ʻOku kamata hoʻo vitioó ʻi he:

42 ʻAho 13 Houa 54 Miniti

Falaite 6 Maʻasi 2026, 11:30 PM (GMT+0)

Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
Ko e fakatahá ni ʻoku ʻi he ʻinitanetí
Ko e fakatahá ni ʻoku kau tonu ki ai
- Ballroom E

Navajo Oral History Project from Gathering of Tribes

This session is an overview of the Navajo Oral History project from Gathering of Tribes, including a short film with testimonials about the importance of the project from Navajo community members and the oral history interviewers who work on the project. The goal of the Navajo Oral History project is to create a new database of names of Navajo people and their ancestors so family members can do more in-depth research in the future. In communities with written historical documents, this work is done by taking names from government, church, community, and other records and entering them into a database, sometimes called "indexing." With Navajo community knowledge being orally transmitted, this project will help families record and document this information from the living holders of historical knowledge: community elders. The information is compiled into a report and returned to the interviewee to keep for their records, as well as entered into a database for future access.

Fakamatala ne Fokotuʻu Maí


Thumbnail ki he Complexities in Indigenous Genealogical Research
Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English

Complexities in Indigenous Genealogical Research

Charity Fleming, Cindy Quinney, Emerson Mose, Gavriel Wise, Rachel Crouse, Shane Manning

Thumbnail ki he Uncovering Truth Through Oral History and Genealogical Research
Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
22:24

Uncovering Truth Through Oral History and Genealogical Research

Clevlyn Anderson

Thumbnail ki he Unveiling Family Legacies: Verifying Native American Ancestry and Tribal Affiliation
Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
1:00:10

Kau ʻi he Fepōtalanoaʻakí