“It Makes My Heart Smile When I Hear Them Say, ‘Hi Grandpa, We’re Home!’”: Relationality, Alaska Native Wellbeing and Self Determination in Tribal Child Protection
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Healing Intergenerational Trauma
1.2. Indigenous Pedagogies (Teaching Approaches) and Evaluative Measures of Success
1.3. Background of the Indigenous Connectedness Framework and Theory Building
1.4. Asserting Tribal Self-Determination
1.5. Rural and Urban Considerations
1.6. Positionality of Our Research Team
2. Results
2.1. Demographics
2.2. Themes
2.2.1. Global Themes: Knowing Who You Are and Where You Come from and Spirituality
Knowing Who You Are and Where You Come from
The land teaches a person about who they are and how to live interdependently through a subsistence lifestyle. Being aware of who you are is linked to culture and results in a sense of peace that releases shame, uncertainty and doubt.“It was a time of connecting to what our ancestors taught us in putting away food and just being who we are meant to be- living off the land and teaching our kids.”
Wellbeing efforts need to help people know the truth about who they are as a unique person who is from a family, community and a special place on the planet. Colonization may have disrupted this sense of self in relation to others, and efforts should help community members reconnect and stay centered and grounded in their ancestral birth right.“Being at peace with who you are and where you come from and your culture and being Native is real important, I think.”
Re-instilling pride in who you are and where you come from can become a source of intergenerational transmission of strength, love, resilience, and connectedness while acknowledging the stress, challenges and grief of past traumatic experiences. The process of knowing who you are is an acknowledgement of personal and collective consciousness that can prevent the use of unhealthy coping mechanisms.“Greatness is in each of us. We’ve never been told that.”
Being well is not an individual pursuit alone, it’s a commitment to being interdependent and interconnected with other people on multiple levels.“I feel that there has to be a balance of understanding where we came from, understanding what historically happened…but also knowing how we got out of it, where we’re going to, [and] remembering who we come from.”
As one person is well, they help the collective be well. The self/collective actualization of community members brings greater awareness to actions that help end the generational cycles of child protection involvement in families.“Well-being also means being proud of who you are as [Native American identity]. When you are proud of who you are, you want to impart that knowledge to your kids and your grandkids. When you don’t know who you are and where you come from, then there are coping mechanisms that affect how you behave in the future. Meaning because you don’t know who you are and where you come from, you mask all of those bad feelings with drugs and alcohol and, you know, whatever else. Well-being is knowing who you are, where you come from, and knowing how to live and cope.”
A self-determined approach to helping Tribal members be well, heal from past traumas, and reconnect with the core of their being, beyond colonial constructs and lies, could prove to be the most effective.“A success would definitely be breaking the cycle. We have generational CPS families…To break the cycle of it [we need to empower] our people to be who they are and where they come from, but to do it in a way that stops any [state child protection] involvement.”
Spirituality
Spirituality is also strengthened through activities such as berry picking, whether it takes place in a rural or urban setting because of the respect for the source that this food comes from.“We don’t just leave the gut pile there, of a wolf or wolverine or anything that we’re not gonna eat…If we’re not gonna eat it then we don’t just bring it to the dump. We bring it someplace to where the body is away from animals…and then we put the head towards the east. That way they can always see the sun rise. The spirituality of our game is really closer than what we can imagine. That’s our way of giving thanks to the game.”
The land and spirit are ever present in rural and urban settings. The spiritual realm was understood and navigated through ancestral connections.“Whether I pick the berries on the land, or I pick them out of the store, that’s a spiritual activity. It means like, everything you do is spiritual, in a sense…so people in [City], I think they feel like they’re disconnected because they’re not on the land as much anymore, removed, but I think people need to understand that it’s everywhere.”
Everything was spiritual. Dances, songs, ceremonies, and activities involving family or community gatherings had spirituality incorporated into it.“Yeah. I feel like we, our ancestors were tapped into something very amazing, in terms of that spiritual realm and just knew how to navigate that…”
The traditional spiritual practices are still practiced in many families and communities to this day. Supernatural knowledge connected with spirituality was also taught and practiced within the community.“Our gatherings, like we’re doing now, is just a continuation on the gatherings that our ancestors did in [Village]. It’s a real neat feeling to know that we’re continuing on what our ancestors had done by doing it here.”
Spiritual knowledge and spiritual practices provided an intuitive knowingness, protection, guidance, relief, and sometimes answers that could not otherwise be explained.“One thing my aunt told me also is, when people got lost…they’d find an extra pair of their mukluks and put ’em up in the corner, and they’d look up there once in a while. If they’re still moving, they know they’re alive. Once they stop moving, they know they passed away. That’s what they did back then.”
This form of spirit and spirituality was a vital aspect of personal and collective wellbeing.“My grandma had put weasel skull on the door one time. Maybe even pike jaw outside on the door. She did not—I’d ask her about it—she didn’t want anything bad to happen. Any bad spirit would go into the teeth of whatever she put up there would catch it and not let it go in.”
The resurgence of spiritual practices is an essential component of personal and collective wellbeing. Spirituality is foundational to people knowing who they are and where they come from.“To me I still feel like I’m still learning. I’m in the generation where I never spoke. We never danced. We never sung. None of that was taught in our school. I see it in our region. My kids are doing it in their schools now, which I’m very thankful for. Yeah. I still have a lot to learn, that’s for sure.”
Life and wellbeing involve an interdependent, relational, and spiritual energy that undergirds everything in existence. Spirituality is the common thread the binds the themes together and it is integral to health and wellness.“I think spirituality’s a big one. I kinda talk to my kids about it, or even myself. It’s a big part of wellness. How you communicate. A lot of things got tripped up there, so probably doesn’t happen as often as [it] could. Just being built into the way things were done. Now, we see ourselves doing things in a way that is in opposition to that in our day to day. We process so many values every day. Maybe acknowledging that. Maybe that’s why we bury things.”
2.2.2. Organizing Themes: Family, Community, Intergenerational, Land
Family
Families develop in various ways, such as cultural adoption. People within families often referred to each other as their familial role rather than by name.“That’s precisely why, as a Tribe, we have the authority to say this person is an extended family member and we want our children placed with that person. Even though they’re not related. Even though they’re not, you know, we can say this person will take good care of our Tribal children.”
Even certain generations of people, Elders, parent caregivers and children were referred to as kin even if there were not biological connections. In some contexts, all older generations were called grandma or grandpa, all middle generations were called auntie and uncle, and all younger children were called cousins. Being a relative to one another enhances the connection because of the responsibility that comes with it.“Yesterday there was an Elder that I called auntie, and she wasn’t my biological aunt…I was adopted into that large [Tribal] family. All of [her older] siblings are my aunties and uncles. I was raised with their kids.”
This intergenerational connection between Elders and youth provided an opportunity for cultural knowledge sharing to happen that has been passed down to this day.“I was probably one of the last in our family to be raised in that traditional way where it wasn’t just a nuclear family, mom, dad, siblings. My mom and dad had me really young…They would leave me with my grandparents a lot and then my aunt was only eight years older than me, she was like a big sister to me…It is a real big difference between if you were raised with your grandparents.”
Family relationships support wellbeing through the mutual feelings of love, happiness, and joy from being with one another.“Yeah. Wellness for me, I’m gonna say for my grandchildren. After school they come home and walk in the door and both will sing at the same time, “Hi, grandpa.” I can tell they love being home or love me saying welcome home. I put ’em to bed early, try to feed ’em a healthy diet and share my native food with them. They’re accepting that now, so I’m makin’ a positive impact on their new lifestyle if you will. It makes my heart smile when I hear them say, “Hi, grandpa. We’re home!” I can tell by the tone of their voice and, they’re smiling inside also. That’s really touching if you will.”
When a child is named after a loved one in the community (who may have passed), this often establishes a relational responsibility between the baby and the relative of the person the baby was named after.“Even with my daughter’s class I can recognize whose family they come from, the way they act, and who they’re named after…I mean I can see the characteristics within their namesake. It’s really interesting how that works, but it really lets you know the child. Just from the name, at first. Now that child is treated as that person, their namesake.”
Naming ceremonies are a tradition that has maintained family and community relationships for generations and helped people form a stronger identity. Children are not raised by 1 or 2 parents alone; they were raised by an entire family and community.“It’s really how people are related to each other from their namesake. There are certain expectations from that namesake of that child that’s working for the well-being of a person since childbirth.”
This traditional way of raising children has been disrupted for some families by the unspoken and individualistic parenting expectations placed on nuclear family households.“I think about we live in these nuclear households, like I live with my husband and my three kids. We struggle. Every day is hard. I always wish sometimes that we were living like we were back in the day where we would be either with my mom’s household, my brother, and then us, and maybe even my aunt and her family. We would all be living together, and it would be so much easier.”
Collaborative caregiving is a key factor in helping children and parents feel less overwhelmed by daily life stressors. Some families may struggle with shared caregiving of children because capitalistic economic structures expect adult relatives (employees) to work an 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. job.“…Growing up we were always at my grandma’s house. Always visiting my uncle. If we were at my grandma’s, all our aunties and uncles were there. We were raised not just by my mom or by my dad, there was everybody there helping. My mom never—and I even said that to her before I had kids, I said, “I don’t ever remember you making me feel like a burden.” She was like, “Yeah. You guys were easy.” I think it was because she had so much help.”
