Writing Raven

Writing Raven
Location
Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Birthday
March 15
Bio
I am a twenty-something Tlingit/Athabascan woman. I never plan on leaving Alaska. And - though I wouldn't have thought this was any kind of issue until recent inquiries - am straight, and always plan on being straight, as well. :) I am not married and have no children, so I frequently take children from my friends, spoil them ridiculously, and send them back. I've also begun to write my first book.

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MAY 7, 2009 3:45AM

Two worlds

Rate: 9 Flag

After "recovering" from a nice little vacation, including an awful lot of "light" fair on the blog lately, I came across this beautiful, thoughtful article in the Arctic Sounder. It was written by Yaari Kingeekuk, a woman I've met on several occasions, who now works for the Alaska Native Heritage Center. It is not a pointed article so much as a discussion of being in and of two worlds - rural and urban, traditional and contemporary, Native and non-Native. She ends:

Even though I feel broken in half, I have to make the best of both worlds to survive. My heart is at home living the cultural ways, but my physical being is here in the city. This is me, this is who I am. Living in both worlds and must remember to keep paddling against the wind.


She paints a picture that I think many Native people around my age/generation feel, but don't know how to put into words - or maybe even feel they shouldn't put into words. Is it complaining? Is it not being grateful? Is it focusing on things that can't be fixed?

Even here, though, I don't know if I'm totally where Yaari is. Even those of us from similar culture, and similar generation get lumped into the idea that we all had a similar experience. I don't, like Yaari, feel "broken in half." Yet at the same time, living in a state with ancestral ties going back literally tens of thousands of years - I have never felt as if I belonged anywhere.

If you asked any of my relatives from where I was born, I can lay money on them saying I was a "city girl." Raised in an urban environment - long removed from any rural setting. Yet friends, people I've met here in town, see me as coming from rural stock. A village girl. Even my own father asked me just a few months ago, "When people ask you where you're from, what do you tell them?"

I haven't actually figured that out yet. I graduated from a high school with more people in it than the town I was born in. I didn't grow up in Anchorage, and even if I'm traveling out of state, I never say I'm "from" Anchorage. I love herring eggs on kelp, but like my restaurant options. I love button blankets and learning the formal Tlingit introduction - but see the need to spend as much time honing computer and job skills. I would love to move back to Southeast, even in the near future, but see the possibility of that as slim to none, with little job opportunity and high cost. In Anchorage I have a great job, lots of creature comforts, "stuff to do" every weekend - but I also have limited access to my culture, the kind of "nature" I love, or an awful lot of family.

The real fun stuff is navigating the racial front. I am half Native - why don't I say I am half white? Why don't I identify with the "white" side? Message: Native people need to get educated, get good jobs, build the economy - leave the villages. Simultaneous message: Native people need to learn the cultural ways, remember ancestral ways, be "real" Natives.

One thing I am certain of when I read things like Yaari's article - in the struggle to figure out what is best, how to honor culture, how to honor the gifts you're given, what to compromise, what to fight for... all these things I don't feel I'm any closer to figuring out - I am not alone. There are a couple of generations of Native people that are stumbling along this path with me.

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Comments

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Wonderful to learn of your perceptions as I continue to enjoy the honest revalations you share. You're work is important.
Take it easy, Raven.
I think your observations apply more widely to most anyone born into two cultures or who has been "transplanted" from one culture to a quite different one. I have watched my son's father struggle and never really "take" in the northern clime he was transplanted to; our son seems to be assimilating bits of both for now, but I expect the questions and challenges will come in a few years' time.
This is a discussion not just limited to your situation but to all who find themselves between two worlds. Thank you for saying it so beautifully.
Your article is excellent .... your questions better. Why a foot in both worlds? Why the difficulties of learning two cultures? Why half native instead of white? Your walk will be a spiritual one ... you will have wisdom one day to impart. Your path is important.
I feel like you have to identify as Native, because without you the Native population declines ever more rapidly.
Your voice is so important.
I am related, by marriage, to a Shoshone-Bannock poet and story teller (My first cousin married a Native American) and their daughter is, like you, a combination of two very different lineages. She has always used her Native name - Seahdom - and identifies as Native.
My side of her - the white side - goes back to the Mayflower. We're direct descendants of William Bradford. She could join the DAR - Daughter's of the American Revolution.
Not that she, or I for that matter, has any interest in joining that sexist and racist clan of old, white shrews.

I'm always happy when I see you have posted. Your writing is beautiful, and you always leave me thinking.
I feel that pull between my two selves all the time, Raven. From my Native family members, I feel pressure to be more Native, to represent them and come back to the rez to make life better for our whole tribe. The weight of the tribe on my shoulders, largely due to my college degree. From my white family members, I hear assimilate, assimilate, assimilate.

I don't know how to balance the two. I wish I did. But I feel better, as you do, stumbling along this path in the company of others.
This really resonated with me:

"The real fun stuff is navigating the racial front. I am half Native - why don't I say I am half white? Why don't I identify with the "white" side?"

My mother is Choctaw; my father was white, but I often get accused of "hating white people" simply because I identify as Native. How could I possibly hate my beloved father?

Great post. Thank you.
Interesting challenges you face. Thank you for sharing them.
I don't know if this has anything to do with what you wrote. I was raised a Catholic. I have converted to Hindu meditation type religion. It changed my life in a positive way. Though I have never personally know a person from India very well. This is me, it is the most important thing in the world to me.
A very honest piece in which I can completely identify. The messages always seem to contradict one another. And I understand what Yaari means, because that contradiction starts to divide us inside, as well.

Thanks for this post.
Hello Raven =) This is Yaari Kingeekuk whose article you read. I was sitting here curiously wondering, "Who this this person I know that wrote this blog?" I just wanted to say thank you for writing this piece. I enjoyed it. It made me think about how there are so many different perspectives of people raised in the village and moving to the city. I do have a hard time, and probably will for the rest of my time here, the differences. It's harder to live at home, but at the same time to me it's more rewarding. Being raised by very traditional elders and doing cultural activities day to day at home, that I miss greatly! There is only so much you can do here. I teach about my culture, but not enough teaching hands on which is important to me. I feel bad about not being able to teach my children the hands on things I did that was taught to me because it just isn't here. But yet, I can't live at home. I don't have a house to come home to or any finances to support me and my children. It tears me up inside. It eats me alive. Some days are harder than others. But thank you so much for writing this blog. I do really appreciate it. Next time you see me, please let me know who wrote this. I'd like to know! Igamsiqaayugvikamken (thank you)!