Easter at the Tulalip Resort Casino: One Special Day, Several Dining Choices

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On Sunday, March 27, Select From Several Egg-citing Dining Options For The Whole Family

Tulalip, Washington — The chef team at the Tulalip Resort Casino has hatched several egg-citing dining options for the whole family. Guests can choose between two grand buffet brunches with one in the Orca Ballroom and one at their signature Eagles Buffet, to dinner specials at the award-winning Blackfish Wild Salmon Grill, Tulalip Bay Restaurant and Cedars Cafe. The offerings are a dining sanctuary for the senses.

Annual Orca Ballroom Easter Sunday Brunch
The annual Easter festivities in the Orca Ballroom are an awe-inspiring culinary adventure for the entire family. Diners can enjoy an array of specialties, such as the made-to-order omelet station, a carving station with Roast Baron of Beef and Bone in Ham, Niçoise Potato Salad, pasta station featuring a build your own Fettuccine and more, and Teriyaki Salmon with shiitake mushrooms, to Pigs in the Blanket and a Belgian Waffle display with fresh berries, whipped cream and maple syrup.

For the sweet tooth in all of us—a plethora of dessert delights will be available, featuring Carrot Cake with maple cream cheese frosting, Decorated Egg Shaped Sugar Cookies, Tropical Fruit Breton Tart, Chocolate Dipped Coconut Macaroons, Lemon Panna Cotta, and Individual Blueberry Crisps.

Children can also enjoy their very own kid’s knee-high buffet, featuring Mini Pepperoni Pizzas, Chicken Strips, Macaroni and Cheese Bites, and Mini Burgers.

Adults and children can celebrate the holiday in grand style in the Resort’s Orca Ballroom, with seating from 11:30 am to 2:00 pm. Easter brunch is priced at $42 inclusive for adults and $22 for children ages 4 to 12. Reservations* are highly recommended and can be made by calling 360-716-6888.

*Note: All reservations will have pre-assigned tables; each reservation will require pre-payment at time of booking and is non-refundable; parties of 10 or more will be placed within close proximity of each other.

Eagles Buffet
Eagles Buffet is offering a mouth-watering selection for Easter Sunday Brunch, Dinner, and items that will be served all day during both meal services. The menu** will feature a selection of brunch items, such as Made to Order Waffles, Steak and Eggs with chopped onion rings and pepper jack cheese, Prime Rib Hash, French Toast Casserole with bananas and rum sauce, and BBQ Braised Pork Belly.

With a nod towards dinner, here are a few palate teasers: Rotisserie Leg of Lamb with rosemary and garlic, Artichoke and Spinach Stuffed Chicken wrapped in bacon, Smoked BBQ Beef Ribs, Stuffed Shells with Italian sausage marinara sauce, and Vegetable Lasagna.

Throughout the day guests can also enjoy chef specials, such as the Baked Wild Salmon with lemon dill pepper, Slow Roasted Prime Rib, Honey Baked Ham, Tender Pot Roast, a grand Salad Bar, and a huge dessert selection with Snoqualmie Gourmet Ice Cream.

Savor Eagles Buffet Easter Sunday Brunch and Dinner all day from 9 am to 9 pm. The holiday brunch and dinner are priced at $24.95 for adults and $13.95 for children ages 2 to 10 (prices do not include sales tax and gratuity). Tables are seated on a first come, first served basis. For more information, call 360-716-1462, or visit online at www.tulalipresort.com.

**Note: Menu items subject to change due to availability.

Blackfish Wild Salmon Grill 
Blackfish Wild Salmon Grill is the Resort’s innovative Pacific Northwest seafood restaurant, influenced by traditional tribal culture and cuisine, served in a casual setting.

This year, Chef David Buchanan will be serving fresh Pacific Halibut with a pine nut pesto crust laced with Parmesan Cheese and served with gourmet rice blend, baby carrots, patty pain squash, French green beans, and pesto lemon beurre blanc for $39. The special will be available in addition to the regular dinner menu from 5 pm until closing on Sunday, March 27, 2016. To book a table online, visit OpenTable, or reserve by phone at 360-716-1100.

Tulalip Bay Restaurant
Tulalip Bay Restaurant is a winning combination of a classic steakhouse and a traditional Italian restaurant with a superior wine list — where old world taste is fused with local Northwest ingredients.

