About this campaign
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Yakama Nation artist Toma Villa calls the famous petroglyph She Who Watches or Tsagaglalal the ?Mona Lisa of the Columbia River.? She represents the Indigenous cultures that have been here since time immemorial and remain here today. Through our education programming, Confluence assembled more than 100 students and community members for Toma arrange into the image of She Who Watches in the landscape by the Columbia River.
We gave them t-shirts that feature a silhouette of a Columbia River fisherman catching a salmon from a traditional scaffold at Celilo Falls. The lesson they took away from the experience is the same as the caption on their shirts: You Are On Indigenous Land.
When you own one of these shirts yourself, you support important cultural education in schools and remind people you meet whose land we all walk upon.
Watch the video below to learn more about Indigenous land rights and sovereignty
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Confluence was a response to the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial as a way to tell the Native side of the story. The mission of Confluence is to connect people with the history, living cultures and ecology of the Columbia River system through Indigenous voices. We work through art landscapes, educational programs, public gatherings, and an online library in collaboration with northwest tribes, communities and the celebrated artist Maya Lin.
Find us at confluenceproject.org
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