Category:Cultural Orientation: Difference between revisions

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Father Michael Oleksa, Ph.D., was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He came to Alaska in 1970 from St. Vladimir's Seminary in New York at the invitation of the Alutiiq village of Old Harbor on Kodiak Island. Over the next three decades he served as a Russian Orthodox priest in over a dozen Alaska Native villages. Dr. Oleksa is a storyteller who seeks to foster greater understanding across boundaries of race and culture. Father Oleksa is a leader in the development of cross-cultural education in Alaska, an educator of Alaskan teachers, and a student of Alaska Native languages and cultures. Check out these videos.
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ivp5B1ky9Gg
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBaZj9FysPU
[[file:Calricaraq_graphic.jpg|right]]Visit the [http://www.ykhc.org/pjcp/calricaraq/ YKHC website] for an overview of Calricaraq, a program to strengthen families and prevent suicide by reaffirming the traditional Yup'ik way of understanding the world and our place in its cycles.  
[[file:Calricaraq_graphic.jpg|right]]Visit the [http://www.ykhc.org/pjcp/calricaraq/ YKHC website] for an overview of Calricaraq, a program to strengthen families and prevent suicide by reaffirming the traditional Yup'ik way of understanding the world and our place in its cycles.  


[http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/03/23/what-are-you-hiding-how-one-brave-woman-pushed-past-pain-abuse-159705 Link to article about Rose Domnick and Calricaraq]
[http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/03/23/what-are-you-hiding-how-one-brave-woman-pushed-past-pain-abuse-159705 Link to article about Rose Domnick and Calricaraq]
Father Michael Oleksa, Ph.D., was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He came to Alaska in 1970 from St. Vladimir's Seminary in New York at the invitation of the Alutiiq village of Old Harbor on Kodiak Island. Over the next three decades he served as a Russian Orthodox priest in over a dozen Alaska Native villages. Dr. Oleksa is a storyteller who seeks to foster greater understanding across boundaries of race and culture. Father Oleksa is a leader in the development of cross-cultural education in Alaska, an educator of Alaskan teachers, and a student of Alaska Native languages and cultures. Check out these videos.
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ivp5B1ky9Gg
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBaZj9FysPU

Revision as of 23:00, 22 May 2017

Father Michael Oleksa, Ph.D., was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He came to Alaska in 1970 from St. