Formline carved paddles, beaded slippers, and a small totem were among the items returned to Kake last weekend by a Quaker woman whose ancestor taught in the mission school there in the early 1900s.
Joel Jackson, President of the Organized Village of Kake (OVK) holds up up a couple carved wooden paddles, which were among the objects a group of quakers returned to Kake in August. (Photo courtesy ...
For years now, Organized Village of Kake President Joel Jackson has had a dream: a cultural healing center that can reintroduce people looking to heal from alcohol and drug addictions and ...
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Reviving Native Food Sovereignty
Gently pushing aside the potato plant, her fingers delve lightly into dark soil. She finds a small potato, and smiling, holds ...
PORTLAND, Ore. (CN) — Nearly five years after a federal board granted a subsistence hunt to a Native American tribe experiencing food insecurity during the throes of the pandemic, the state of Alaska ...
The Kake high school boys basketball team was disappointed to learn that despite being undefeated heading into the Alaska 1A State Basketball Tournament for the third year in row, it wasn’t first or ...
The Kake Thunderbirds defeated the Hydaburg Warriors 83-18 on Thursday in the Alaska Airlines Region V 1A Boys Basketball Tournament at the Thunder Mountain Middle School gym, and the Klawock ...
At the Kake Dog Salmon Festival on Saturday, Aug. 3, 2024, residents and visiting Quakers examined artifacts returned to the village by the ancestor of a Quaker missionary. (Photo courtesy of Jan ...
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