For Easter 2016, Tulalip Bay Chef Jeremy Taisey has crafted a Lavender and Rosemary Crusted Lamb accompanied with cauliflower puree, local fiddleheads, apricots, wild mushrooms, and lamb demi-glace. The special is priced at $40 and will be available in addition to the regular dinner menu from 5 pm until closing on Sunday, March 27, 2016. To book a table online, visit OpenTable, or reserve by phone at 360-716-1500.

Cedars Cafe
Cedars offers a relaxed atmosphere for breakfast, lunch or dinner.

This Easter Sunday, Chef Brent Clarkson is serving up lamb chops rubbed with olive oil, seasoned with garlic and a fresh herb marinade; served with a Riesling wine demi-glace, orange mint sauce, garlic mashed potatoes, charred asparagus, and crispy onion straws. The special will be available for $25 and comes with a choice of a house salad or soup du jour; and will be in addition to the regular menu on Sunday, March 27, 2016. Cedars Cafe is open 24 hours a day. For more information and to reserve a table by phone, call 360-716-1276.

 

Skate On: New skate park opens at Tulalip

Photo/Micheal Rios
Photo/Micheal Rios

 

By Micheal Rios, Tulalip News

It was back on May 3, 2014 that the Tulalip Board of Directors made a motion to approve funding to build a community skate park. The skate park’s purpose is to give Tulalip youth another recreational opportunity, while offering alternative sport modalities to youth not interested in the most popular reservation activities, such as basketball, volleyball, and weight lifting. Nearly 21 months after the Board motion, after much careful planning and collaboration with Tulalip skateboarders, the Debra Barto Memorial Skate Park officially opened on Friday, February 19.

There has always been a passion for skateboarding amongst Tulalip youth, but they didn’t have an outlet for that passion or a location to showcase their skateboarding skills on the reservation until now. The newly minted Tulalip skate park cost an estimated $400,000 and is nearly 12,000 square feet in size. It features a variety of skating elements including half-pipes, quarter-pipes, ramps, bowls, and grinding rails.

 

Photo/Micheal Rios
Photo/Micheal Rios

 

Ours is but one of the growing number of skate parks being built on Pacific Northwest reservations to address the recreational needs of Native youth. Recently, the Port Gamble S’Klallam, Muckleshoot, and Lummi reservations have opened skate parks of their own.

Seattle-based Grindline Skatepark, Inc was contracted for the design and construction of Tulalip’s skate park. Grindline emphasizes community engagement during the design process, and that was displayed during a number of collaboration meetings Grindline designers had with Tulalip skateboarders and the Board of Directors.

Grindline, who also built the Port Gamble S’Klallam skate park, is well-known for creating progressive and engaging skate parks with a design philosophy that each be tailored to its users and existing surroundings. To tailor to the Tulalip location, key aspects of our culture can be found in the skate park as stylized representations of a lake, river, waves and even an orca tail fin.

Prior to the ribbon cutting ceremony held at the skate park, there was a presentation to honor the skate park’s namesake Debra Parto. According to those who knew her best, her friends and family, Debra was a beautiful, kind and gentle spirit who had a nurturing energy to all. She loved helping people and supporting the youth in the Tulalip community.

Debra was familiar with skateboarding through her children and their friends. She became a big supporter of the sport and all of the youth who participated in it. For many years, she would listen to the youth’s dream of having their own skate park in Tulalip and she started dreaming with them. Debra was determined to see the youth’s dream to have skate park built on the reservation come to fruition. She supported youth in the request for funding in 2014.

Debra passed away June 24 of breast cancer at age 49, but her determination lived on through her children and all those youth she dreamed with. Now, we are able to honor her for her fight, encouragement, support and love with what is now the Debra Barto Memorial Skate Park.

“She wanted to make sure the young ones were happy and they have a fun, safe place to go,” said Debra’s son Shane McLean. “When you’re out there skating, you fall down a lot and get a lot of scrapes and bruises. That’s how I think my mom’s life was, with a lot of ups and downs, but she always got back up and kept on doing her thing.”

 

Design by Ty Juvinel
Design by Ty Juvinel

 

Having a skate park in our community will address many of the goals the Board and Youth Service workers are tasked to achieve for our Native youth. Understanding the need to support the youth who wish to pursue healthy, active lifestyles and provide them a safe and fun area to progress in their athletic interests has remained a constant mission for the Tulalip Tribes.

The commitment to Tulalip youth is commendable and goes to show we will continue to invest in them. As Board of Director Theresa Sheldon said at the ribbon cutting ceremony, “The true leaders are our youth, and any time we can give them a voice and a platform then that’s what we’ll do.”

