Please note, RSVPs to chcculturalactivities@potawatomi.org are REQUIRED to attend. On Tuesday, November 16, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., learn how to make a pair of standard pillow cases embellished with an applique design. Participants must be 18 or older and will need to supply their own fabric/notions.
Please note, RSVPs to chcculturalactivities@potawatomi.org are REQUIRED to attend. Learn to make a simple Cross-Body Tote Bag embellished with an applique design on Wednesday, December 1 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Must be 18 or over, and will need to supply your own fabric/notions.
Learn how to make a simple cotton wrap skirt with applique on October 19 from 5:15 to 8:45 p.m. RSVPs are REQUIRED to attend. Reserve your spot by emailing chcculturalactivities@potawatomi.org Class is free and open to those 18 and older.
Have an ongoing sewing or beading project that you need help on? Attend our Open Sewing Classes. Cultural Activities Coordinator, Leslie Deer, will be on hand to offer her assistance! Classes are: Tuesday, November 16, 2-3 p.m. Wednesday, December 1, 2-3 p.m.
Attend the Citizen Potawatomi Nation’s Cultural Heritage Center’s Tobacco Pouch Necklace Class on July 7 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The class will cover how to make a buckskin tobacco pouch necklace embellished with edge beading. RSVP to chcculturalactivities@potawatomi.org All CHC classes are free to attend. Must be 18 years or older.
“I play with emotion, and I do sense the person who is supposedly speaking through this song, their pain or their emotion, and it is very touching,” said Native American flutist and professional musician Marcia Bendo. In addition to her doctorate in psychology and a law degree, she performed as a violinist with the Tulsa Read More »
Citizen Potawatomi Nation’s wellness court welcomes many who choose sobriety, accountability — and a 9 p.m. curfew — over jail time. The 15-month Healing to Wellness Court is open to CPN tribal members, their children and Natives and non-Natives over age 18 who have a history of substance abuse and are charged with a Read More »
Youth have power. Right now. “When we told them they’re the future, we accidentally said, ‘You don’t matter yet. You don’t count until some futuristic point on the horizon that, statistically, some of our kids won’t see,” Emcee One, born Marcus Anthony Guinn, recently told the Hownikan. “They’re — right now — the No. 1 Read More »