Home Washington and Lee to celebrates Indigenous People’s Day with public lecture
Local

Washington and Lee to celebrates Indigenous People’s Day with public lecture

washington and leeWashington and Lee University presents a public lecture with Katrina Phillips, an assistant professor of American Indian history at Macalester College and an enrolled member of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe.

The talk, which is open to the public to watch online, will be Monday, Oct. 12 at 7 p.m. It is titled “Indigenous People’s Day: Minneapolis, American Indians, Police Brutality & Community.”

The public can register for the virtual event for free at go.wlu.edu/indigenous-peoples-day-celebration. 

The cohort, which was founded by W&L faculty and staff with native heritage, was formed last year to illuminate Native American history and culture.

“After last year’s successful Native American Heritage Month, we decided that our activities and programming should not be limited to November,” said Kelly Fujiwara, W&L special events coordinator and a founder of the cohort. “Our goals have always been big – because why not? Through researching other colleges and universities, we began to identify best practices and were inspired by the curriculum and programming being offered.”

During her lecture, Phillips will discuss her Washington Post article, “Longtime police brutality drove American Indians to join the George Floyd protests.” Her discussion will also include W&L’s Native American Cohort members Fran Elrod, the associate director of the Shepherd Program at W&L; Kelly Fujiwara, Miwok descendant and W&L’s special events coordinator; Joseph Guse, a professor of economics at W&L; Harvey Markowitz, a professor of anthropology at W&L; and Jessica Wager, a Muscogee descendant and W&L’s executive assistant to the provost. The group will discuss additional Indigenous rights topics and the interconnectedness of current social movements.

Phillips will also return in 2021 as a guest of the Africana Studies yearlong series, “Activism and Black Life.”

Other Native American Cohort-sponsored events that will be free and open to the public virtually this year include a series hosted in partnership with Hillel that starts in November called “Joining Voices: Native American and Jewish community.”

For more information and to register in advance, visit my.wlu.edu/office-of-inclusion-and-engagement/programs-and-events/native-american-heritage-month.

“Whether you are an enrolled member of a tribe, have a family tie to a native lineage, or are just interested in learning more about Native American topics we are bringing forward, you are welcomed to every event the cohort sponsors,” said Fujiwara.

To learn more, the Native American Cohort invites the community to reach out and email them at [email protected].

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

police ICE agent
Politics, Virginia

Feds file suit against Virginia over laws barring Trump henchmen from masking up

lgbtq baseball
Baseball

MLB pitchers make Pride Night about their homophobic bigotry

A veritable who’s that? of San Francisco Giants pitchers made homophobic bigots of themselves in the 5-1 loss to the Chicago Cubs on Friday night, on Pride Night at Oracle Park.

police officer on city street at night
Local

Waynesboro Police still mum on vehicle break-ins: Protecting the shield?

Was the Waynesboro Police Department ever going to go public with news of the rash of vehicle break-ins that included at least two belonging to Albemarle County Police Department officers?

school student child bookbag
Local

Staunton: Leadership changes for school system for 2026-2027 school year

harrisonburg
Local

Harrisonburg Schools beginning summer meal program on Monday

vdot road
Local

VDOT: Travel alerts for Augusta, Nelson, Rockingham for June 15-19

waynesboro map
Local

UPDATE: Is the Waynesboro vehicle break-in story that we reported something bigger?