Olivia Richardson is an aunt, accountant, and dog lover who works for a construction company in Raleigh. But sheโ€™s also someone elseโ€”a Native American.

Richardson, a member of the Haliwa-Saponi Tribe, hails from Hollister in Halifax County, where she grew up learning about her tribeโ€™s culture, language, and artistic traditions. In Raleigh, Richardson often feels like sheโ€™s โ€œwalking in two worlds,โ€ she says.ย 

โ€œBeing in a city setting thatโ€™s not close to a tribe, you have to be able to find ways to continue to [be in touch with your heritage],โ€ Richardson says. โ€œYou want to be able to live what we call โ€˜American lifeโ€™ as well as hold on to your Indigenous ways and traditions.โ€

That feeling of living a double life is common for Native Americans, says Christina Theodorou, a member of theย Lumbee Tribe. For her, going home means seeing her family but also getting back in touch with her tribal roots.ย 

โ€œWhen you are from a tribal community, you kind of live in two worlds,โ€ she says. โ€œYou live and you function and you work your day-to-day โ€ฆ but you have to go home to have that cultural [connection]. You have to spend a lot of time on the road to get that boost of energy and good medicine that comes from going to a tribal powwow.โ€ย 

Sandon Jacobs, a member of the Waccamaw Siouan, says living in Raleigh can sometimes be challenging.ย 

โ€œWeโ€™re so spread out,โ€ he says. โ€œWhen you go around the Lumbee community in Pembroke, Native folks are together. They live down the road from one another, [they] go to church together on the weekends.

โ€œRaising a family here is a lot different. I do miss that experience for my kids, being immersed [in Native culture]. Itโ€™s nice to be around people who have your lived experience.โ€

Jacobs and the 168,000 other Native Americans who live in North Carolina will have the chance to come together Saturday at Raleighโ€™s Inter-Tribal Pow Wow at Dorothea Dix Park, the first funded by the city. Raleigh officialsโ€™ decision to literally invest in the Indigenous community means a lot, says Richardson.ย 

โ€œTheyโ€™ve taken it upon themselves to acknowledge that there were Indigenous people who lived here [in Dix Park],โ€ she says. โ€œ[Theyโ€™re saying], โ€˜We want to take the time to appreciate you. To allow people to witness you.โ€™โ€ย 

In Raleigh, powwows at local colleges are regular but relatively small events. There have been attempts to start a large annual powwow at the NC State Fairgrounds, but theyโ€™veย  faltered due to lack of funding, says Jacobs. This event feels different, like โ€œthe start of something lasting,โ€ he says.ย 

In the past few years, recognition of Native American communities has increased. In 2018, Governor Roy Cooper turned Columbus Dayโ€”once a celebration of Christopher Columbus, who led the conquest and extermination of hundreds of Native Americans upon landing in South Americaโ€”into Indigenous Peoplesโ€™ Day. Recently, local officials have also acknowledged land in the state that once belonged to Native American people.ย 

Policy changes like these and cultural programs like the Dix Park Pow Wow should be โ€œconversation starters,โ€ Jacobs says.ย 

โ€œAs the Native people living here, itโ€™s up to us to make ourselves seen,โ€ he says. โ€œTo show up in the community,ย  in our schools and our workplaces and our politics โ€ฆ. To make sure that the history of the Indigenous people in this state isnโ€™t just glossed over in a couple of pages in your fourth-grade textbook.โ€

North Carolina has one of the largest Indigenous populations in the United Statesโ€”with eight tribes and four urban Indian organizationsโ€”but manyย  think of Native American culture as extinct, Theodorou says.ย 

โ€œOur presence truly hasnโ€™t been known,โ€ she says. โ€œThereโ€™s not really been an acknowledgment of Indigenous culture in the Triangle.โ€

Thatโ€™s partly because there is not a tribe specifically anchored in the Triangle, she says. The closest community is the Occaneechi Tribe in Hillsborough.ย 

Powwows help the wider population understand that Native American communities are alive and well, Theodorou says. Moreover, they educate people about Native American culture. The Dix Park Pow Wow is an exciting and โ€œemotionalโ€ event, Theodorou says, but itโ€™s also an opportunity to reduce the stigma and stereotypes associated with Native American communities.ย 

โ€œWhen you are an Indian who lives in a city, an urban setting, oftentimes youโ€™re one of the only Indians that is in your school or your job. Youโ€™re constantly asked questions that are offensive or ignorant,โ€ Theodorou says. โ€œWe need to have frank, open, and honest conversations about what people donโ€™t know about tribal cultures here.โ€

Powwows are a time to come together, says Trey Roberts, community engagement manager for the Dix Park Conservancy and a member of the Haliwa-Saponi Tribe.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s a moment for us to celebrate our culture. Up to 1940 or 1950, it was illegal for us to even dance,โ€ Roberts says. โ€œPowwows are an opportunity to gather and dance and celebrate what weโ€™re proud of, our artistry and our culture and the things that have been passed down to us.โ€

The all-day celebration will include dancing, drumming, and singing, with performances by former Miss Lumbee Alexis Raeana and singer-songwriter Charly Lowry.ย 

Jacobs, a singer and emcee, will perform with the Stoney Creek Singers, he says. Their higher-pitched style of singing comes from the Northern Plains area, around the Great Lakes, he says. He and other members of Stoney Creek will be singing in the Tutelo-Saponi language.ย 

Richardson, meanwhile, is one of the lead dancers for the powwow alongside Patrick Green. Sheโ€™ll perform the โ€œjingle dance,โ€ a healing dance that originated in the West. In the story she was told, the dance healed a young Native girl who was very sick, she says. The girlโ€™s grandfather saw the dance and the dresses worn by dancers in a vision.ย 

The story is told in many different ways, but thatโ€™s the version Richardson carries with her, she says. Every time she dances, she tries to think of someone who is in need of healing.ย 

โ€œI always take the time to pray for someone who might be sick. I pray for someone who went through the loss of a family member. I pray for someone thatโ€™s going through depression,โ€ she says.ย 

โ€œThe dresses are heavy, but when youโ€™re wearing them, the weight tends to distribute across your entire body. As Iโ€™m dancing, I try to think of that weight as someoneโ€™s hurt or someoneโ€™s sickness that theyโ€™re going through. I carry that on myself, just enduring it, and helping them endure it as well.โ€ย 


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Jasmine Gallup is a freelancer for INDY, covering LGBTQ+ issues, social justice, and arts and culture. A Raleigh native, she also works as an editor for online media.