Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion  Bunny Swan-Gease helps to complete a large circle of people during a cloth-tearing ceremony to commemorate the grand opening of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Bunny Swan-Gease helps to complete a large circle of people during a cloth-tearing ceremony to commemorate the grand opening of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Kenaitze Indian Tribe celebrates opening of Dena’ina Wellness Center

  • By Rashah McChesney
  • Saturday, June 14, 2014 10:01pm
  • News

Isis Fischer wanted to dance.

She squatted, stamped her feet and arched her back, and stared at Rolly Rivas, whose bell-wrapped feet matched the rhythm of the Mount Susitna drummers and singers gathered around a skin drum in the large gathering space of the Dena’ina Wellness Center.

Rivas spun around, a whirl of feathers and brightly colored beads, looked right at Fischer, stretched his hand toward her and beckoned for her to cross the glacial-blue polished concrete floor of the new 52,000-square-foot building in Old Town Kenai.

It was all the encouragement she needed and grinning wildly, the 6-year-old, took off, running, jumping, dancing her way to a spot behind Rivas where she ducked under his elaborate feathered costume and matched her steps to his.

It was a common sight during the three-day celebration, children being welcomed into the ceremony and encouraged to play among the adults.

Hundreds of people gathered at the wellness center for the first two days, taking self-guided tours of the state-of-the-art facility, listening to a parade of speakers and well-wishers, listening to drum and chanting circles and sharing meals — all celebrating the grand opening of the center.

More than 375 people signed a guest book for the tribe on the first evening. Each was given a jar of salmon and a commemorative trinket honoring the Kenaitze Indian Tribe.

For more than three hours, a parade of speakers congratulated the tribe on its achievement and a Dena’ina cloth ceremony took place. Guests were invited to gather in a large circle and tear the same piece of cloth apart — each taking home a tangible piece of the opening ceremony.

Then, Friday, the music and dancing began in earnest as visitors gathered to for a ceremony celebrating the art installed on the building site. A steady stream of people photographed Soldotna native Joel Isaak’s bronze statues gathering and processing fish.

“It’s a family,” Isaak said, as he spoke to the audience Friday. “I wanted to convey that sense of family with the installation.”

As he spoke, Isaak told everyone in the crowd to turn to a neighbor and talk about their first memories of catching fish.

“Everybody I know has a fish story,” he said. “Fish bring people together.”

Isaak’s intricately shaped 6-foot, 1-inch Dena’ina fisherman is flanked by the massive wooden fish-rack shaped structure on the outside of the wellness center. Nearby on another mound, a woman climbs a bronze fish-rack, and a child stands by watching.

The site of the wellness center is important to the Kenaitze as it is one of the original village sites for the Kahtnuht’ana Dena’ina people.

As they celebrated their community and its achievement with the center the tribe moved to its educational fishery site Saturday for a potluck at the mouth of the Kenai River looking out into the Cook Inlet.

Campfire smoke drifted over those in line for the potluck dinner of beans, salmon and barbecue. Picnic tables bursting with community members encircled the constantly lit campfire.

Director of Tribal Government Affairs, Alexandra “Sasha” Lindgren, sat and talked with guests. She said she had not expected such a turnout.

Meanwhile, children dug deep holes on the beach, and rushed back in forth between the rising tide to fill buckets for their sand structrues.

As Clinton Lageson stood up and left his spot at one of the drums, his sister Alexis Lageson quickly filled in.

Beaded necklaces with engraved wooden pendants and jars of canned fish were given to the elders, and the ceremonies helped bless the new center.

Everyone in the Kenaitze community really pulled together in the last three days, Clinton Lageson said.

After hours of eating, chatting and digging in the sand, a group of children and adults pulled the tribe’s setnet from the water, and harvested the catch.

