Rising from Invisibility: Indigenous Arizona Women in Charge of Themselves

Cliff Castle Casino Hotel 555 W Middle Verde Rd, Camp Verde, AZ, United States

In many Southwestern matrifocal cultures, Indigenous women’s lives are modeled after female heroes and sacred women who exemplify and express courage and kinship values. Among some tribal cultures, rites of passage celebrate female creativity and the transformative nature of women, hence there was not a need for the concept of feminism. Nevertheless, Indigenous women’s lives […]

Free

Community Building through Community Gardening

Spaces of Opportunity 13th Ave & Vineyard, Phoenix, AZ, United States

TigerMountain Foundation (TMF) will feature an on-going Cultural Diversity concept called Community Building through Community Gardening series that features storytelling, the arts and experiential learning through the TMF Experience. TMF seeks to unite people throughout different backgrounds and bring them into a setting where they can learn, build and share success with one another. The […]

Free

The Long Walk of the Navajo People, 1864-1868

Phippen Museum 4701 U.S. HWY 89N, Prescott, AZ, United States

In 1864, Navajo people were forced to walk over 450 miles to Fort Sumner in eastern New Mexico.  Imprisoned on a 40-square mile reservation for four long years the people suffered from hunger, loneliness, illnesses, and severe environmental conditions. On June 1, 1868, U. S. officials and Navajo leaders reached an agreement, allowing the Navajos […]

Free

Día de los Muertos: A Celebration of Life and Death

The Museum of Casa Grande 110 W. Florence Blvd, Casa Grande, AZ, United States

What is Día de los Muertos? Where did it come from, what are its roots? How do we celebrate it here in the U.S.? Día los Muertos or Days of the Dead is a significant and highly celebrated holiday in Mexico, Latin America, and Southwestern U.S. To understand Día de los Muertos one has to […]

Free

Beautiful Games: American Indian Sport and Art

The Museum of Casa Grande 110 W. Florence Blvd, Casa Grande, AZ, United States

Similar to what a person can find in art, sport and games also come to us with good and bad qualities. When bad there is evidence of cheating, chauvinism, narcissism, civil unrest, and stereotypes. And when good we gain aspects of trust, cooperation, fairness, focus, patience, and control. The values gained in the practice of […]

Free

Pearl Hart, the Lady Bandit- Victim or Vixen… or Both?

Florence Community Library 778 N. Main St., Florence, AZ, United States

Separating fact from fiction is no easy task when it comes to flamboyant stage coach robber Pearl Hart. A mountain of conflicting stories abound, thanks in no small part, to Pearl herself. So enamored of the Wild West, she embellished her own tale to accommodate the interest of newspapers and public fascination. This presentation will […]

Free

Plants, Inspiring the People: Reflections on Hualapai Ethnobotany of the Grand Canyon

Cliff Castle Casino Hotel 555 W Middle Verde Rd, Camp Verde, AZ, United States

Where lies the cure to diabetes? “Ask the prickly pear, or the mesquite bean pod…maybe they will tell you.” This is the answer you may hear from elder instructors of the Hualapai Ethnobotany Youth Project. The ethnobotanical story of the Hualapai Tribe  begins with the plant knowledge the people have inherited from their great grandparents […]

Free

Miranda v. Arizona: Part II

Arizona Humanities 1242 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ, United States

Join LGBTQ migrant rights group Trans Queer Pueblo and AZ Justice That Works for a community discussion and participatory workshop to explore the impact of the social and legal expansion of police power on disproportionately marginalized communities. This is the second program of a three part series that examines the impact of the 1966 United […]

Free

The Explorations and Discoveries of George Bird Grinnell, The Father of Glacier National Park

Southeast Regional Library 775 N Greenfield Rd, Gilbert, AZ, United States

The great West that George Bird Grinnell first encountered in 1870 as a 21-year old man was shortly to disappear before his eyes. Nobody was quicker to sense the desecration or was more eloquent in crusading against the poachers, the hidehunters, and the disengaged U.S. Congress than George Bird Grinnell, the “Father of American Conservation.” Grinnell […]

Free

Reading, Writing, and Fun with Polly and the Peaputts

Patagonia Public Library 346 Duquesne, Patagonia, AZ, United States

Welcome to Peaputt Place! Come meet Polly, her family, and friends. See how Polly and the Peaputts live, love, learn, and smile. In this three part book series, see how Polly and her friends work on acceptance, forgiveness, cooperation, inclusion, and many more constructive interactions. Participants will have opportunities to explore language understanding through five […]

Free

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