{"id":39193,"date":"2018-11-30T06:00:00","date_gmt":"2018-11-30T15:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/student-research-movie-digs-into-alaskas-colonized-names\/"},"modified":"2018-12-01T11:39:58","modified_gmt":"2018-12-01T20:39:58","slug":"student-research-movie-digs-into-alaskas-colonized-names","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home2\/student-research-movie-digs-into-alaskas-colonized-names\/","title":{"rendered":"Student research movie digs into Alaska’s colonized names"},"content":{"rendered":"
Sayéik is a Tlingit word that can be translated to mean voice of a spirit helper<\/a>.<\/p>\n Historically the name is associated with Douglas Island, and in more recent years, the word that was added onto Gastineau Community School’s name<\/a> and contained in the Sayéik Sacred Site <\/a>Memorial<\/a>.<\/p>\n Now, it’s also the title of a student research film <\/a>made by University of Alaska Southeast student Luke Holton.<\/p>\n “Sayéik” was screened Wednesday night to a mostly full house at the Gold Town Nickelodeon downtown. The film, which examines Alaska Native and non-Native place names, was presented by Juneau-Douglas City Museum, and it was funded through the University of Alaska’s Undergraduate Research, Experiential & Creative Activities grant.<\/p>\n “I felt like place names were a huge opportunity in front of us to say we’re not as ignorant as we were a hundred years ago, and a chance to make positive change,” Holton said before the screening.<\/p>\n Since the documentary is a research film, it is available for free on Vimeo.<\/a><\/p>\n “Sayéik” particularly examined Native names through the prism of the history of Douglas, especially in light of the burning of Native homes <\/a>and graves that five years ago were accidentally unearthed during a renovations at the school.<\/p>\n During a panel discussion that was at least twice as long as the 24-minute movie, it was made plain that some steps toward healing have been made, but the process was not complete.<\/p>\n Dan Monteith, associate professor of anthropology for UAS, Holton’s mentor and an adopted Tlingit, and Barbara Cadiente-Nelson, Douglas Indian Association council member, and a mostly quiet Holton made up the panel.<\/p>\n Monteith, who specializes in ethnohistory, economic anthropology, cultural ecology pertaining to subsistence, Tlingit art and oral narratives, and archeology of Southeast Alaska, said during his research into the past mistreatment of the site of the former Native village and burial grounds, it’s become evident such things happened because of institutionalized racism.<\/p>\n “We need to address the historical trauma, so we can move on,” Monteith said.<\/p>\n Audience members shared some of their experiences in boarding schools, which Alaska Natives were forced to attend well into the the 1930s and separated children from their families and preventing them from speaking their language and expressing their cultural identity.<\/p>\n How to redress those pains is tough to determine.<\/p>\n “How do we address this?” Cadiente-Nelson asked. “Does it stop here? Have we done enough? Until our community is thriving, our children are thriving, then we’ve done our responsibility.”<\/p>\n The panel said acknowledging Native names is part of the equation.<\/p>\n Cadiente-Nelson said the Juneau community has made strides in that area.<\/p>\n