original volumes of Curtis’ magnum opus:
The North American Indian.

The shows also include Indigenous Regalia from the entire coast. Both shows are
taken from 20 years of my photographic work,
revisiting Curtis images and traveling the Northwest coast camera in hand.

The color show opened on January 13, 2018.
The black and white show opened to the public on February 23rd.
On  February 28th there was a reception.
I also spoke at a special event on the evening of February 28th.

Initially the project was to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the birth of
Edward S. Curtis. Early on, though, the project became and continues to be a
celebration of the Native Living Cultures of the Northwest Coast. Curtis
photographed the Indigenous peoples of North America in the early 1900’s when he
and most white people thought these cultures were disappearing.

My goal became, and continues to be, to show these cultures as vibrant, alive
and very important communities of the Northwest Coast of North America. I have
been honored to visually document the evolving and growing world of Northwest
Coast Indigenous peoples who continue to celebrate their home at the edge of the
sea.

                                                                               
                                                                               
                                                                               
 
                                                                               
                                                                               
                                                                               
     Photographer Sharon Eva Grainger


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Dos Polacas is pleased to announce a spectacular exhibit of the First Nations
people of the Pacific Northwest
at the Seattle Public Library from January 13th to April 30th, 2018.
Comprised of photography by Dos Polacas' own Sharon Eva Grainger,
the exhibit also displays magnificent regalia from four living cultures of our
region.
Here is the formal announcement:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




THE LIVING CULTURES OF THE NORTHWEST COAST


"In the spirit of Great Tribal Honor, your name has been called to come forth
and witness,
hear and feel the Living Cultures of the Northwest Coast
as depicted by the tribally appointed photographer, Sharon Eva Grainger.
Four Nations' voices will be heard.
They are, from North to South,
the Tlingit,
Haida,
Kwakwaka'wakw
and Lummi."
 
-- Jim Thomas and Sharon Eva Grainger

"Living Cultures"
Photographs by Sharon Eva Grainger
 Seattle Public Central Library,  1000 Fourth Avenue, Seattle, WA 98104
Saturday, January 13, 2018 to Monday April 30, 2018
Free Admission
Central Library
1000 Fourth Ave.
Seattle, WA 98104



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




MOVING AHEAD WITH
"IN OUR HANDS: THE KEEPERS OF THE BOX OF TREASURES"

From May 25th to June 10th and again from December 6th to December 9th, Sharon
and Pamela are back in Alert Bay, British Columbia adding to our images of the
older members of the Kwakwaka'wakw  community, recording their stories and
memories, seeing old friends and making new ones. In May, we were also very
lucky to accompany some of our youngest friends in kindergarten on a day-long
excursion  to nearby Hanson Island to visit the island refuge created by one of
the founders of Greenpeace 30 years ago. Click here for images of the field
trip.  During the following days one part of their kindergarten classroom was
devoted to creating cedar bracelets to give away as gifts during their upcoming
cultural celebration. Click here for more. 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


You are listening to a native speaker of Kwak'wala saying their word for Thank
you. Click the play button to hear it again. We thank www.firstvoices.com for
this recording.
00:00
00:00
00:01





GILAKAS'LA! THANK YOU! GILAKAS'LA! 

We are grateful for our 102 backers from around the world who given the
financial support to make this important book project possible!
We thank everyone in Alert Bay, British Columbia who has given us permission to
use their portraits and words in our book "In Our Hands: The Keepers of the Box
of Treasures."
We are so grateful to the families who have given us permission to use the
photographs and words of their grannies and grandfathers, aunties and uncles to
fill this book with memories, reflections and stories.
Many people have given us great advice, helped us out in so many ways small and
large, spread the word to their networks and provided us with a community that
has made this book possible.
We would especially like to thank Headman Jim Thomas “kHatsati” – “The Great
One”,  “Shaa Ye Gun” – “Keeper of the Mountain” for encouraging us, standing up
and speaking in support of our project at many gatherings. 
Now we turn to our work: creating more portraits of faces and hands, recording
more interviews, especially stories in Kwak'wala. We will be organizing it all
into a book for publication.
We will have updates here on our website on a regular basis.
If you have pledged, there will be a special section on the Kickstarter website,
Spotlight, devoted to our progress. Within two to three weeks, you will receive
more information on that.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





WE HAVE SURPASSED $25,000 !

We are now officially stamped as Successful Kickstarter Creators and the future
published authors of “In Our Hands: The Keepers of the Box of Treasures.”  We
are immensely grateful for all the support and trust we have received.  We are
looking forward to spending our time immersed in portraits and interviews in the
Kwakwaka’wakw community.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




OUR EVENT ON MARCH 18TH WAS A RESOUNDING SUCCESS!


Headman Jim Thomas, Tlingit, in support of our Kickstarter
It was thrilling to have everyone there in Seattle's  Smith Tower! Close to 100
people were online or were there in person. We listened raptly as Headman Jim
Thomas told us about why the word for the leaders of the Tlingit is Headman and
not Chief, the difference between big and little  and how little birds and big
bears can inform us about our personal interactions. 
A wonderful, enthusiastic, curious and friendly turnout for our event in
Seattle's Smith Tower

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



What is the Box of Treasures? Video Series


Kickstarter Video


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


For our 4th installment on the video series "What is the Box of Treasures? we
interviewed internationally known Kwakwaka'wakw film-maker Barb Cranmer. Please
click on the image to go to the Video Series.
Our 2nd video released in the Series "What is the Box of Treasures?" is with
traditional culture teacher and mentor, Andrea Cranmer of Alert Bay. Please
click the image to go to the Video Series.
Alert Bay's Big House with a Kwakwaka'wakw Woman in a Cedar Hat and Traditional
Button Blanket.
Dzunakwa (Wild Woman of the Woods) amid autumn's yellow leaves. Click on the
image to watch our Kickstarter video.

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The speaker in this 1st video interview is Patricia "Trish" Nolie, a member of
the Kwakwaka'wakw Nation, a Hamatsa and someone who feels strongly about this
subject and her family.  Here is  the 2-minute version of her response to the
question "What does the Box of Treasures mean to you?" For the 7-minute version,
please click HERE.

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But wait!
What does the phrase 'Box of Treasures' in the title of our book actually mean?
It turns out that it means something different to different people.
We were lucky enough to have seven people in Alert Bay, a First Nations
community of British Columbia, respond to our question
"What does the Box of Treasures mean to you?"
Our respondents ranged in ages from 14 years old up to 83 years old with a broad
range of backgrounds.
Click Dos Polacas' video series to see the wonderful responses to this
fascinating and personal question.

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2016 RECONCILIATION POLE:
COPPER NAILS



Over the last few months, while the Reconciliation Pole has been at the Museum
of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver B.C., there
has been a steady flow of visitors and especially First Nation school groups
from around the area.  
Click here to read more about this remarkable inter-generational making of
history.

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2016 RECONCILIATION POLE:
A JOURNEY FORWARD OF UNDERSTANDING, TRUTH AND RESPECT

James Hart at work on the Reconciliation Pole
Since 2014, James Hart, the renowned Haida artist from Haida Gwaii,  his family
and fellow Haida carvers have been carving an 800-year-old cedar tree. Their
hands are transforming this red cedar into the story of reconciliation as an act
of healing from the deep wounds caused by the indigenous Residential School
system.

Click here to read Sharon's account of the last three years as she has watched
the Reconciliation Pole take shape.
Click here to see a video-slideshow of an interview with James Hart and a
celebration of the Reconciliation Pole's arrival at the Museum of Anthropology
in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Please join us to witness the ongoing story of the indigenous people carving
their past, present and future into the Reconciliation Pole.

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AUGUST 25, 2016, INDIGENOUS PEOPLES HONOR
 THE ENVIRONMENT AND ITS CREATURES BY JOINING IN THE CELEBRATION OF
THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE #NATIONALPARKSERVICE

Digital technology broadcast the 100th anniversary celebrations of the National
Park Service involving First Nations people. Live streaming of events, Twitter
hashtags, regular blasts on Facebook, and posts are everywhere, whether it’s
images, music or speeches from events. We, Dos Polacas, have noticed a change
over the last few years: native communities are handling this technology rather
than being handled by it.
Technology, whether it is 19th century radio or 21st century internet, has been
a tool to assimilate indigenous communities. Assimilation reads as colonization:
attempting to erase the native culture institutionally, socially, economically
through a systemic obliteration of the structures holding native communities
together. The accumulated result has been disastrous: an overwhelming perception
of poverty, neglect, depersonalization and powerlessness within native
communities.
In 2016 we have witnessed the explosive growth of indigenous use of digital
technology and a strong native presence on social media.
Technologies, once used to assimilate, dilute and weaken indigenous cultures
around the world, are now being by natives in their struggles to protect the
environment, safeguard their way of life and celebrate the resilience of their
peoples.
The result has been some changes in laws, policies and perceptions. And maybe
even more reverence and protection for Mother Earth but we’ll just have to wait
and see.

Glacier Bay, Alaska: Big House Opening Ceremony
English Camp, San Juan Island, Washington: Coast Salish Totem Pole Dedication
St. Mark's Cathedral, Seattle, Washington: Lummi Nation Totem Pole Journey

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VIDEO: WELCOMING THE CANOE FAMILIES TO NISQUALLY

Next best things to being at the Paddle To Nisqually: check out our video!
A thrilling beginning to days and days of ceremony, singing and dancing.
While Dos Polacas were unable to be there for the entire week, we are so
thankful we were there when the canoes arrived! 

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AUGUST 2016: DOS POLACAS ATTEND & DOCUMENT
2016 PADDLE TO NISQUALLY 
CANOE JOURNEY

A canoe journey is a weaving that every year unravels and is re-woven again for
warmth, protection and healing. 
In the spring paddlers gather to ready themselves, their canoes and their hearts
for the journey.
The older generation looks on, remembering their own journeys across the waters
of the Pacific Northwest, down rivers and up coasts.
Excited children run back and forth waiting for their time to take up the
paddle.
The paddlers feel the energy gathering.



For a more complete recounting of this memorable event, click HERE.
Sights and sounds, ancient and modern, songs and carvings, all reflect
the resilience and beauty of this indigenous culture stretching coast to coast
and north and south. 

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JUNE 2016: DOS POLACAS VISIT ALERT BAY FOR
THE SALMON PAGEANT, JUNE SPORTS AND A FEAST!

Alert Bay - June Pageantry We are so fortunate to have made the wonderful
connections we have over the last 18 years in Alert Bay. This community
continues to be a source of joy, laughter, knowledge and deepening friendships.
In June 2016 we brought a slideshow of the elders' portraits from our book
project "In the Hands of Our Elders" to the U'Mista Cultural Center in Alert
Bay to let the community see what we were doing. 
It was June Sports Weekend and full of soccer and community events including
 * the Salmon pageant to choose the Salmon Prince and Princess
 * a fantastic and supernatural parade marking the opening of June Sports
 * a feast celebrating the graduation of several members of the Dawson family to
   which we were invited to photograph and record

2016 Salmon Prince and Princess
A parade kicks off festivities. This year's theme: Potlatch.
Salmon cooking around the Big House fire in preparation for the Dawson feast

All weekend the eagles serenaded us (as only eagles can), the ravens urged us
forward and the serendipities multiplied. We came home exhausted and happy, full
of experiences reinforcing our "In the Hands of Our Elders" book project!

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DOS POLACAS' JOB IS
==>  TAKING PORTRAITS OF
AND
==>  LISTENING TO THE ELDERS 



Dos Polacas found themselves in Vancouver, British Columbia on April 2016 in the
presence of two chiefs,
one Tlingit and one Kwakwaka'wakw.
Jim Thomas, Tlingit, and Beau Dick, Kwakwaka'wakw, were telling stories and
teasing us,
finding out they had family ties in common and glorying in a new friendship.
Sharon took photographs and Pamela recorded the stories while Zenia
Pakker-Kozicki was there to video it all.
Click HERE and HERE to check out two of the stories from this magical gathering!

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




 "IN THE HANDS OF OUR ELDERS" 

Uses Sharon Eva Grainger's portraits of Elders to celebrate the Elders'
resilience, through their stories,
ceremonies and language.

Intersperses Elders' portraits with stories, told in the elders' own words,
recorded and transcribed by Pamela Pakker-Kozicki.

The Elders' strength is creating a path to a future where children,
grand-children
and great grand-children will derive their own resiliency from the legacy
offered by today's Elders and from the grounding their culture gives them.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




WE ARE
SUPPORTED
BY YOU AND:



 * the U'Mista Cultural Center, Alert Bay, British Columbia, 
 * the Burke Museum in Seattle
 * the University of British Columbia Belkin Gallery
 * the Bill Reid Gallery in Vancouver BC 
 * and Lindblad Expeditions.

These organizations have all pledged to broadcast "In The Hands of Our Elders"
October 2016 Kickstarter updates to their followers.
We are very grateful for their support.



The October 2016 Kickstarter funds will go to
 * publishing 500 to 1,000 books
 * equipment
 * travel  

100% of the proceeds from book sales will go toward indigenous language
education.
The book will contain:
 * 150 pages of intimate black and white portrait photography of the
   Kwakwaka'wakw people by Sharon Eva Grainger
 * Sharon Eva Grainger's stunning photography of the Pacific Northwest coast
 * Elders' personal interviews and stories
 * A dedicated webpage with recorded stories in both English and Kwak’wala 


In March 2016, 137 people pledged to get "In the Hands of Our Elders" published.
Thank you to everyone who pledged!
We missed our target but we will be coming back in October 2016 with another
Kickstarter campaign.
We learned so much we cannot begin to tell you.
We have been evaluating our March 2016 Kickstarter.
Changes in our October 2016 Kickstarter and In the Hands of Our Elders book
project:
==> involving people from different international organizations, as well as
indigenous people, 
==> tweaking reward levels to make our project and the In the Hands of Our
Elders book more accessible to more people

Here (below) is a video of Darrell Hillaire, Lummi Nation, Director of the Lummi
Youth Academy,
speaking, as only he can, in support of this ground-breaking book project.
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Our Kickstarter Launch event, held Sunday Feb 21, 2016 on the 29th Floor of the
Historic Smith Tower, in the offices of Tahzoo,
gathered  supporters together from all over.
Here (below)is an excerpt what Chief Jim Thomas, Tlingit, said
in support of Dos Polacas' book project "In the Hands of Our Elders."
If you were there, you can relive it! If you weren't, you can enjoy a 5-minute
snippet of what we heard and felt.

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The twinkling eyes of Auntie Ethel, Alert Bay, British Columbia
The Feb and March 2016 Kickstarter Campaign's goal was to raise money to
finish and publish the book   "In the Hands of Our Elders." Even though we fell
short, we learned a lot.

So stay tuned for our next Kickstarter in October 2016.

After all, you don't want the  Bukwus to come find you, do you?

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Bukwus, wild man of Kwakwaka'wakw legend, courtesy of Chief Beau Dick


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January 15th and 16th 2016


LALAKENIS/ALL DIRECTIONS: A JOURNEY OF TRUTH AND UNITY

Box of Treasures
Transformation Mask
Lalakenis/All Directions Procession

January 16th 2016 was a "grey on grey day with shades of dark green." A mix of
low-hanging clouds and rain. In other words, a perfect January day in the
Pacific Northwest. First Nations people were gathering, preparing for the
Procession to inaugurate the official opening of Vancouver UBC's Belkin Gallery
exhibit "Lalakenis/All Directions: A Journey of Truth and Unity."
It celebrates the 4,500 km path traveled by Chief Beau Dick, Chief Giindajin
Haawasti Guujaaw of the Haida Nation and 21 others to Ottawa. Beau started out
with his two daughters, Linnea and Geraldine and a dozen other companions  in
February 2013 from Quatsino on the northwest side of Vancouver Island.
Like a rock dropped into a pond, the ripples from their journey have spread far
and risen high.
In Victoria on the steps of the Legislature, they presented coppers brought from
their communities and made a Copper Cutting Ceremony, taking the unprecedented
step of reintroducing the symbolic breaking of coppers to the modern political
world. The following year, they were in Ottawa. Coppers, with all their
emotional and institutional weight, were now broken to express how one entity -
the indigenous people and their natural environment - had been wronged,
disparaged and marginalized by the Canadian government through unjust policies
and denying of treaty rights. To damage the environment is to injure the spirit
and heart of the indigenous people.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




PARIS, DECEMBER 2015
DOS POLACAS AT THE PARIS CLIMATE CHANGE CONFERENCE (COP21)


The Paris Climate Change Conference doesn't only include heads of state.
Representatives from scores of indigenous groups from around the planet have met
in Paris during the last weeks of 2015.

It began November 25th with "Resilience in a time of uncertainty: Indigenous
peoples and climate change” with speakers from many indigenous groups from the
Navajo to the Sami, from Tahiti to Tibet. 

Between December 5th and December 12th, Dos Polacas has been honored to have
their work presented at two different times by indigenous representatives at
the Climate Change Conference.
The Lummi Nation Youth Paddlers have chosen to exhibit a special Dos Polacas
slide presentation during their traditional give-away, or potlatch in the
Indigenous Pavilion. Photography by Sharon Eva Grainger and the writings of
Pamela Pakker-Kozicki combine into a moving display of images highlighting
the spectacular natural beauty of the Pacific Northwest and
the strength of the Lummi Nation Youth Paddlers.
Jon Waterhouse, an indigenous climate activist who has been invited to speak at
the Climate Change Conference, will also be showing Dos Polacas' work  during
his speech “A Call of Action: Sovereign Nations and Global Warming,” using
Sharon’s images and Pamela’s writings plus other work by photographers from
across North America.



DOS POLACAS

About
Background & Experience
Contact
Blog



INFO

Email: dospolacasonlummi@gmail.com
Phone: 206-789-7454
Mailing Address: P. O. Box 152
Lummi Island, Washington 98262




© COPYRIGHT 2015. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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