 

Clarion reporter Kelly Sullivan contributed to this report. Reach Rashah McChesney at rashah.mcchesney@peninsulaclarion.com.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion A cloth-tearing ceremony took place Thursday June 12, 2014 during the grand opening ceremony for the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center in Kenai, Alaska. Everyone who took part tore the cloth into pieces and carried a tangible reminder of the center with them for the rest of the evening.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion A cloth-tearing ceremony took place Thursday June 12, 2014 during the grand opening ceremony for the Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s Dena’ina Wellness Center in Kenai, Alaska. Everyone who took part tore the cloth into pieces and carried a tangible reminder of the center with them for the rest of the evening.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion   Maggie Jones and Sondra Shaginoff-Stuart talk about squeezing more people into the growing circle joining a cloth-tearing ceremony Thursday June 12, 2014 during the grand opening ceremony of Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Maggie Jones and Sondra Shaginoff-Stuart talk about squeezing more people into the growing circle joining a cloth-tearing ceremony Thursday June 12, 2014 during the grand opening ceremony of Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s Dena’ina Wellness Center in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion  Madison Reams, 9, plays with her brother Enoch Reams, 18, during the grand opening ceremony of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Madison Reams, 9, plays with her brother Enoch Reams, 18, during the grand opening ceremony of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s Dena’ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Nancy Shephard, of Dillingham, dances with the Mount Susitna drummers and singers during the second day of grand opening festivities Friday June 13, 2014 at the Dena'ina Wellness Center in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Nancy Shephard, of Dillingham, dances with the Mount Susitna drummers and singers during the second day of grand opening festivities Friday June 13, 2014 at the Dena’ina Wellness Center in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion  A bronze statue of a Dena'ina fisherman, crafted by Soldotna-native Joel Isaak, was unveiled outside of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center Friday June 13, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion A bronze statue of a Dena’ina fisherman, crafted by Soldotna-native Joel Isaak, was unveiled outside of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s Dena’ina Wellness Center Friday June 13, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Cadence Fischer, 8, laughs as her younger sister Isis Fischer, 6, reacts to being allowed to dance during the grand opening ceremony for the Dena'ina Wellness Center Friday June 13, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Cadence Fischer, 8, laughs as her younger sister Isis Fischer, 6, reacts to being allowed to dance during the grand opening ceremony for the Dena’ina Wellness Center Friday June 13, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Yaqui and Otomi Indian Michael Rico smiles at native Yup'ik Rose Gilbeau of Kenai, who stopped when she saw his costume Friday June 13, 2014 during the second day of the grand opening ceremony for the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center in Old Town Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Yaqui and Otomi Indian Michael Rico smiles at native Yup’ik Rose Gilbeau of Kenai, who stopped when she saw his costume Friday June 13, 2014 during the second day of the grand opening ceremony for the Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s Dena’ina Wellness Center in Old Town Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Rose Tepp, tribal chair for the Kenaitze Indian Tribe and Gary Hartz of the Indian Health Services laugh together during the grand opening of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's new Dena'ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Rose Tepp, tribal chair for the Kenaitze Indian Tribe and Gary Hartz of the Indian Health Services laugh together during the grand opening of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s new Dena’ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion  Elsa Maillelle hands a jar of salmon to a visitor during the grand opening ceremony of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe's Dena'ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Rashah McChesney/Peninsula Clarion Elsa Maillelle hands a jar of salmon to a visitor during the grand opening ceremony of the Kenaitze Indian Tribe’s Dena’ina Wellness Center Thursday June 12, 2014 in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Kelly Sullivan/ Peninsula Clarion Community members of all ages helped pull in the setnet at the end of the three-day celebration for the opening of the Dena'ina Wellness Center, Saturday, at the Kenaitze educational fishery site.

Photo by Kelly Sullivan/ Peninsula Clarion Community members of all ages helped pull in the setnet at the end of the three-day celebration for the opening of the Dena’ina Wellness Center, Saturday, at the Kenaitze educational fishery site.

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