It will be important to take this dynamic of work and home life balance into consideration when engaging families in wellness activities and learning.“I feel like it’s just a constant juggling act of like, wanting to spend time with my niece and nephew, wanting to get work done. Wanting to be out on the land, go kayaking, be at home and just be. I don’t know how people do it.”
Strengthening family relationships is a strategic way to promote personal and collective wellbeing.“I really do believe as we heal ourselves, we’re healing our parents, our grandparents, great-grandparents. That’s really vital, but it’s just finding the time and emotional bandwidth to do it.”
Community
The interdependence of community makes life better for families because of the network of mutual care and support that is provided.“I really feel like being a family or being a parent becomes less overwhelming when you have a community structure…like a safety network of people stepping in and out.”
Care and support for one another aligns with traditional values that direct community members to step in to help when needed. It takes immense effort and time investment to create a sense of community.“It takes a whole community to raise a child. Everybody looking out for each other, and when a parent becomes a single parent for whatever reason. There’s people there that should be guiding them, and helping them, and helping them raise their children. Like it used to be.”
Bringing people together is one of the best ways to assist with the development of a community.“Circles are so powerful…whenever I’ve been a part of those circles, how bonding that experience is, with everybody who’s a part of that circle and how that builds community as well.”
Hosting circles, engaging in specific cultural tasks and activities, and sharing food were a few of several examples that community members shared about ways to promote community connections.“I like the idea of having a culture-based task. I think that’s a natural way…I think building a network of families, and strengthening community structure is wellness.”
“…what we’re doing now has a big impact on our kids. We’re laughing, we’re talking, we’re telling stories. This is how gatherings are. We’re from different communities, yet we have similarities too. Even though we’re from different villages, different areas we’re connected as one right now.”
Intergenerational
“You go back 500 years; our language and our people weren’t doing exactly what they did 100 years ago. Even if we take the pieces that our ancestors have lovingly guarded and held onto, and if that’s what we build from, then that’s good. Whatever comes of it is still good. We can breathe life back into that. I think that’s what our ancestors would want us to do. They’d recognize the hardships that we’re facing, but that we’re wanting to carry forward the gift that they’ve passed down for thousands of years. We’re doing our best.”
The next generations are taken into consideration in all present-day actions.“It’s really, really good to see that, and comforting knowing that what I passed onto them is now being passed on to the next generation. Now there’s three generations, myself, the nephews, and then their kids. Then my boys now too. Holdin’ it back would have really stopped them from living the lifestyle I grew up doing.”
Future generations need to have a balanced narrative of the truth of what has happened in the past or is happening now, that also contains messages of love and hope for current and future generations.“I think, for me, what always helped was framing it as we’re the result of the love of thousands of those before us. That’s the thread that connects us. I mean, yes, we have, like you said, we have trauma that we’ve experienced, but that doesn’t define us. That doesn’t cage us into what our future can or should be, or what we want it to be.”
Providing knowledge about who people’s ancestors are and what they have been through to make life possible for the descendants of today is a source of power and resilience.“We’ve been here, we’ve always been here, and we’re still here today. That’s a huge thing for our kids to learn. That we have the strength in us to continue even during hard times. Even during hard times right now we support each other, right? We have a resiliency.”
The process of teaching intergenerational values and history involves an awareness and acknowledgement of the whole human being, a real human being.“Throughout Alaska, we all have our traditional values…and they were handed down from our ancestors to our grandparents, we need to teach those to our kids, our members, our families because that’s important. It helps us be a good human- If we practice them.”
Children need to be taught intergenerational knowledge too because this helps them connect with who they are as a real person.“Keep it simple for the kids and teach ’em as a holistic person. Basically, Inupiaq, so we’re real people and everybody’s a real person, right…Then, if we’re gonna touch on intergenerational trauma and stuff, teach ’em the resiliency that we have. We’re strong.”
Land
Being out on the land provides an opportunity to practice almost a form of meditation or mindfulness that cultivates a connection between inua (spirit) and nuna (land).“Teaching them how important the land and the animals were from the beginning of time. Teach ’em all the animals, what they do, and also the land, what it provides, and just being silent. Another big, big one is being silent. That’s what our Elders, like my dad and the rest of the village was taught was silence, and mostly in camping.”
Subsistence may be a lot of work, but it is worth the effort as it nourishes not just the body but also mind and spirit.“Every time I come home, I feel that re-connectedness and it’s healing, and it’s that medicine I need to survive [laughter]. It is a lot more work to be connected to land out there.”
