Series Three Programs

Each of our Series Three programs includes eight regular features:

Historical Introduction:
Program Host Arlie Neskahi (Dine, or Navajo) narrates the Introduction to the program, which provides a summary of the original journey of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, includes a Lewis and Clark journal quotation, and a brief history of the tribe involved, sometimes including their original territory and trading partners.

Elder Wisdom:
Features oral accounts of tribal elders who share personal memories and tell about the lives and character of grandparents. These individuals serve as exemplary role models to younger generations and will be featured on our website and later in educational curricula and outreach materials. Elder Wisdom is produced by Brian Bull (Nez Perce), award-winning Assistant News Director at Wisconsin Public Radio, Madison, WI.

Speaking Native:
A brief visit with Don Addison, focusing on the language of the featured tribe.

Sacred Landscape:
Nez Perce and Cherokee herbalist and educator, Judy Bluehorse Skelton, highlights native elders' stories about the sacred geography of the featured tribe. This includes rich descriptions of the environment traveled to harvest traditional foods, shelter, herbs and other medicines for their families, special relationships with neighboring tribes who were trading partners, and issues of environmental importance in today's world.

Tribal Rhythms:
Presents interviews with musicians from the featured tribe who share the history and background of traditional music and dance, relating the legend or story behind the music, sometimes painting a colorful picture of the dance, and including excerpts of traditional music. This is produced by Clark Salisbury and Larry Johnson, scripted by Don Addison, and narrated by Nico Wind (Assiniboine).

Health and Healing:
Produced by Rose High Bear in partnership with KCUW community radio at the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation at Pendleton, Oregon, and with Sound Partners for Community Health at Benton Foundation, a project ofthe Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. In Series Three, we focus entirely on diabetes, a killer in Indian country..

Artists Circle:
Produced by Bruce Crespin, focusesmodern and traditional forms of tribal art.

Turtle Island Storytellers :
Spotlights tribal storytellers who share legends, creation stories and other traditional and sometimes contemporary stories that illuminate the roots of the storyteller's cultural identity. These keepers of oral tradition have many voices, many stories, many messages which have been passed down from generation to generation.


 

 

Wisdom of the Elders Radio Program: Series Three

Wisdom of the Elders Radio Program: Series Three includes eight one-hour American Indian cultural magazine radio programs with the theme "Native Nations along the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Trail." Programs feature thirteen native nations living along the western side of the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail from the Bitterroot Mountains to the Columbia River. A rich mixture of oral history and cultural arts from tribal elders, historians, storytellers, artists, song carriers and environmentalists from the following nations: Lemhi Shoshone; Nez Perce or Nimi’ipuu; Salish, Kootenai, Flathead; Cayuse, Umatilla, and Walla Walla; Yakama; Wasco, Warm Springs, Northern Paiute; Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde; and Chinook tribes. The radio series is hosted by Arlie Neskahi (Dine, or Navajo). Programs continue to air on native radio stations nationwide via Native Voice One at www.nv1.org.

Each program contains:

Historical Introduction shares expedition and tribal history to provide context for the features, and six cultural arts features.

Elder Wisdom, produced by Brian Bull (Nez Perce), features oral accounts from tribal elders who reveal stories about the lives and character of exemplary grandparents and ancestors.

Speaking Native with Don Addison (Choctaw), gives listeners an opportunity to learn a new word or phrase in the language of the featured tribe.

Sacred Landscape, produced by Judy BlueHorse-Skelton (Nez Perce/Cherokee), highlights tribes’ "sacred geography."

Tribal Rhythms, written by Don Addison (Choctaw), produced by Clark Salisbury and Larry Johnson and narrated by Nico Wind (Assiniboine), relates the history of tribal music and features selections of music.

Health and Healing, produced by Rose High Bear in partnership with KCUW community radio at the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in Pendleton, Oregon, informs native communities about the growing epidemic of Type Two Diabetes and inspire them to develop habits that will prevent the disease.

Artist’s Circle, produced by the late Bruce Crespin (Juaneno Band of California Mission Indians) focuses on tribal artists and their gifts of art, both traditional and contemporary.

Turtle Island Storytellers spotlights tribal storytellers who share traditional or contemporary stories that illuminate the roots of their cultural identity.

Funding has been provided by the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail System, National Parks Service, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Endowment for the Arts, and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. This series will be distributed to American Indian radio stations through the AIROS satellite system, to public radio stations via MP3 files from our website, and on CD.



  
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