Soroptimist House, California State University Long Beach
Friday, November 2, 2012 – Symposium
9:00-10:00 a.m Registration (free, donations accepted)
10:00 Welcome- Cindi Alvitre (Tongva),
Ernest Siva
(Serrano/Cahuilla), CISA Board Chair
Louie Robles (Acjachemen) - Master of Ceremonies
10:15 The Life Work and Collective Song
of Sam Kaha`i Ka'ai
10:30 Sam
Ka’ai (Hawaiian), Opening Speaker
11:00 Water
Forum: Kealoha Blake (Hawaiian), moderator
Cindi Alvitre (Tongva), Darryl B. Wilson
(Iss/At’we),
Brian Tripp (Karuk), Ernest Siva
(Serrano/Cahuilla),
Angela Mooney D' Arcey (Acjachemen)
11:45 Speaker
- Mahina Rapa Tuki (Rapa Nui) - The Welling Being of Our Peoples
12:15
Announcements
12:30-1:15 Lunch Break
1:15 Speaker
- China Leipakumakaniokalani Ching – Indigenous Peoples’
Biocultural Climate Change Assessment Initiative
1:45 Panel: Canoe Cultures and the Conditions of
our Waterways and Our Relationship to the Rivers, Oceans and Living Creatures
of the Water- Marcus Lopez (Chumash), facilitator, Rico Miranda (Ohlone),
Elaine Grinnell (S'Klallam), Woody Morrison (Haida), Takirirangi Smith (Maori), Sam Kaai (Hawaiian)
2:30 Break
2:45
Brian Tripp (Karuk), The Salmon Story
3:30
Community Dialogue
4:00 Closing Song by Brian Tripp (Karuk)
Saturday, November 3, 2012 -
Storytelling Festival
12:30 pm Registration
1 pm Welcome
1:15 Darryl
Babe Wilson , Ph.D. (Iss/At’we)
1:45 Brian
Tripp (Karuk)
2:15 Elaine
Grinnell (S'Klallam)
2:45 Woody
Morrison (Haida)
3:15 – Break
3:30 Takirirangi Smith (Maori)
4:00 Mahina
Rapu Tuki (Rapanui)
4:30 Rico
Miranda (Ohlone), Closing Song
Biographies of Presenters
California
Darryl Babe Wilson (Iss/A’te) Ph.D. is
founder of CISA and a member of the Pit River tribes of Northeastern
California, he holds a doctorate in Comparative Ethnic Literature from the
University of Arizona. Dr. Wilson is a
scholar, writer, poet, storyteller, oral traditions expert, and teacher. He is a published author of a variety of
articles and books on California Indian culture and history and, in particular,
the history of his tribe’s connection with Hawaiians from long ago to today
through the oral traditions and more.
Ernest Siva (Serrano/Cahuilla) is the Chair for the CISA Board. He is a tradition
bearer, storyteller, ethnomusicologist in American Indian music hailing from
the Morongo Reservation in Banning, CA.
He is one of the founders of the Malki Museum at Morongo and the Dorothy
Ramon Learning Center has worked to preserve the culture and history of tribe
from southern California, such as Cahuilla Bird Songs and the Serrano language.
Rico Miranda (Ohlone) is a teacher and researcher, singer and historian. He
is an activist in the preservation of Ohlone culture, songs, and stories.
Louie Robles, Jr (Acjachemen) is a storyteller and culture bearer from the
Acjachemen tribe in southern California, near San Juan Capistrano.
Brian Tripp (Karuk) is a renowned and multitalented artist, poet and traditional singer.
His studio is located in Eureka. As an honored Karuk traditionalist,
singer and dancer, Tripp has been instrumental in the preservation of his
people’s traditions. In addition to being a highly regarded contemporary
visual artist, Tripp serves as a cultural consultant for a number of
organizations. Tripp has exhibited and lectured in San Francisco and New York,
as well as having done residencies at the Kunst in Der Landshaft, Prigglitz, Austria,
Ecoe d’Art Aix en Provence, Provence, France, and the Open Air Modern Art
Museum in Pedvale, Lativa. His paintings are modern and hard-edged, yet
faithfully based on Karuk designs.
