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Our Peoples: Giving Voice to Our Histories

We want to preserve our identity, history, land, language, and values for our children. Our children—our future—must understand our history so no one can say our culture is gone. If we do not preserve this, our lives won't belong to us anymore.

-Tapirapé curators (Mato Grosso, Brazil), 2002

Historically, Native people have been portrayed in textbooks in narrow or inaccurate ways. In Our Peoples, Native Americans tell their own stories—their own histories—and in this way the exhibition presents new insights into, and different perspectives on, history. The Seminole Tribe of Florida, Tapirapé, Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma, Tohono O'odham Nation , Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation, Nahua, Ka'apor, and Wixaritari—sometimes known as Huichol—share with visitors a few of the multitude of stories that represent Native American experiences.

The main story of Our Peoples focuses on the last 500 years of Native history and shows how the arrival of newcomers in the Western Hemisphere set the stage for one of the most momentous events in human history. In the struggle for survival, nearly every Native community wrestled with the impact of deadly new diseases and weaponry, the weakening of traditional spirituality, and the seizure of homelands by invading governments. But the story of these last five centuries is not entirely a story of destruction. It is also about how Native people intentionally and strategically kept their cultures alive.

Ángela Camilo Lucas (Nahua) preparing clay for her signature ceramic figures, San Agustín Oapan, Guerrero, Mexico, 2001., Photo by Ramiro Matos, NMAI.
Ángela Camilo Lucas (Nahua) preparing clay for her signature ceramic figures, San Agustín Oapan, Guerrero, Mexico, 2001.
Photo by Ramiro Matos, NMAI.
Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian