Nuxalk: American Indian Rituals Featured
Below is an extract from article published by the International Information Programs of the
Washington – Invited to tell their own stories in a museum exhibit, one native tribal community, the Kwakwaka’wakw, recounts how the Canadian government banned their potlatches, or ceremonial feasts, from the 1880s to the 1950s, jailing those who defied the ban and confiscating their regalia and masks.
Yet another tribe, the Nuxalk, shows how, during the long years of the potlatch ban, people told the traditional stories at night in secret.
A groundbreaking exhibit is in its final months at the
Listening to Our Ancestors: The Art of Native Life along the
“Our way of being, our view of the world in all its depth and complexity, continues to define us,” say members of the Tsimshian nation. “The ceremonial objects used yesterday and today are only separated by time; they still hold the heart of the people within them.”
What is so special about Listening to Our Ancestors is that members of each of the 11 native groups whose culture is represented worked with museum staff as “curators,” deciding which objects to display and how to present them. This unique approach is a natural outcome of the views of NMAI Director W. Richard West Jr., himself a member of the
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The 11 nations represented are the Coast Salish, Makah, Nuu-chah-nulth, Kwakwaka’wakw, Heiltsuk, Nuxalk, Tsimshian, Gitxsan, Nisga’a, Haida and Tlingit.
The tribal members provide a vital perspective on the deeper meaning the objects hold and describe how much they remain an essential part of the spiritual lives of these peoples. As a result, exhibition objects are accompanied by contemporary interpretations by American Indians and native peoples connecting them to the voices of their ancestors.
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There are dance performances, art demonstrations and storytelling in conjunction with Listening to Our Ancestors. For those who are unable to travel to
Listening to Our Ancestors remains on display until January 2, 2007. The online exhibition is available on the NMAI Web-Site.