Angela
De Arcey Mooney (Acjachemen), has been working
with Tribal Nations, Indigenous peoples, and grassroots organizations on
Indigenous environmental justice issues for over fourteen years. She
teaches Indigenous Cultural Resource
Protection Law in Theory and Practice as part of the UCLA Extension
and Tribal Learning and Community Educational Exchange Program, Native Nations
Law and Policy Center’s Working in Tribal
Communities program. She is also the Co-Director for the United
Coalition to Protect Panhe (UCPP), a grassroots alliance of Acjachemen people
dedicated to the protection of their sacred sites.
Georgiana Sanchez (Chumash), CISA Board member, is a storyteller, poet, writer
and professor of Native American Literature at California State University,
Long Beach. She works extensively in the
community as a cultural tradition bearer, language learner and activist.
Marcus Lopez (Chumash) is the Co-Chair of the Barbareno Chumash Council and
Tomol Captain for the Chumash People. He is an activist in the preservation of
sacred sites and a builder of the Tomol--the traditional plank canoe of the
Chumash people. Currently, he is the host and producer of American Indian
Airwaves on KPFK in Los Angeles and
Coyote Radio in Santa Barbara.
Paul Kealoha Blake (Hawaiian) CISA Board, is a videographer, musician and
cultural activist. He has worked within the Native Hawaiian community for more
than 20 years. His production, with the Pacific Island Cultural Association,
concerning the arrival of the voyaging canoe Hoku'lea in California has won
numerous awards both nationally and internationally. He has collaborated with
CISA since 1998 as an organizational and cultural advisor and as CISA’s primary
videographer/documentarian. He has participated as a founder of the League of
Indigenous Voices since 2007.
China Leipakumakaniokalani Ching is the
Associate Program Officer for The Christensen Fund. She works on both the San
Francisco Bay Area Program and in the Global Program focusing on supporting and
increasing Indigenous participation and representation in global processes
affecting Biocultural Diversity and in global policy work. China has provided
capacity-building assistance to Indigenous communities across the United States
and in Africa with a particular focus on using media technologies and
storytelling to promote social and community change and to complement cultural
documentation and preservation. China was a founding member of Third
World Majority, a new media training and production resource center where she
was the Director of Circle of Voices, a Native-specific training program.
China holds a Master’s Degree in Oral History from Columbia University.
Washington – Elaine
Grinnell, (S’Klallam) is
a basketweaver and storyteller, a teacher, counselor of native American
students and historian for her Tribe, and conveyor of Native American culture
and language for forty years.
Alaska – K ‘awan
Sangaa--Woodrow Morrison (Haida) is a lawyer and writer who resides in
Vancouver, Canada. During the past 15 years he has worked as a Cultural/Story
Consultant on 17 Hollywood films. K ‘awan Sangaa ‘s travels have taken him to
Aotearoa, Samoa, Tonga and Fiji, to all but 2 of the 50 US States, 5 of
Canada’s 10 Provinces and to most of the countries of Northwestern Europe.
Hawaii – Sam Ka‘ai
(Hawaiian)
a
true son of Maui whose roots stem from Hãna, Kipahulu and Kaupõ, is known
throughout Polynesia as an artist, sculptor and noted scholar of Hawaiian
cultural practices. Sam has played a monumental role in the Hawaiian
Renaissance, Sam is a visionary and
storyteller of metaphoric expression, a crew member of the 1978 Tahiti voyage
of the Hõkule`a and the first Hawaiian Fulbright Scholar.
Aotearoa (New Zealand) – Takirirangi
Smith, Ph. D, (Maori) the multifaceted
artist; an accomplished master carver, sculptor, painter, contemporary music
performer and composer. He had lead the carving of 7 carved meeting houses,
several entrances, gateways and facades in New Zealand. He is also an
accomplished carver of canoes and has particular interest in reviving the Maori
small sailing canoes.
Rapanui (Easter Island) - Mahina
Rapa Tuki is a cultural preservationist and activist, devoted to protecting
Rapanui from extinction. She is an
internationally renowned culture bearer, singer and storyteller.