 

Photo/Micheal Rios
Photo/Micheal Rios

 

In the next syəcəb issue we will be detailing the opening of the Alpheus Gunny Jones Sr. Ball Field. With the additions of the ball field and our skate park, the popular Tulalip Youth Center will continue to grow in capacity and further diversify the activities local youth can participate in.

 

 

Contact Micheal Rios: mrios@tulaliptribes-nsn.gov

Celebrate Valentine’s Day: A Contemporary Love Affair From Rock N’ Roll Romance To Sublime Dining

 Tulalip Resort Casino Offers Sweethearts Multi-Sensual Dining 
Options Combined with Mesmerizing Music

Tulalip, Washington – Tulalip Resort Casino knows how to translate the feelings of love. From events like the Rock Ballad Ball featuring Guns N’ Roses and Aerosmith tribute bands; to seven award-winning food and beverage outlets that feature Valentine inspired Sous Vide Lobster Medallions or Asian-infused dining fare, Tulalip Resort Casino has just what the love doctor ordered.

The Rock Ballad Ball is an out of the box extravaganza offered to the young – and the young at heart. This annual February 14th Valentine’s Day party includes a concert of tribute bands (Appetite for Deception and Aeromyth) featuring music from legendary greats Guns N’ Roses and Aerosmith. Doors open at 6:30 pm with DJ tunes. Dinner starts at 7 pm in the Orca Ballroom where guests can savor a buffet spread offering a selection of two salads, chicken or prime rib entrees, a selection of side dishes (grilled vegetables, penne pasta, mashed potatoes), assorted desserts and coffee/tea. Admirers and their main squeezes can dance the night away to rock pounding sounds starting at 8 pm.

Aeromyth has become known as the top Aerosmith Tribute band worldwide! Playing nationwide as well as International dates such as Mexico, Canada and El Salvador since 2002. Chris Vandahl does an amazing portrayal of Steven Tyler, including all of his dance moves, costumes, stage show and amazing recreation of Tyler’s outrageous vocals! Chris looks so much like Steven Tyler that many people make the mistake of thinking he really is the Aerosmith front man! The band that backs Chris is truly amazing as well, very solid and tight, recreating the music fans know and love – note for note! For more information about the band, visit aerosmithtribute.com.

Appetite for Deception fans are blown away by the attention to detail and variety of material this band delivers.  Appetite for Deception strives for authenticity in all aspects of their live performance – the gear, clothes and precision of the songs included. Everything is in place to take the listener and viewer back to the heyday of Guns N’ Roses. Nearly 20 years to the date of Guns N’ Roses’ formation, Appetite for Deception was put together in Portland, Oregon by five musicians looking to continue their great legacy. The tremendous catalog of music helps to make every show a roller coaster ride of high energy and intense emotion as the memories of that era are brought back to life. For more information about the band, visit appetitefordeception.com.

Rock Ballad Ball is for those 21 and over and offers a no-host bar and festival seating. All-you-can-eat Dinner Buffet and concert tickets are priced at only $75 per person, including tax and gratuity. Tickets must be purchased in advance. To purchase Valentine’s Day Rock Ballad Ball tickets, visit ticketmaster.com or the Casino Box Office (where no additional ticket processing fees are added). Additional details can be found at Rock Ballad Ball.

Prefer something a little more intimate and less ‘rockin’ for a romantic getaway? Tulalip is offering exclusive holiday offerings at two of their world-class restaurants.

Guests can travel to Journeys East where Asian inspiration meets Tulalip hospitality with a blend of cuisine and culture in a modern, Zen-like setting. Wood, metal and glass combine to offer unmatched harmonious décor. A centrally located display kitchen features offerings from Japan, Thailand, China, Korea, and Vietnam. Enjoy handcrafted cocktails, a phenomenal sake selection and award-winning wines.

Valentine’s Day weekend dine-in specials will include Journeys East Wok Finished Lamb Chops as well as the restaurant’s signature Shrimp Hargow Dumpling. These dishes will be available in addition to the regular dinner menu from 5 pm until closing on February 12-14, 2016. To reserve a table online, visit OpenTable, or reserve by phone at 360-716-1880. No passport required – just an appetite for a delectable experience.

Gals and guys can also wow their lover with the Tulalip Bay restaurant – a winning combination of classic steakhouse meets traditional Italian with a superior wine list. Discover what magic occurs when old world taste is fused with local Northwest ingredients. The menu is filled with many delectable culinary twists from prime cut steaks and chops to freshly prepared seafood and classic Italian specialties.

