Page 89 - HISTORY ANGKOR
P. 89

HERITAGE AND HISTORY. AFTER THE END OF EACH ARCHAEOLOGICAL DIG SEASON,
                  YUP’IK LOCALS VIEW THE LATEST FINDS FROM THE NUNALLEQ SITE.
                  ERIKA LARSEN/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE COLLECTION

                                                                                                    RECONNECTING

                                                                                                    WITH THE PAST



                                                                                                    AT FIRST, Qanirtuuq chairperson Grace Hill
                                                                                                    opposed the excavation at Nunalleq because
                                                                                                    Yup’ik tradition says ancestors shouldn’t be
                                                                                                    disturbed. She came to see the dig as a way to
                                                                                                    preserve Yup’ik culture and language. “I’m hoping
                                                                                                    this will get the kids interested in their past,”
                                                                                                    she says. As artifacts were recovered from the

                                                                                                    site, Yup’ik people from the wider area around
                                                                                                    Quinhagak were able to see them close-up at the
                                                                                                    new culture and archaeology center. Artists also
                                                                                                    hold workshops there to demonstrate traditional
                                                                                                    arts and crafts, including mask making, hide
                                                                                                    sewing, drumming, and dance.


                                                                                                    PHOTOGRAPHED NEARLY A CENTURY AGO, AN IMAGE (LEFT) OF
                                                                                                    A GROUP OF YUP’IK LOCALS HANGS IN THE COMMUNITY CENTER
                                                                                                    IN BETHEL, ALASKA, ON THE YUKON DELTA.
                                                                                                    MARK RALSTON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
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