This Week in Native American News (10/30/2020): Run, Read, Listen, Watch, and Don't Dress Up as an Indian
October 30, 2020
RUN: Carol Seppilu Named the 2020 AFN ‘Woman of Courage’
CAROL SEPPILU OF SAVOONGA AND NOME RUNS, she runs for her own life and for the lives of Alaska Native people. Earlier this month she completed the last of three long-distance runs on each of Nome’s roads, totaling almost 250 miles, in the name of hope and suicide prevention.
On Friday, Seppilu achieved another milestone as she was formally recognized by the Alaska Federation of Natives during the 2020 AFN Convention.
Even though she started running less than two miles at a time about six years ago, Seppilu has now run thousands of miles and completed all three of Nome’s roads earlier this season. By living out her new-found love for long distance running, Seppilu hopes to inspire others to keep putting one foot in front of the other.
Read the Full Story Here
LISTEN: ‘The Storyteller’ resurrects Alaska Native stories for a modern audience
In an effort to bring traditional Alaska Native stories to a modern audience, Koahnic Broadcast Corp and Rising Indigenous Voices Radio have been putting previously recorded oral culture stories and folk tales to animation.
It’s a 10-part series called The Storyteller, each part with a five-minute animated video and a separate podcast episode.
John Sallee is lead producer for The Storyteller series. He told Alaska Public Media’s Casey Grove that it started with audio recordings that were part of a radio series, now resurrected in animated video form.
Check out the Storyteller website here
Happy Halloween!
Cultural Appropriation, A Perennial Issue On Halloween
Your yearly reminder that Native Americans and Alaska Natives are people, not costumes.
It’s hard to fit all the news in a little space.
To read all of this week's news, visit the LIM Magazine.
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