This year’s Valentine’s Day Tulalip Bay dinner special for two includes the Sous Vide Lobster Medallions (due to long cooking time, pre-reservations requested) and a Sea Scallop Mousseline with avocado risotto, glazed thumbelina carrots, lobster air, and caviar along with two special cocktails of Prosecco and prickly pear foam. The special will be available in addition to the regular dinner menu from 5 pm until closing on February 14, 2016. To book a table online, visit OpenTable, or reserve by phone at 360-716-1500.

Whatever floats the proverbial Love Boat this year, Tulalip has it covered!

Hibulb Cultural Center debuts Sing Our Rivers Red

Photo/Micheal Rios, Tulalip News
Photo/Micheal Rios, Tulalip News

 

by Micheal Rios, Tulalip News

The reality.  Since 1980, over 1,181 Native women and girls in Canada have been reported missing or have been murdered. While there isn’t a comprehensive estimate, there are many factors that contribute to the disproportionate number of Indigenous women who are missing and murdered in the United States.

Indigenous women have incurred devastating levels of violence in the United States. According to the US Department of Justice, nearly half of all Native American women have been raped, beaten or stalked by an intimate partner; one in three will be raped in their lifetime; and on some reservations, women are murdered at a rate 10 times higher than the national average. But many factors complicate the reporting and recording of these numbers, including fear, stigma, legal barriers, racism, sexism, and the perpetuation of Native women as sexual objects in mainstream media.

 

This map reflects the diverse community that contributed to the Sing Our Rivers Red earring installation. Over 3,400 earrings were received from over 400 locations for this project – so many that a second installation has been created that will open in Albuquerque this March.
This map reflects the diverse community that contributed to the Sing Our Rivers Red earring installation. Over 3,400 earrings were received from over 400 locations for this project – so many that a second installation has been created that will open in Albuquerque this March.

 

 

The exhibit.  On Friday, January 8, the Hibulb Cultural Center and Natural History Preserve debuted the travelling earing exhibition, Sing Our Rivers Red, created by Diné (Navajo) and Chicana artist Nanibah “Nani” Chacon. The exhibition uses 1,181 single-sided earrings to represent the Indigenous women reported murdered and missing in both Canada and the United States. Nani’s intention is to use the power of this art piece to raise awareness about this epidemic that occurs in the United States and all across Turtle Island. Over 3,406 earring were donated from over 400 people, organizations, groups, and entities from six provinces in Canada and 45 states in the U.S.

Former Board of Director, Deborah Parker, who had an immense role in the 2013 Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) reauthorization, was present to witness the exhibit debut and speak on its importance.

“I thank everyone here for honoring the work that’s been going on, for honoring all the missing and murdered Indigenous women who are represented by these earrings. I know for some of us this is a difficult issue to even talk about,” said Parker. “When we talk about policy, protecting, and justice for missing and murdered Indigenous women there’s not always the words that can be said to fight on behalf of those who cannot speak. I know this is such a somber, such a hard issue to think about, but it’s so important for us to discuss. So I really want to honor each and every one of you who are here tonight because you are part of the story, you are part of the prayers, and I’m hoping and praying you are part of the solution.

“This exhibit is a good way to open up that dialogue and discuss the issues represented in this art and those earrings. We no longer have to remain silent. I strongly believe when we speak of the missing and murdered Indigenous women that we honor them on the other side, we honor their name and their presence. They deserve to be honored and to be talked about in a way that will bring justice because no one deserves to go missing from their families, no one deserves to be murdered. Hopefully, we leave this exhibit feeling motivated to stand up and to speak out for justice.”

Before closing the evening’s debut, several strong and motivated Tulalip women donated earrings and shared words of their importance. The earrings will join the many others that represent and speak for those who can’t speak for themselves.

Board of Director, Theresa Sheldon, was one of those who donated earrings to the exhibit. “Planting those seeds of change right now is just the beginning. Making it a regular conversation with people, finding where it is that you are comfortable to discuss these issues, and learning how to further the conversation helps victims become survivors,” explained Sheldon. “I truly thank you all for answering the call and being here. Please share what you witnessed tonight and carry on the words that were shared and know that you can make a difference. By sharing these messages and breaking the cycle of silence you have that ability to provide opportunities for healing.”

