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Writer's pictureDaisee King

Skaˀnikú·lat founder facilitates #LanguagesBack Workshops with In-Na-Po (Indigenous Nations Poets)

Below is the In-Na-Po, Indigenous Nations Poets, press release for thier upcoming inaugural #LanguagesBack Workshops.


Indigenous Nations Poets To Host Trio of #LanguageBack Workshops


In-Na-Po, Indigenous Nations Poets, is delighted to announce the launch of three inaugural

#LanguageBack Workshops to be held in Wisconsin during November and December of 2024.

Funded in part by a grant from Wisconsin Humanities*, with funds from the National

Endowment for the Humanities, the In-Na-Po #LanguageBack workshops center on writing

poetry that incorporates Indigenous languages and tribal teachings. In-Na-Po welcomes

Indigenous language learners of all levels to participate in a one-day Indigenous language and

poetry workshop with the guidance of Indigenous language experts, community members, and

poets. The three workshops will take place as follows: Menominee and Mohican Language and

Poetics: November 9th, 2024 at College of the Menominee Nation, Keshena, WI, Oneida and

Anishinaabemowin Language and Poetics: November 23rd, 2024 at University of

Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, and Anishinaabemowin Language and Poetics:

December 7th, 2024 at Lake of the Torches Casino, Lac du Flambeau, WI. All of the

#LanguageBack Workshops are free and will include meals, supplies, and literary resources for

all participants. Knowledge of Indigenous languages or experience writing poetry is not

required.


“We both learn and teach Indigenous languages through poetry writing and performance," says

In-Na-Po Founding Director Dr. Kimberly Blaeser. “Because the language carries important

teaching—environmental, spiritual, and subsistence teaching (among others)—using the

language in poetry can also carry that Traditional Indigenous Knowledge into the world at a

time our planet desperately needs it.”


With help from project and site coordinators Dr. Ryan Winn (College of the Menominee

Nation), Dr. Michael Wilson (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee,) and Carol Amour, (First

Nations Traveling Resource Center), In-Na-Po staff, including Blaeser (Project Director),

Emily Clarke (Project Manager), and Sunni Parisien (Project Assistant) have invited the

following list of Indigenous language experts and poets to collaboratively facilitate the

#LanguageBack workshops: Richard Oshkeshequoam (Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin),

Brock Scheiber (Mahican), Dr. Yekuhsi•yó Rosa King (Oneida Nation), and Wayne Valliere

(Lac du Flambeau Ojibwe).


Teaching and learning Indigenous languages in a community setting can be a tool to

community wellness, Tribal Sovereignty, and self-determination,” says language expert Dr.

Rosa King. “Learning our languages in our community builds our nations, relationships, and

restores our kinship practices. Our languages are a medicine and can be healing for our people and build our identity as a collective. By reclaiming languages in our own spaces, we are able to build up our nations once again, heal our communities, empower our learners, and ensure our survival for the next seven generations.”


The #LanguageBack workshops will include leadership from language experts, Indigenous

poets, project and site coordinators, and In-Na-Po staff. Together, they have planned a day of

presentations and communal activities geared to help participants stretch their language skills

using the tools of poetry. Filmmaker Dusan Harmic of Stumptown Media and Lane Hall of the

Overpass Light Brigade will be present at the workshops to film participants partaking in

activities as well as conduct interviews for a larger In-Na-Po film project. Throughout the day,

participants will take part in Indigenous language lessons, delve into the world of Indigenous

poetics and discuss how language and poetry intersect, write their own poems inspired by the

use of Indigenous languages, and have the opportunity to appear on camera. The day will

conclude with a community dinner and reading in which participants will have the opportunity

to discuss and celebrate new language knowledge and the work they created.


In-Na-Po is a national poetry community committed to mentoring emerging writers, nurturing

the growth of Indigenous poetic practices, and raising the visibility of all Native writers past,

present, and future.


*Wisconsin Humanities strengthens our democracy through educational and cultural programs

that build connections and understanding among people of all backgrounds and beliefs

throughout the state. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this

project do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.


IN-NA-PO Contact

Emily Clarke






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