2.2.3. Basic Themes: Values, Roles and Responsibilities, Subsistence/Food, Language, Culture, Historical Knowledge, Wellness and Teaching
Values
Values provide guidance on community relational and cultural standards that should be communicated, lived, practiced throughout the lifespan. Several values were discussed directly and indirectly. While many values can be readily identified, such as respect, sharing, love for children, care for those in need, humor, cooperation, and hard work, it is important for people feel the values from within.“I mean my dad when I was growing up, he not only provided for us, his wife, and family of eight children. He provided for his siblings. He provided for his relatives, his friends. He was a hunter. Plus, he worked. He worked seasonally, but and then hunt whenever he was able to. He helped a lot of people.”
Multiple values can be demonstrated at one time depending on how the relational interactions take place. Traditional values are important to teach and live as best one can because some values are in direct contrast with typical American values such as individualism, competition, and patriarchy.“They never yelled at us, or screamed at us, or told us that’s wrong, or that’s right, or whatever. They just showed us, and without being critical. The best way that they knew how to explain things.”
Families within the community may need to make intentional efforts to instill traditional values within children so that they learn how to stay grounded in who they are as they exist in what can feel like two worlds.“I was taught to honor all woman, all ladies. The relationship with a woman is sacred. I am to give the highest honor to all ladies no matter who they are and give the respect to the ladies. The reason why I was told that is because us men don’t know how it is to give birth to a child, so we’re gonna give that full honor to a woman, to a lady. That we’re gonna show all the respect. We’re not gonna talk down. We’re not gonna take advantage of our strength, of our voice. We’re gonna give that to the woman.”
The maintenance of traditional values in a society that has many contrasting values takes courage and the presence of pride may help people stay rooted in that. Values provide a way of life that sustains wellness for the collective and this is something to be proud of. Love, compassion, care and concern for oneself and everyone and everything is a key ingredient for the successful sustainment of traditional values.“Being okay with being Native is important. Being okay in a non-Native environment and being Native is important. Understanding some of the cultural values and traditions that you have and being proud of that.”
Even if people may have differing values other people are still respected, and this maintains inner wellbeing.“I feel like when I’m connected to my values, I feel more healthy and happy and well.”
Each value, each word has deeper meaning and relational actions that come with it. Core values are not about knowledge of a theory or idea, values provide a way of relating that keeps people alive and well to survive all of life’s traumas and challenges, because nobody gets through life unscathed.“I think the most grounding value that was taught is respect. Respect for others. Respect for—goes along with everybody, right? Respect for elders. To learn to be respectful.”
The way to survive hardship is to get through it together. A sense of belonging to a family (nuclear and otherwise) and community helps foster a safety net where support is given to each other without hesitation.“Those values [don’t] make you a good person. It makes you alive. It’s survival.”
Not just one person lives the values alone. A whole family and community who lives the values provides wellness to the collective.“People always asked how did you raise this kid? My community. In English that’s a hard concept for people to understand. It’s your community. Even with your grandmother’s people…That’s how they are. It’s everybody. Always.”
Roles and Responsibility
Having a sense of responsibility is central to a more equitable division of labor and sharing one’s gifts for the benefit of children, the family, community and the Earth. This responsible connection between an individual and collective was often based on man or womanhood.“In the conversations that I’ve had with some Native men, it’s sad to hear them say, I have no place in community, I have no purpose…But thinking of activities for men, like learning to butcher a seal [is important].”
When colonial values and structures were embedded within Tribal communities, this created a challenging relational dynamic that needs to be remedied, especially with regard to men’s roles in the community.“…we have children that doubt themselves, we have children that don’t feel confident in their abilities. So for our young men, safety on the ice, knowing how to read the water, are just some ideas for how to bring our men into this conversation too… think of activities for men, that was part of the roles and responsibilities…there are very distinct roles based on gender, not exclusionary, but we do need to be mindful of that.”
Knowledge Bearer 1: “The other thing I learned is that it takes a community to survive these places, and there are two parallel lines. I understand the man’s role pretty well from my people. What the women do is what the women do. [Laughter]”
Having mutual respect cultivates healthy relationships between men and women. A reliance existed between one another, and the community thrived when these roles and responsibilities were in balance.Knowledge Bearer 2: “They are the ones that keep order in the village. They are so valuable. Us men don’t know anything about that. We relied and depended on the women in the village to keep order, to keep everything safe, to keep the discipline. If people got outside of that in a bad way, they found out, and we never had to have police or churches or jails or lawyers or taxes. You name it. [Laughter] They had it figured out.”
Everyone in the community was appreciated, supported and cared for. Community members discussed the shared responsibility of caring for children. Each child brings love, laughter, and joy for all involved.“…and she was talking about roles in a community. Everybody had a role. Everybody gave to whatever was going on. Sometimes they would carry the water, sometimes they’d cut. I just remember her saying even the men who were more feminine, the men did not make fun of them. They just embraced them and let them be where they needed to be. If it was in the kitchen, or sewing, nobody judged. They just embraced who they were and put them in whatever role they wanted…I think that’s so important to remind kids nowadays. We all have different strengths, and different skills, and we all take part in every part of the community.”