 

Photo/Micheal Rios, Tulalip News
Photo/Micheal Rios, Tulalip News

 

The mission. The Sing Our Rivers Red exhibition and events aim to bring awareness to the epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women and colonial-gender based violence in the United States and Canada. The events strive to raise consciousness, unite ideas and demand action for Indigenous women and girls who have been murdered or gone missing, raped, and assaulted, and who have not received the proper attention and justice.

Sing Our Rivers Red stands in solidarity and with collaborative spirit to support the efforts built in Canada and to highlight the need for awareness and action to address colonial gender violence in the United States. The events recognize that each of us has a voice to not only speak out about the injustices against our sisters, but also use the strength of those voices to sing for our healing. Water is the source of life and so are women. We are connecting our support through the land and waters across the border: we need to “Sing Our Rivers Red” to remember the missing and murdered and those who are metaphorically drowning in injustices.

 

Missing. Oil on canvas. From the artist, “I created this piece to honor the lives and memory of unexplained murders and missing Indigenous women of North America. The imagers I chose places a woman amongst a landscape and butterflies. The interaction of the woman and the butterflies has little do with one another in the physical sense; instead, I combine the elements in this painting in an overlapping manner to create cohesion between three violated subjects. The butterflies are a symbol for Indigenous women, which is why they are seen moving through and within the woman. The monarch butterfly has a migratory pattern that spans North America. In recent documentation, the monarch butterfly is also unexplainably dying / missing. In this piece, I wanted to depict the connection between land and women – I see that we are mistreating and killing both. I believe that because there is no respect for the land, there is no respect for women. I believe when one stops, the other will too.”
Missing. Oil on canvas. From the artist, “I created this piece to honor the lives and memory of unexplained murders and missing Indigenous women of North America. The images I chose places a woman amongst a landscape and butterflies. The interaction of the woman and the butterflies has little do with one another in the physical sense; instead, I combine the elements in this painting in an overlapping manner to create cohesion between three violated subjects. The butterflies are a symbol for Indigenous women, which is why they are seen moving through and within the woman. The monarch butterfly has a migratory pattern that spans North America. In recent documentation, the monarch butterfly is also unexplainably dying / missing. In this piece, I wanted to depict the connection between land and women – I see that we are mistreating and killing both. I believe that because there is no respect for the land, there is no respect for women. I believe when one stops, the other will too.”

 

Sing Our Rivers Red will be on display at the Hibulb Cultural Center through the end of the month. For hours and directions, please visit HibulbCulturalCenter.org

 

 

 

 

Tulalip Resort Casino Appoints Jeremy Taisey as Chef/GM of their AAA Four Diamond Tulalip Bay Restaurant

Source: Allan Aquila & Associates, LLC

Jeremy Taisey resort casino

Tulalip, Washington — Tulalip Resort Casino is pleased to announce the appointment of Jeremy Taisey as the new Chef/GM of their Four Diamond Tulalip Bay Restaurant — bringing new vision and experience to the operation. Prior to joining the Resort’s culinary team, Jeremy Taisey was cooking up cutting-edge fare at the Woodmark Hotel Kirkland, Las Vegas’ Bellagio Hotel, The Regent Hotel Beijing, along with the Pine Valley Resort in Beijing and other local area hotels.

“We are excited to bring Jeremy Taisey on-board,” states Executive Chef Perry Mascitti. “He possesses an incredible mixture of knowledge, creativity, and foresight that he will bring to the operation. Our guests are going to enjoy what he creates for them.”

Native to the Seattle area, Jeremy Taisey has always been fascinated by the happenings in the kitchen. It was during an Easter brunch at a local hotel that he decided to become a chef. The next day, Jeremy Taisey enrolled himself in the Edmonds Community College Culinary Arts program, which allowed him to fulfill his dream.

In 2006, Jeremy Taisey decided to pack his belongings and venture to Beijing, China, to marry his fiancé of three years. It was during his time in China that Jeremy Taisey’s career really took off. During his nomadic culinary journey, he cooked for many famous individuals, such as the Governor of Beijing, Israel’s Prime Minister, the Princess of Thailand, and actors Jackie Chan, Jet Li, and Christopher Lloyd.

Jeremy Taisey returned to his hometown in 2012, bringing with him a blend of unique experiences and an unparalleled skill set. His goals for the Tulalip Bay menu are to create seasonal dishes featuring modern interpretations of Italian meals, using local ingredients with a focus on top-rated prime steaks.

When Jeremy Taisey isn’t cooking up a storm in the kitchen, he can be found spending quality time with his wife and enjoying great food.

