Today, the 41st Annual Protecting Our Children Conference started by welcoming over 1,800 advocates for Native children. The excitement to be together was clear.

Emcees Stephanie Weldon and Tessa Baldwin helped us start off the conference by introducing this year's theme, "Healing Our Spirits: Nurturing and Restoring Hope," and grounding us in the collective healing we know as Indigenous peoples. Through healing ourselves, we can stop the transmission of intergenerational trauma, help families heal together, and protect our children.

Yéil Koowú Shaawát, the Raven Tail Woman Program, was our first plenary panel which shared its expertise, stories, and experience in building and enhancing culturally based programs designed to strengthen community and family resilience. Leona Santiago, elder and advisor for the Tlingit and
Haida Tribal Family and Youth Services Department program, stated, “As a case manager or an ICWA worker, when you come to trainings like this you leave with healing. But the most powerful thing is when you heal on your own land. That’s powerful. That’s how we came up with Healing Village because a lot of us grew up in the village.”

Our second plenary panel included a kinship navigator program, program evaluator, personal lived experience, and a representative from the Grandfamilies & Kinship Support Network: A National Technical Assistance Center. Georgie Makris, who shared her experience onstage being a grandmother raising her three grandchildren, said, “My grandchildren saved me as much as I saved them.” Cheryl Miller ended the panel by encouraging the audience to work together and said, "This work is not done alone. It takes a wraparound [approach]. You can do it."
Eagle Wings Pageant Dancers dancing during the opening general session
As we look forward to what's ahead this week, we are reminded of our shared values of creating community bonds with one another so we can remain unified and stronger in our work advocating for Native children and families.
Tuesday Workshop Spotlight
Chehalis Basketry as a Healing Art
1:30 p.m.–3:00 p.m.
Chehalis basketry is a sit-beside artcultural sharing is a healing aspect of weaving. Participants have an opportunity to work with cedar and sweet grass to weave a basketry pouch. Traditional teachings are incorporated into the workshop and an honoring of ancestors who worked to reclaim Indigenous basketry gathering, processing, storage of weaving materials, and teaching are highlighted. There is a $50 fee in addition to registration payable on-site. Funds from this workshop are used to support the adoptee gathering sponsored by Sandy White Hawk.