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Hosted by Arcia Tecun, an urban and mobile Wīnak (Mayan) with roots in Iximulew (Guatemala), an upbringing in Soonkahni (Salt Lake Valley, Utah), and in relation with Tonga, Aotearoa (New Zealand), and Te Moana Nui a Kiwa (The Great Pacific Ocean). Wai? [pronounced why] (W.A.I.: Words and Ideas) is a podcast based on various issues, topics, and perspectives including critical analysis, reflection, dialogue, and commentary on society, politics, education, history, culture, Indigeneity, and more. The purpose of this project is to share words and ideas that are locally meaningful, globally relevant, and critically conscious.
Episodes
Thursday Jun 01, 2023
Ep.42: Thinking about living in and relating better to this place
Thursday Jun 01, 2023
Thursday Jun 01, 2023
This episode begins with some reflections on my experience and relations to people of place and to being mindful of where one lives, especially if one’s immediate ancestral ties lie elsewhere. I think about responsibilities and possibilities of relating differently and better to where I currently reside by digging deeper beyond the dominant understandings of Indigenous people and issues here in Utah. I highlight a variety of sources by Indigenous folks in order to respect their capacity and listening to what they have already shared by reading what is already available and putting in some work to better understand it. Topics include remembering Soonkahni (Salt Lake Valley), Indigenous identities and cultural politics in this place and remembering a more complex and nuanced reality outside of our current cultural climate crisis. I work through different words and terms and where they derive from along with a range of meanings. This episode concludes by thinking about Farmer’s historical observation of a shift from an aquatic age to a hydraulic one that underpins various issues currently faced right now in this place. An overarching theme is a practice of respecting elder cultures and perspectives in order to more meaningfully relate to place.
Terms: Soonkahni (Salt Lake Valley in Newe Taikwa-Shoshoni Language), Piapaa (Big Water, Sea, a name for the Great Salt Lake in Newe Taikwa), Pia Okwai (Big Flow/River, a name for Utah’s Jordan River in Newe Taikwa), Newe (The People), Neme (The People), Nuuchiu (The People), Nuwuvi (The People), Diné (The People), Awahko (Sucker fish in Newe Taikwa), Paa Kateten (One name for Utah Lake in Newe Taikwa).
Suggested Reading List: History and culture - Darren Parry’s Bear River Massacre; Forest Cuch’s (Ed) A History of Utah’s American Indians; We shall remain – Utah documentary series; Dora Van et. al’s History of Unita Valley Shoshone Tribe of the Utah Nation. Non-Indigneous writers/producers - Black hawks mission of peace by Philip Gottfredson and The Black Hawk War Utah’s Forgotten Tragedy documentary film; Utah’s Black Hawk War by John Alton Peterson; On Zion’s Mount by Jared Farmer; Place and Personal Names of the Gosiute Indians of Utah by Ralph V. Chamberlin. Linguistic – Drusilla Gould and Christopher Loether’s An Introduction to the Shoshone Language; University of Utah’s Shoshoni Language Project.
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