THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Indigenous People's Day 2025

Written by Mya Simon, Photographed by M'iitra Pino

Author: Nels Christensen/Wednesday, November 12, 2025/Categories: Home, Campus, Culture

Rate this article:
No rating

Staff and students gathered to celebrate Indigenous People’s Day on Oct 13. The event was sponsored by the Native American Center and began at the Fort Lewis College clocktower with a Campus-Wide Blessing and Solidarity Walk. 

The NAC works to support students from roughly 165 different Indigenous tribes by conversing directly with Native students on ways to best support them, NAC director Larenz Esplain said. 

This approach lends itself to celebrations and events such as Indigenous People’s day, Esplain said. 

“We're celebrating our whole identity, and the community's identity,” he said. “Regardless if people are Indigenous or non-Indigenous.” 

 

People gather at the FLC clocktower on Indigenous People's Day (M'iitra Pino)

 

The NAC is furthering its commitment to support Indigenous students through the creation of the Reconciliation Center that serves as a hub of resources, said Reconciliation Center Coordinator Matthew Schaeffer, 

Fort Lewis was formerly a federal Indian boarding school located in Hesperus, Colorado, about 20 miles west of present-day campus, said Schaeffer. 

While the reconciliation Center is not a physical space, its purpose is to promote tribal nation building, health and wellness, language reclamation and the proliferation of  Indigenous culture and knowledge, Schaeffer said. 

“I think any reconciliation effort is a community based effort, and should be about the collective rather than individuals,” Shaeffer said.  

Melia Duvall is a student worker at the NAC who is of the Muscogee Creek and Yuchi tribes. For her, reconciliation includes continually learning about tradition and Indigenous language, she said. 

I'm still attempting to bridge that gap between what was traditionally done and existing in today's world,” Duvall said.

While there are complexities to navigating life as an Indigenous person today, it means a lot to be in community with others and living their truth, Duvall said.

For ASFLC Student Body President Asa Worthington, reconciliation is the first big step to understanding and appreciating the struggles and hard times as Indigenous peoples. 

“It plays a huge role in how we see our future being shaped, and the steps that we need to take to make sure that our people after us can live in a world where they belong.” Worthington said. 

Different colors represent many things, like a woven blanket, all the colors present lives, histories, and different avenues, he said. 

 

Asa Worthington speaks to the crowd (M'iitra Pino)

 

“I think for Indigenous Peoples day, this is the legacy, the culture, the colors from so many different other tribes, stories, everything like that, and that message of just understanding that life is full of many different things,” Worthington said. 

“But if we construct it and take the time and the patience and have the resources to do this, we can cultivate something very beautiful through our community,” said Worthington. 

 


 


 


 

 


 

 
Print

Number of views (4516)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

The Hidden Cost

Story by: Matthew Claeson and Zara Tucker

Investigating Meal Swipes and the New Food Provider at Fort Lewis College

Fort Lewis College announced on Apr. 9 that Fresh Ideas will be taking over Fort Lewis College’s food service and dining contract, a place that has been filled by Sodexo for the past 15 years. This article takes a look into Sodexo’s food service system for students.  Skycards and Meal Swipes When it comes to skycards here at Fort Lewis College, they are a student’s...

The Coming Storm

Scout Edmondson

Lessons learned from the ‘22/‘23 winter and what could come with the looming El Niño.

  At the end of the 2023 winter, the San Juan Mountains, just north of Durango saw a record-breaking snowpack.  According to the National Resource Conservation Service, a branch of the US Department of Agriculture that tracks historical snowpack data, the snowpack in The San Juans topped out at 31.5 inches of snow-water equivalent (SWE) in mid-April. Purgatory Ski Resort,...

Crying Wolf

Scout Edmondson

Colorado's wolf reintroduction has become so emotional, so political, that it's no longer even about the wolves. 

Cover photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Wolf 2306-OR runs into the wild after being released by CPW on Dec.19, 2023.  Grand County is a land of wide open skies, snowy mountains that hunch against the biting wind blowing off the plains of Wyoming, and miles and miles of prairie, pine forests and meandering trout streams. It’s home to the headwaters of the Colorado...

A New School is Coming to Fort Lewis College

Julian Zastrocky

Mountain Middle School capitalizes on the "empty" space behind Animas High School.

Fort Lewis College approved Mountain Middle School's request to build a new building next to the recently built Animas High School location. It approved a 420 million dollar budget to help with the building process.  Tom Stritikus, president of Fort Lewis College, is slated to release an email tomorrow announcing the decision formally to the student population. “We are so...

Bones from the Bisti Badlands

Anja Tabor

What it takes to get a dinosaur to Fort Lewis College

A dinosaur skeleton cast and cousin of the Tyrannosaurus rex moves onto campus from the Bisti Wilderness Area in New Mexico, also known as the Bisti Badlands. The fossil is being loaned to the college for undergraduate research this semester, professor of geosciences, Gary Gianniny said. But how is the cast coming to Fort Lewis College? The most recent discovery of the dinosaur was found...

First567810121314Last