Children are seen as cherished ancestors, relatives, and contributors to the community. Sometimes children are the teachers for people older than them.“Modeling good behavior to our children as well. We really value babies. [Laughter] You know? They’re the best thing that ever happened.”
This shared responsibility facilitates child, parent, and collective wellbeing. Responsibility requires mindful actions that consider how much the children are looking up to their family and community for direction.“It takes a whole community to raise a child. Everybody looking out for each other, and when a parent becomes a single parent for whatever reason, there’s people there that should be guiding them, and helping them, and helping them raise their children. Like it used to be.”
Responsible actions shape healthy bidirectional relationships and could make all the difference to a child’s life path trajectory.“…I go through difficult things, and I could turn to alcohol, but I don’t because I think about the younger children in my life, like my nieces. I have a seven-year-old stepson, and I think about how I want to make good choices for them and not myself, and that’s what keeps me well and stay healthy.”
If a parent could not provide something for their child, then someone else in the family or community stepped up.“I brought how many nephews out hunting? Their dad didn’t bring ’em out. They’d just pop up if I was gonna go set a net…I actually taught them how to fish. How to hunt. How to camp. How to get things ready…I didn’t know the impact it would have on the kids.”
The provision of caregiving support happened without any expectation for something in return. People could trust that all that was needed would be provided by something greater than themselves. Keeping multiple levels of relationships healthy and well is a very active process. It requires everyone fulfilling their role and responsibility, reaching out, sharing gifts, receiving the gifts, and showing up over and over again.“After my dad passed away, my cousin from [Town], he would quite often bring us a share of his hunt to my mom, and my mom’s kids, like me. When he would stop by, I would thank him and tell him he didn’t have to do that. He would say, ‘Oh. No. I’m only doing what your dad did.’ Because he said, ‘After my dad passed away. Your dad was always bringing my mom a share of whatever he hunted.’ Because he knew that her husband was gone. Their kids were small, and she needed that food to sustain themselves.”
Subsistence/Food
Subsistence activities require mental and spiritual preparation, patience, mindfulness, good intentions, respect, and gratitude for the blessings received. People who subsist from the land and waters work very hard to gather enough and leave enough for mutually sustainable purposes.“The food is a really big part of us…We don’t hunt. We don’t go catch. The game has given itself to us. I was taught [whether] it’s seal, caribou, [or] moose—if I do catch and if they give themselves up, I don’t just go over there and butcher it and just lay it aside. I say thank you for giving yourself up and please come again. I say that out loud before I butcher.”
The Elders and ancestors taught how to keep the ecosystem in balance so that people, animals, plants, and the land still benefited from the subsistence activity.“A lot of people don’t realize what it takes to live out there in the rural areas…how it is to subsist, to [live] on subsistence food, to hunt, to fish, to camp. Our people are very strong and that’s where our history comes from, is from our Elders, who were very strong in wellness. They lived it. They didn’t have anything in writing about wellness. They lived it.”
The hunters and gatherers who go out on the land today to subsist are traversing the same lands and waters that their ancestors did, which helps future generations build and strengthen their connection with past generations.“I grew up at fish camp. I grew up at hunting camp. I [had] a nomadic life. When I was young, we’d go to [camp] to get fish…We went around our region growing up, and that allowed me to know our ancestors. Also, it helped me become who I am today.”
Subsistence activities foster multiple connections at the same time, especially with the land, ancestors, and within one’s spirit. Subsistence foods bring people together and help maintain healthy relationships.“…Because [subsistence] was a time of connecting to what our ancestors taught us in putting away food and being who we are meant to be- living off the land and teaching our kids.”
Sharing food is a continuation of subsistence because once food is gathered, it is important to feed others and share the bounty of the catch with good spirit.“One of the greatest things we do as a family is to gather up all our [Tribe] foods, have a feast and invite all our family and friends to it because that’s the best way to enjoy it- Is being with family and friends and eating together and laughing and telling stories. That’s the best fun.”
This sharing of food often involved storytelling that was spoken in the Inupiaq or Yup’ik language and was rich with knowledge about history, the land, and lessons learned.“I feel like the way we learned about history, or the way I did growing up. We would be gathered at my grandmother’s house right down the street over here…Especially when people came over from [Town]. They were always going to her house. We’d have a meal together…our parents would bring us kids, and we would sit there quietly, and listen to them talking.”
This sense of peace can be difficult to replenish when people work 8 h per day, 5 days per week.“I quit going to [AA] meetings years ago and someone asked me a few years ago, let’s go to a meeting. I said, no, my meetings are the nearest fishin’ hole. I find my peace out when I’m fishing, out hunting.”
