Sheet'ká Ḵwáan Naa Kahídi
The Sheet'ká Ḵwáan Naa Kahídi is a performance venue and meeting space modelled after a Tlingit clan house in Sitka, Alaska. Its capacity is 300 people.[1] Some translate the building's name to "The House of the Sitka People." It is also known as the "Community House." It is the home of the largest hand-carved house screen in Southeast Alaska.[2]
Every summer the Naa Kahídi Dancers use the house to perform for tourists, singing and drumming songs that tell stories of Tlingit legend. The building is owned by Sitka Tribe of Alaska.
History
It is built on the location of the former school for Native children in Sitka.[2] It was built in 1997.[1]
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gollark: That sounds quite bad.
gollark: Maybe. It's hard to judge. If you average across all platforms ever, then probably.
gollark: I fear it.
gollark: The very ominously named "online safety bill" is very ominous and would impose ridiculous compliance requirements on basically everything, as well as allowing the media regulator to block sites which don't comply, as well as in a plausibly-deniable way banning end to end encryption, as well as requiring all web platform things to censor "harmful content".
References
- Kwong, Emily (23 October 2015). "Naa Kahídi needs new roof". KCAW News. Sitka, United States: KCAW. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
- "Sheet'ka Kwaan Naa Kahidi Tribal Community House". cityprofile.com. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
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