Writings
Steward Udall, a great spirit
03/22/10
Steward Udall, a great spirit
By Willie Iggiagruk Hensley
Posted at Alaska Dispatch, 3/22/10
This past weekend I learned that a great friend had passed away at the age of 90. After recovering from the sad but not unexpected news, I promptly remembered the last time I saw him in 2004 in Washington, D.C.suli...
By Willie Iggiagruk Hensley
Posted at Alaska Dispatch, 3/22/10
This past weekend I learned that a great friend had passed away at the age of 90. After recovering from the sad but not unexpected news, I promptly remembered the last time I saw him in 2004 in Washington, D.C.suli...
In Alaska, Qiviters Never Win - New York Times Op-Ed
07/24/09
On July 24, 2009, the New York Times published Willie’s Op-Ed piece “In Alaska, Qiviters Never Win.”
It begins:
“Ten thousand summers have come and gone here in Alaska and the village people are already preparing for another cold winter by drying and smoking salmon, rendering seal oil and drying the meat and hoping for a bountiful berry season. In the meantime, our governor has called it quits 18 months before the end of her four-year term. She leaves tomorrow, to be replaced by her lieutenant governor, Sean Parnell.
The Inuit have a word, “qivit,” that you do not want to have applied to you. It means to quit or give up when the going gets rough. In traditional times, and that was very recent, if you gave up as a leader you were jeopardizing yourself and everyone around you. It takes a lot of effort to maintain life in the bitter cold of the Arctic.”
Suli (more)...
It begins:
“Ten thousand summers have come and gone here in Alaska and the village people are already preparing for another cold winter by drying and smoking salmon, rendering seal oil and drying the meat and hoping for a bountiful berry season. In the meantime, our governor has called it quits 18 months before the end of her four-year term. She leaves tomorrow, to be replaced by her lieutenant governor, Sean Parnell.
The Inuit have a word, “qivit,” that you do not want to have applied to you. It means to quit or give up when the going gets rough. In traditional times, and that was very recent, if you gave up as a leader you were jeopardizing yourself and everyone around you. It takes a lot of effort to maintain life in the bitter cold of the Arctic.”
Suli (more)...
Comments at Martin Luther King, Jr. event
01/19/09
Willie’s address given at today’s Alaska State Society event in Washington, DC