The work–life balance can be especially trying during the summer months and will need to be taken into consideration for planned wellness gatherings and activities.“… I work seven days a week. I work two jobs. I mean I feel like I’m just pulled everywhere. Yeah, I do need to make time to actually go out and pick berries and cut fish. I used to.”
This togetherness during subsistence seasons gave an opportunity for the application of traditional values as families worked together to put away food to last throughout the winter.“Even camping at Fort Davis was our summer home. We had meals together with our neighbors…We would all eat together, and do stuff together, take care of the catch together, go picking together, go fishing together, whatever it was.”
Language
The language acts as a thread that connects them to their ancestors and past ways of life, and how expression in Inupiaq allows community members to draw on that connection to establish a lifestyle grounded in relationships and culture. Language becomes a fundamental part of their identity.“That’s when it hit me that, oh my goodness. English doesn’t allow for how our people lived. Because they didn’t speak in English. They spoke in our languages. Our language sets our lifestyle. It sets how you relate to other people. Our language gives us that identity.”
Another knowledge bearer describes how Inupiaq supports joy and social connection through comedy and argues that translation into English can undermine these same things.“I think there are people that are not from our places that may not understand how deep how deep each of those terms can go.”
Sometimes the process of translation can limit the meaning and outcome of what was shared. This is why it is so important for the Inupiaq, Yup’ik and Siberian Yupik languages to be learned and spoken.“My uncle, my great-uncle [Name], I don’t know if you all know him. He could have been a comedian. Honest to goodness. Every story he told we laughed and laughed and laughed. When he translated the story to English it kind of lost its humor, or something.”
These quotes demonstrate how language supports connections to culture, community, values, and identity.“We do have a different form of respect in our language. That doesn’t translate in English. We can’t tell people ‘be respectful,’ like that…We have to act it. We have to be on it, and not telling people because they, especially little kids, have to see it. They have to see it. Because kids learn.”
This creates an opportunity to include Inupiaq lessons within the NEC curriculum, so that all participants are able to better access the healing powers of the language.“I love that we brought up language…one of the things I think brings healing in my family is our everyday focus on Inupiaq. I read to my children in Inupiaq, almost every day, I speak to them every day. And maybe one of the focuses could be a mini lesson in Inupiaq.”
Historical Knowledge
It is important to have inclusive historical stories and piece back together ancestral knowledges so the next generations can learn the truth about their family, community and who they are as an Indigenous person.“I think we really need to teach our history of how it was, and why we changed. Because once I understood why we changed, more of my pride came back of who I was. There wasn’t so much shame. I also had to work on shame in itself on what I lived through…It really, really pisses me off that we have to fight so hard to be well. ’Cause there are people who don’t fight like that…History needs to be made known. What came from history. Because I think when I saw that [history], it opened up conversations between me and my father about boarding school [and] understanding that we did the best we [could] with where we were at because that’s what we were taught. Ultimately, putting the historical shame back in its place, and teaching our children what we come from.”
Teaching historical knowledge has to take into consideration the depths of emotions, potential anger, and grief that could come up and everyone processes these feelings in their own way. One knowledge bearer shared how talking circles could be an avenue of letting people talk and share what they feel. It is also important to not overwhelm people by trying to do too much at once and to have the right person(s) facilitate the conversation.“There’s a way of doing it too that’s safe. Instead of just bombarding with all this information. At the same time, allowing space for discussion about what they know, and about what they’re feeling, legit feelings. Even if it’s just anger and just having that space to express that anger. Because I really do feel, even the bad parts, we need to know.”
This form of historical knowledge contains the wisdom of generations that kept a collective healthy and well. While some of the historical knowledge may have become dormant or disconnected from being common knowledge among community members, colonization could not permanently erase these practices.“…keeping and maintaining the knowledge through the songs, and dances, and language, and all those practices.”
Historical knowledge is a core component of healing and wellbeing that needs to be incorporated into wellness activities.“I feel that there has to be a balance of understanding where we come from [and] understanding what historically happened. Not necessarily pointing fingers, but knowing how we got out of it, where we’re going to, remembering who we come from.”
The truth can help people connect with who they are, break relational patterns of trauma, and come back to balance for a better future.“I really need to understand my own trauma so that I don’t impact my children. I think what has been really helpful for me as a parent is having access to research about intergenerational trauma, and how you release that, and being able to identify ways to work through it. Whether it’s meditation, preparing healing food, or having a sound bath…”
Culture
Despite these distances, culture can be lived and sustained when it is intentionally celebrated and shared with people who may be different.“I do worry about my nieces and nephews that live down in the States. They don’t have that access to cultural knowledge, and they don’t hear it. Me and my husband, we’re super intentional about any birthdays or Christmas, we always send them Alaska Native books and Alaska Native language things. Or even Alaska Native toys. Just so they always remember their cultural identity. Then we always try to, even though they’re so far away, we try to connect them with their Tribe, or even their native corporation.”
An Elder in the knowledge sharing circle spoke to the importance of acknowledging how many Alaska Native children are multi-cultural human beings that need all aspects of them honored and respected.“There is a cultural values poster that comes from all the different cultures of Alaska. I think that would be appropriate to use because we have a lot of families who are married into different cultures.”
Today’s expression of cultural knowledge may not be exactly the same as it used to be, and that is okay because culture and present-day life are dynamic and ever evolving.“They’d recognize the hardships that we’re facing, but that we’re wanting to carry forward, the gift that they’ve passed down for thousands of years. We’re doing our best.”
The hope is for learners to use, practice and share cultural knowledge so that future generations benefit from what is carried forward.“For me, going forward is our culture and our language gonna look exactly how it did in the past? No. That means it’s alive. It’s never looked exactly the same.”
Wellness
Humans are social beings. Survival would not be possible without socialization. It is through mutual support that personal and collective wellbeing is possible. Traditional values prevented people from feeling stigmatized if they needed help because it was a natural assumption of responsibility by the broader family and community to provide extra support to single parents, widows, Elders, and children.“The well-being of our people I feel comes from ourselves, of course, our family, the community, friends, and, also, to include men’s wellness, woman’s wellness, child wellness. Even friend wellness, who you grew up with as a child.”
Efforts are needed to strengthen communal wellbeing, and a sign of this positive shift would be for community members to reach out and ask for help more often.“Look at her grandma raising all the kids and reaching out for help when you need help. That’s part of wellness too. Instead of stuffing it and denying it. You have to reach out.”
This approach to promoting multiple levels of wellbeing could be more effective because wellness is reciprocated and sustained across all relationships.“My son goes to Cook Inlet Headstart. And I recently participated in a weaving class. A Tsimshian Weaver brought parents and children together to learn weaving, and it was really healing to do a meditative practice, but also we’re informally gathering together. It was a natural way to build community. And so I like the idea of having a task, like a culture-based task. I think that’s a natural way…I think building a network of families, and strengthening this community structure is wellness.”
When every person feels at peace, that they can be themselves, they belong, they are welcome, they are safe, and can be trusting/trustworthy, this has a ripple effect of wellbeing out to the collective. When communities create a space for everyone to be themselves, foster belonging, welcome beautiful diversity, provide a sense of safety, and demonstrate trust and respect, then this has a ripple effect within individuals. This relational way of understanding wellbeing needs to be learned AND experienced. To this end, our team received pedagogical (teaching) guidance on how to facilitate experiential learning.“Yeah. Wellness to me would be being well within your mind, body and spirit. It’s just a peaceful feeling when you finally come to peace with things, like the trauma and stuff. Accepting all the stuff that’s happened but walking through it knowing that you’re building yourself up every day, getting stronger, [with] lessons learned.”
Teaching Approach
This shows how important it is to still have children amongst activities that might be deemed to be too hard for them to do. Young children often learn from exposure and observation to everyday activities.“I think about how my grandma would trust us at a younger age. I remember I would watch her, and she would be sewing, and I would wanna try it…she would just give me a needle thread and say, “Go ahead. Go sew your toy.” I think nowadays if you give a four-year-old a needle—kids are a little—parents and adults are more like, ‘Eee (scary), no. She’s too little.’ My grandma was like, ‘She wants to learn. Here you go.’”
Elders should be incorporated into any teaching activities that involve ancestral and cultural knowledge.“…growing up in [City], I don’t get to see the beauty of living in the village and things like that. My grandma’s taking me out fishing every summer. We do things together. It’s still part of the culture. I’m still able to be a part of it. It’s a very, very healing, holistic way of living.”
This approach to teaching would encourage new learners to put in the work it takes to master a skill. New skills had to be practiced and repeatedly practiced over and over again.“I heard that we really grabbed each other’s hands and said follow me. Let’s go and do this. That’s how we taught. We never say that’s wrong, but we showed by showing them. That’s where it goes back to respect is showing them how to do it.”
The repetitive nature of learning takes time and practice. Repetition in learning is in contrast to some educational processes that move through material too quickly.“Just because I did it once, that didn’t mean I knew how. I had to learn the whole summer to cut it right again and again.”
From this repetition, learners start to get it right and become more confident in their abilities. The generative nature of education can become a catalyst for further learning where the students become the teachers.“Our world is not like a math book. One chapter. Move on, move on, move on. We still hear some of the things that we have heard from our grandparents…That’s part of our [Indigenous] world is to continuously hear it over and over, to remind us of who we are, who we should behave as…Repetitiveness in our world is okay.”
The goal is for everyone to become teachers and learners and for the benefit of the collective. One idea that was shared was to intentionally build within the NEC wellness intervention a process for participants to eventually become the ones who co-facilitate and teach.“A measure of success to me is that someone else will pick it up and teach this. Like the people that attend it will become the teachers, so we’re just planting seeds and we’re spreading it. We’re helping all of us bloom again.”
Building sustainable approaches like this could help restore traditional modes of education that last across generations.“Growing knowledge holders and [developing] a mentorship or apprenticeship program for youth that are eager to learn…would be really cool…Like [an] Indigenous wellness apprenticeship.”
Listening to stories can promote the storyteller’s and the listener’s wellbeing at the same time.“Just a thought, maybe incorporating stories? Whether it’s creation stories or…archival recordings of Elders and bringing that into the curriculum. Maybe emphasizing that connection to past generations. Also, what our origins are from me reading people of [town] was really grounding.”
Storytelling provides an opportunity to connect and build a relationship with one another. This one form of knowledge sharing can have multiple benefits to all involved.“What really helped me was being back home and just visiting the Elders that we have…I think one of the most valuable things is getting to listen to other people’s stories [and] find out more about them.”
When children learn about their own local heroes that they are descendants of, it could help them feel pride, respect, and a greater sense of belonging. These feelings can help a young person develop healthy connectedness relationships that create a positive feedback loop within themselves, their family and community.“This discussion is making is making me think of the point that there are so many things in the formal schooling system that are lacking that need [transformation] to be effective. And in a curriculum for Alaska Native students, they should be able to learn about local heroes. I mean, our region has so many local heroes like I was starting to write them down [numerous local heroes named] …and those are just the ones that I thought of.”
When people connect the dots and understand why there may be struggles and disconnect at the root of challenges within families and communities, it can help release shame, blame, and liberate community members from internalized oppression.“I feel like you need to understand relationships…I think this is really important ’cause we don’t understand these things. Like for me, once I learned about historic and intergenerational trauma it all clicked for me. I was like, oh, this is why my family has been the way that they have been.”
Ensuring that people have tangible tools to get through difficult conversations is a way to prevent further harm. The other suggestion was to engage in this content in a developmentally appropriate way and to talk about these layers of material one piece at a time.“One thing that I’m trying to do more is meditate. Be mindful of how I am feeling, breathing exercises. I never realized how much breathing can impact you. Those are things that I’ve been thinking—if I teach history of colonization again that I would probably incorporate.”
Building trust and co-creating a safe space was recommended before engagement. Sharing values and setting group norms is another strategy for welcoming all viewpoints and experiences into the learning space.“I like the idea of the levels because some of [these are] more difficult conversations, or more challenging to get through. How you mentioned building those relationships in a safe space first is a good approach when they do that.”
2.3. The NEC Piaġiq Framework
3. Discussion
3.1. Limitations
3.2. Recommendations for Future Research
4. Materials and Methods
Data Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Ullrich, J.S.; Young, J.C.; Wilbur, R.E.; Nguyen, T.; Johnston, P.; White, L.F.; Bright, J.; Contreras, A.; Alowa, E.; Tobuk, L. “It Makes My Heart Smile When I Hear Them Say, ‘Hi Grandpa, We’re Home!’”: Relationality, Alaska Native Wellbeing and Self Determination in Tribal Child Protection. Genealogy 2025, 9, 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030085
Ullrich JS, Young JC, Wilbur RE, Nguyen T, Johnston P, White LF, Bright J, Contreras A, Alowa E, Tobuk L. “It Makes My Heart Smile When I Hear Them Say, ‘Hi Grandpa, We’re Home!’”: Relationality, Alaska Native Wellbeing and Self Determination in Tribal Child Protection. Genealogy. 2025; 9(3):85. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030085
Chicago/Turabian StyleUllrich, Jessica Saniguq, Jason C. Young, Rachel E. Wilbur, Tram Nguyen, Patricia Johnston, Lily Fawn White, Jadyn Bright, Annalise Contreras, Elizabeth Alowa, and Lola Tobuk. 2025. "“It Makes My Heart Smile When I Hear Them Say, ‘Hi Grandpa, We’re Home!’”: Relationality, Alaska Native Wellbeing and Self Determination in Tribal Child Protection" Genealogy 9, no. 3: 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030085
APA StyleUllrich, J. S., Young, J. C., Wilbur, R. E., Nguyen, T., Johnston, P., White, L. F., Bright, J., Contreras, A., Alowa, E., & Tobuk, L. (2025). “It Makes My Heart Smile When I Hear Them Say, ‘Hi Grandpa, We’re Home!’”: Relationality, Alaska Native Wellbeing and Self Determination in Tribal Child Protection. Genealogy, 9(3), 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030085