![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Hearing that our guests felt welcomed by our Wildcat community and proud to have attended our Pow Wow fills my heart with joy. “This event establishes and strengthens relationships with Native communities from Chicagoland and Great Lakes region. “I couldn’t be prouder of the work of the NAISA students on Pow Wow planning committee,” Golding said. ![]() President Michael Schill welcomed participants, noting students’ remarkable efforts to prepare for this celebration of Native and Indigenous communities.Īaron Golding, associate director of Multicultural Student Affairs, echoed those sentiments. will be a moment I never forget.” – Jasmine Gurneau, director of Native American and Indigenous Affairs Dancing into the arena, on Menominee lumber under our feet, with hundreds watching, will be a moment I never forget.” “We spent months preparing to enter the circle and dance for the first time in our new regalia. “This Pow Wow was very special for my family,” said Jasmine Gurneau, director of Native American and Indigenous Affairs. The Native American and Indigenous Student Alliance (NAISA), in collaboration with Multicultural Student Affairs and numerous Northwestern partners, hosted the Pow Wow, which was accented by traditional song, dance and dress. Taking place on Earth Day, the second annual event was dedicated to “honoring the land.” Friends and members of the Northwestern community gathered April 22 at Welsh-Ryan Arena for the University’s traditional Spring Pow Wow. ![]()
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