Unlocking Indigenous Knowledge

Burke Museum helping to revive lost traditions

 

The model Angyaaq, which means ‘open boat’ to the Sugpiat peoples of Alaska. Photo/Micheal Rios
The model Angyaaq, which means ‘open boat’ to the Sugpiat peoples of Alaska.
Photo/Micheal Rios

 

by Micheal Rios, Tulalip News 

The Burke Museum, located on the University of Washington campus in Seattle, is home to more than 16 million historical artifacts and objects. The thing is, only a few thousand are on display on a daily basis. Of those millions and millions of artifacts hidden away in archives and storage rooms, there is no telling how many hold cultural keys that could unlock indigenous knowledge once thought lost or destroyed forever during colonization and European settlement.

Enter Dr. Sven Haakanson, member of the Alutiq people of Kodiak, Alaska. Sven is a world renowned curator of North American ethnology and currently the head of Native American anthropology at the Burke Museum. Sven has joined the Burke team to use the museum’s amazing collection and vast resources to find those keys to indigenous knowledge currently hidden away.

“For me, the real privilege is having access to such an amazing collection because when I look at ethnographic pieces I don’t see an art piece, I see a historic object,” says Sven. “I see something that we can use the museum as a way to bring back a lot of that traditional knowledge, that we thought was lost, and put it back into a living context.”

A prime example of rediscovering indigenous knowledge that was thought lost forever has been the finding of simple model boat. Well, it was thought of as simple and sat away in collections until Sven came across it and realized he had stumbled across long lost knowledge.

What he found was a model Angyaaq, which means ‘open boat’ to the Sugpiat peoples of Alaska. This model Angyaaq is one of only a dozen known to exist and hold secrets to a long ago mode of transportation. It demonstrates a lost building tradition, models the difference pieces needed, and material and engineering techniques used to build a full-size Angyaaq – like marine animal skins to wrap the hull and lashing to tie all the pieces together. This model is key to Sven unlocking and reviving a practice of boat making absent on Kodiak for nearly 200 years.

According to Burke researchers, the Angyaat (plural for Angyaaq) were an essential part of the Sugpiat peoples of Southern Alaska’s livelihood and culture for thousands of years. An open boat used for transportation, hunting, trading, warring and more. Angyaat were a symbol of prosperity and wealth. Remnants of these boats are present in archaeological sites; yet, by the 1820s, roughly twenty years after contact, Russian settlers had either taken or destroyed all Angyaat in an effort to restrict the Native peoples’ ability to move, gather in large numbers, and display their wealth and power. Due to this destruction, very little is known about a type of boat once common on Kodiak Island.

What Sven set out to do was first make successful models of the model, in an effort to teach himself how to build the open boat without the use of modern methods. “No nails, no glue” in order to replicate and then teach the traditional way. After many intricate sketches and even more attempted models later, Sven had taught himself how to replicate the Angyaaq model using the same traditional techniques. The next phase is to use the model to build a full-size, working boat.

 

Photo/Micheal Rios
Photo/Micheal Rios
Photo/Micheal Rios
Photo/Micheal Rios

 

“By building this traditional boat in the traditional style, we are taking information that was lost from my community in the 1800s and figuring out innovative ways restore that indigenous knowledge,” explains Sven. “We are not just reverse engineering the model, but we will build a full-size one so we can share that information back into the communities from which it came. This is just one example of thousands that we can do for the next 100 years for our local Native communities both here in Washington and in Alaska.”

“The amazing can happen when you look at these museum objects not just as beautiful art pieces, but think about the history embodied in them. Think about what it means to the indigenous peoples and how they can then take this lost knowledge and re-embrace it while celebrating it. For me, it’s a process of rediscovery, of looking at how innovative, how adaptive, and how scientific my ancestors were. In that, this Angyaaq is just one example of who knows how many others we have and haven’t explored yet. I’m hoping this will be a catalyst for asking even more questions and continue to be innovative as we search through the past.”

Over the summer, Sven will travel to Kodiak Island to work with tribal members on the construction of several model Angyaat, with the goal of training students how to build a full-size, working boat in the future. Practicing this reconstruction with community members is helping share Sugpiat heritage and traditions, restoring knowledge that’s been lost, and providing a research model for others around the world to emulate.

Until then, Sven with continue to hone his Angyaat building skills as he hosts a live exhibit that can be witnessed by all. Witness the revival of a lost practice as part of a special month-long program at the Burke Museum. Visitors can see the finished Angyaaq in the Maker-Market from December 20 – January 3. Check burkemuseum.org/maker for the up-to-date boat construction schedule.