Tabetha with her daughter, Allison, and Grandpa Charles Toloff. Courtesy photo
Alaska Native/Indigenous People

Tabetha Toloff – Koyukon Athabascan

Tabetha and her Grandpa Charles Toloff. Courtesy photo
Tabetha and her Grandpa Charles Toloff. Courtesy photo

Tabetha Toloff (Koyukon Athabascan and Russian) grew up as a kid in Nikiski and has lived in Anchorage for over 30 years. Her beloved grandpa, Charles Peter Toloff, was born in 1921 in Fort Yukon, and later homesteaded in Nikiski where much of her family lived. Tabetha’s great- grandmother was Margaret Albert Reed of Rampart. Her great-grandfather was Peter Toloff and was from Russian. Grandpa Charles is now 95 years old, is like a father to Tabetha, and is the oldest living original shareholder of his Native Corporation, CIRI.

Tabetha is married and has a daughter and two step-sons. I have known Tabetha since the early 2000’s. We served on the board for the Alaska Native Professional Association (ANPA) for a number of years. Since our ANPA days, we have been busy with our lives and I was glad to catch up with her recently.

Tabetha’s passion for education led her to earn her Master of Organizational Leadership degree with a concentration in Servant Leadership from Gonzaga University; her Bachelor of Arts in Organizational Management from Alaska Pacific University (APU); and an Associate in Applied Science degree in Business from UAA. In 2014, she completed APU’s Alaska Native Executive Leadership Program. Alaska Pacific University (APU) recently highlighted Tabetha as one of their new board members and featured alum.

Tabetha Toloff speaks at ANPA's 10th anniversary in 2009.
Tabetha Toloff speaks at ANPA’s 10th anniversary in 2009.

Tabetha is currently the chief administrative officer of Cook Inlet Tribal Council (CITC). Prior to joining CITC, she oversaw the Alaska Native Program for Alyeska Pipeline Service Company and its associated commitments to the Alaska Native Utilization Agreement, scholarships, internships, employee development, community outreach, and stakeholder relations.

Tabetha serves on the Alaska Native Heritage Center Board of Directors as Development Committee chair, and is chair of the Alaska Native Shareholder Development Action Group. She is the President of the Bering Straits Foundation Board of Director, as well as a member of the University of Alaska (UAA) Alaska Native Advisory Council.

Tabetha credits her Grandpa Charles with teaching her a strong work ethic. He is family-oriented, does for himself and helps others. He inspired Tabetha to give back to her community and share with others. She has worked with organizations that help advance Alaska Native people, whether it is with direct services, scholarships, job creation, education, shareholder development and more.

Tabetha with her daughter, Allison, and Grandpa Charles Toloff. Courtesy photo
Tabetha with her daughter, Allison, and Grandpa Charles Toloff. Courtesy photo

Tabetha is a dual shareholder of Bering Straits Native Corporation and CIRI. She was grateful to receive scholarship support from The CIRI Foundation while pursuing her degrees. Like many young Alaska Native people who weren’t raised around the same traditions held by their Alaska Native elders, she didn’t grow up knowing or learning about her cultural heritage, ANCSA, or what it meant to be Alaska Native.

In her mid-20’s, Tabetha set out to give back by working for and volunteering with Alaska Native organizations as a way to learn more about her culture. She made it her mission to learn more about Alaska Native people, culture and ANCSA. Tabetha felt she wasn’t ever easily identified as being Alaska Native and many times found herself in situations or conversations where she needed to explain her heritage to others. It gave her an opportunity to learn from others and she has been fortunate to work with people who have generously shared their culture with her, and some who have given her meaningful insight and gifts of knowledge.

Tabetha has treasured the many connections she has made with people she has worked and crossed paths with, including Willie Hensley. Last year, Willie gifted Tabetha with an Inupiaq name, Ivalu. It means dried caribou tendon or sinew that is commonly used to tie canoes together, and also means useful and strong. Tabetha loves the Alaska Native value of sharing, and appreciates the Inupiaq name being shared with her.

Many young Alaska Native people grew up as Tabetha did, and she shares some advice:

  • Be true to yourself
  • Don’t try to be something or someone that you’re not
  • If you want to learn about your culture, immerse yourself in it through many ways and people
  • You don’t have to look or live a certain way to be truly connected to your Alaska Native spirit and culture. It’s a way of being.

Tabetha is proud of the strides made by Alaska Native tribes, organizations and companies over the years. She is happy to have contributed to organizations, like ANPA, that have grown in the past 20 or so years. I have always admired Tabetha’s work ethic, sense of humor and willingness to ask questions and learn. I also admire the ways she mentors young people in a professional and volunteer capacity. Ana basee’ Tabetha for sharing a little bit about yourself!

Alaska life

Woman’s March on Anchorage Youth Report

My daughter and I went to the Woman’s March on Anchorage to take photos and interview a some people. It was about 11 degrees Fahrenheit and snowing. My phone died pretty quickly, but we managed to interview a few people.

Here are couple photos from the March.

Approximately 2,000 people attended the Woman's March on Anchorage. Photo by Angela Gonzalez
Approximately 2,000 people attended the Woman’s March on Anchorage. Photo by Angela Gonzalez
Approximately 2,000 people attended the Woman's March on Anchorage. Photo by Angela Gonzalez
Approximately 2,000 people attended the Woman’s March on Anchorage. Photo by Angela Gonzalez

Thank you to Ermelina Gonzalez for reporting for the Athabascan Woman Blog!

Alaska life, Entertainment

Nikolai – Sobriety for the New Year

Amy Modig recently attended a sobriety celebration in Nikolai and has generously agreed to share her experience on the Athabascan Woman Blog.

Nikolai sunset b by Amy Modig

Nikolai – Sobriety for the New Year – A Community Wide Celebration

New Year celebration in Nikolai. Photo by Amy Modig
New Year celebration in Nikolai. Photo by Amy Modig

In this small Athabascan village of 100, Sobriety Week was celebrated from January 10 to 15, which included Russian Orthodox New Year on the 14th in Nikolai. Beverly Gregory, Tribal Administrator and her Assistant, Shalmarie Nikolai, organized and coordinated the activities for the week which included music for the school students, a suicide prevention workshop, sobriety work, dances every night and a spectacular fireworks display on Russian Orthodox New Year’s Eve. The community was able to use donated funds, as well as local organizations, to house, feed and provide transportation for the guest speakers and musicians.

In the last local election, the residents voted to change Nikolai’s local option law from dry to damp and the community has seen an increase in alcohol-related trauma. Local planners hoped to support sobriety and attract strugglers and inspire active users to choose healthier lifestyles. Many times it is the youth who suffer from chaotic homes.

Josephine Malemute and Mike Mickelson performing at the Nikolai Sobriety Celebration. Photo by Amy Modig
Josephine Malemute and Mike Mickelson performing at the Nikolai Sobriety Celebration. Photo by Amy Modig

With the youth as a priority, Dancing with the Spirit was invited to teach the students in school to play music. Its mission is to connect youth and elders through school music programs and it promotes spiritual, physical and mental wellness with music. Josephine Malemute (Nulato/Galena) and Mike Mickelson (Cordova) were the two instructors. Mike Mickelson, son of founder and Executive Director, Belle Mickelson, said Nikolai was the 30th village the program has visited in the last 20 years.

Josephine, who is also the Assistant Director of Dancing with the Spirit, said they bring guitars, fiddles, mandolins and ukuleles and even though they mostly go to Athabascan villages, they have been all over the state as far north as Pt. Hope and even into Canada. The week of music culminated in a concert for the community by the younger grades.

Guitar lessons for youth in Nikolai. Photo by Amy Modig
Guitar lessons for youth in Nikolai. Photo by Amy Modig

Top of the Kuskokwim School provided housing for most presenters and opened the library for music classes. Principal Tara Wiggins and Teacher Matt Willette were generous in their sharing of space and participating whole-heartedly in all events, while John Runkle, Maintenance, and Martha Stearns, Cook/Custodian, gave all possible support to create a clean and comfortable site while doing all of their regular duties. Matt Willette had just arrived as a new teacher that week! They were all very appreciated.

As part of the festivities, each night Mike and Josephine played so the community could dance. Several youth, adults and elders were encouraged to try their talents with the two. In a special treat, they were joined by Stanley Peters of Holy Cross who delighted Nikolai with his guitar, fiddle and voice. On New Year’s Day, he and Josephine demonstrated the Jitter Bug dance to everyone’s delight.

Russian New Year’s Eve was on the 13th and the community organized a fireworks display that would rival Anchorage or Fairbanks.

As part of developing sobriety skills, a four-hour safeTALK session was held for over 20 community members, high school youth included. Val Pingayak and Constance Reiner-Ely co-trained and it was very well received. They both work for Tanana Chiefs Conference Suicide Prevention.

Samuel Johns of the Forget-Me-Not movement for helping people to reunite homeless people to their families or communities, delighted the young people with his humor and his inspirational message. The Forget-Me-Not Facebook group started in June and already has over 21,000 members. He has received numerous awards; just the latest is the FBI Director’s Community Leadership Award which he will receive in April in Washington, D.C. Samuel performed some of his rap messages and spoke on his commitment to sobriety and health.

Circle Talks were held at the Nikolai Sobriety Celebration. Photo by Amy Modig
Circle Talks were held at the Nikolai Sobriety Celebration. Photo by Amy Modig

Doug and Amy Modig, early leaders in the Alaska Native Sobriety Movement, held circle talks each day on different aspects of living sober. They also had individual sobriety talks with community members. They thoroughly enjoyed local steam baths and the music and dances.

All the guests were fed three meals a day by a professional quality chef, Ed Ticknor of Nikolai, who is also the father of Tatiana Ticknor (who got to speak with President Obama last November on Alaska Native youth concerns). Joricha Thomas was also a great cook and they had creative recipes for moose and fish. They cooked large items, such as moose stews, baked king salmon and turkeys for the potluck dinners held each night in the school gymnasium.

Breakfast and lunch was provided at the tribal office where a kitchen was set up. Each of these meals, were enlivened by the storytelling skills of the visitors and the local staff. The final lunch on Friday caused so much hilarity that people were wiping their eyes and holding their sides. Many agreed that these were the most healing of all the activities, except for the steam baths so generously provided by the Petruska family, Nick and Oline.

Nikolai Dog Musher John Runkle with pups. Photo by Amy Modig
Nikolai Dog Musher John Runkle with pups. Photo by Amy Modig

Another local activity was provided by John Runkle, longtime dog musher, who gave a sled ride to Mike Mickelson for 27 miles! There were several birthdays during the week. People requested prayers for the Tribal Chief Sammy John, who was under medical care at a hospital.  On New Year’s Day, gifts were presented to the Elders and to the children.

It was a very wonderful sobriety celebration and reminded Doug and Amy of the early Rural Providers’ Conferences. They both received, as well as everyone who had participated, a Certificate of Appreciation “for choosing to LIVE a SOBER lifestyle.” All of us want to thank Nikolai for its generosity for sharing its vision of sobriety with the rest of us. May all their hopes and dreams be realized in the New Year!

____

Thank you Amy Modig for sharing her experience and beautiful photos. What an inspirational start to the New Year in Nikolai!

Alaska life

Alaskan Gift Basket Ideas

A cooler full of subsistence foods was a hit at a fundraiser in Fairbanks. Photo by Robin Renfroe
A cooler full of subsistence foods was a hit at a fundraiser in Fairbanks. Photo by Robin Renfroe

Throughout the year, I see people doing fundraising to support families, organizations or just looking for gift ideas for birthdays, anniversaries or holidays. When families, friends or organizations are holding fundraisers, they are always looking for ideas for gift baskets themes. I asked Peter Captain, Jr. for some ideas on gift baskets. He is an experienced fundraiser and caterer. Peter shared the following ideas and advice.

“Having done and coordinated many successful fundraisers over the years, mainly here in Fairbanks with the help of an awesome volunteer based group of people who help in their own unique way. Learning as we go along over the years what works and what doesn’t has been a big learning stone. But one thing for sure, having REALLY good raffle items makes a HUGE difference.” – Peter Captain, Jr.

Peter said, “Really GOOD raffle items are anything made with LOVE!” For example, homemade items are a hit, like beaded slippers, fur hats, beaded gloves, clothing, snow shoes, dog sleds or quilts/afghans.

According to Peter, the biggest hit sellers are Native food baskets. They are sometimes more challenging to acquire because of shipping costs, but they are very popular. He gives a list below, but says there are many more ideas for Native foods (whether frozen, fresh, jarred or smoked).

Native Food Baskets

  • Moose or caribou Dry meat (Biggest hit)
  • Jarred salmon or smoked salmon strips
  • Frozen fish of any kinds (especially white fish eggs)
  • Frozen moose or caribou meats
  • Fresh, pickled or jarred muktuk
  • Jarred seal oil
  • Jarred pickled fish
Robin Renfroe attended a fundraiser in Fairbanks, and took pictures of these Native food baskets.
Robin Renfroe attended a fundraiser in Fairbanks and took pictures of these Native food baskets. Yum!

 

Here is an example of a Thanksgiving themed holiday basket. Photo by Robin Renfroe
Here is an example of a Thanksgiving themed holiday basket. Photo by Robin Renfroe

Seasonal Gift Basket Theme Ideas

  • Emergency roadside kit tote
  • Emergency household kit
  • Holiday theme baskets (Thanksgiving, etc.)
  • Holiday dinner totes
  • Sledding packages (sleds, hats, mitts, hot coco, mugs, tea, marshmallows, etc.)
  • Bonfire kits (hot dogs, marshmallows, hot coco, fireworks, etc.)
  • Planters Basket (Spring)
  • Picnic Basket (Spring)
  • Graduation Party Kits (Spring)
  • Car Detailing Basket (Spring)
  • Jarring Kits (Summer)
  • Family Swimming Basket (Summer)
  • Fishing Tote (Summer)
  • Camping Tote (Summer/Fall)
  • Rafting Tote (Summer/Fall)
  • Hunting Totes (Summer/Fall)
Here is an example of a spa gift basket prepared by Janet Hall. Photo by Angela Gonzalez
Here is an example of a spa gift basket prepared by Janet Hall. Photo by Angela Gonzalez

Everyday Fun Basket Theme Ideas

  • Family fun night basket (board Games, card games, soda, popcorn, chips, candy, etc.)
  • Movie night basket (movies, DVDs, chips, candy, popcorn, soda, juices, etc.)
  • Laundry Basket (laundry soap, dryer sheets)
  • Bathroom décor basket
  • Men’s personal hygiene basket
  • Men’s tool set toolbox
  • Women’s personal hygiene basket
  • Home décor basket
  • Kid’s family fun basket
  • Reading basket
  • Knitting basket
  • Sewing basket
  • Beading basket
  • Photography basket
  • Wine basket

Baking Basket Ideas

  • Cookie sheets, cookie mix, baking oil, cookie cutters, frosting
  • Cupcake pans, cake mixes, cupcake holders, frosting, decorations, oil
  • Cake pans, utensils, cake mixes, frosting, oil
  • Bread pans, flour, yeast, oil, milk, sugar
  • Pie pans, pie filling, Pie Crust box

Assorted Dinner Basket Ideas

  • Pasta dinner in colander
  • Lasagna dinner in baking dish
  • Spaghetti Dinner in Colander
  • Soup makings in soup pot
  • Taco makings in frying pan

Last year, I wrote about an Alaskan Road Trip Survival Kit on the Athabascan Woman Blog. Some items that could go into a road trip kit are below.

Alaska Road Trip Kit

  • Camera
  • Car charger for your device(s)
  • Thermos with coffee
  • Jack Link’s Beef Steak Tender Bites
  • Gardetto’s snack
  • Kellogg’s Fruit Snacks
  • Nuts – chocolate covered
  • Mandarin oranges
  • Dried moose meat and fish
  • Pilot Bread Crackers
  • Spam
  • Water and juice
  • Entertainment – books, games and movies

As you can see, there are no shortage of ideas for gift baskets. I can see how  these can be used for the holidays or sent as care packages to loved ones. Thank you Peter Captain, Jr. for sharing your great ideas and experience. I certainly appreciate the ideas as I prepare for the holiday season. There is a lot of work that goes into making specialized gift baskets, but it can make a big difference in fundraising or in making someone feel special.

Alaska Native/Indigenous People

Miss WEIO Promotes Water Safety

With spring break-up in full spring and summer around the corner, many Alaskans are getting back out on the lakes, streams, rivers and other waterways. Miss World Eskimo-Indian Olympics (WEIO) Chanda Simon shared a very timely message about water safety.

I hope everyone’s Memorial Day weekend is off to a good start! I see a lot of people towing their boats around, and I would like to remind everyone about their water safety, please keep yourselves safe and wear a PFD (personal flotation device)! Around town here in Fairbanks, there are these boards at some of the boat landings with life vests for kids that you can borrow!

Kids Don’t Float, and neither do adults or pets so remember, if you are going to be in or around water on a boat, skidoo, kayak, or anything, wear your life vest! It is in the name, the vest is there to help protect your life and the life of kids. This picture was taken at Pike’s Landing, and as you can see there are a variety of sizes to keep your little ones safe. I also remember seeing a board like this in Bethel, and I saw a picture of one in Juneau. Have a safe summer out on the water!  🌼🐶 – Chanda Simon, Miss WEIO

Chanda and her dog, Daisy, are wearing life vests and are ready to get out on the water. Courtesy photo
Miss WEIO Chanda Simon and her dog, Daisy, are wearing life vests and are ready to get out on the water. Courtesy photo

Enjoy the waterways and remember to wear a float coat. The Alaska Boating Safety Program has many more life-saving tips at:  http://dnr.alaska.gov/parks/boating/index.htm. Thank you Chanda for sharing an important message about boating safety in Alaska.

I took a boat ride around Huslia last year. Photo by Angela Gonzalez
I took a boat ride around Huslia last year. Photo by Angela Gonzalez