
Late this morning, I learned Dr. Katie John of Mentasta had died earlier in the day. I am not going to write much about Katie right now, other than to note she loved her Ahtna family, culture, and way of life so strongly that when it mattered she stood up to the State of Alaska and went out to catch salmon in the place where she had first fished with her a father as child. She fought for the right to continue doing so all the way to US Supreme Court.
She won that battle, then, through quirks in the law faced the fight all over again. Finally, she persuaded an unsure Governor Tony Knowles, beset upon by powerful political and financial interests to file the final appeal and send her case back to the Supreme Court, not to play politics with her life, but to do what was right.
Over the weekend, I will search through my Katie John photographs and articles. Sometime early next week, I will put up a proper tribute to her. Then I will go to her funeral. I took this photo in May of 2010 at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks Interior-Aleutians Campus in Tok, just before the first of two ceremonies in which UAF awarded her an Honorary Doctor of Laws Degree.
The woman behind her is granddaughter Kathryn Martin, who had just earned a bachelor's degree. The red sash designates the graduates as Native.
My own grandson, Kalib, graduated from pre-kindergarten today. I will put up a post on this either late tonight or early tomorrow. True, I recently switched this blog to a once a week schedule, but ever since, extraordinary circumstances have demanded I put up more than just one post a week.
Index to full series. * Designates the main, story-telling, posts: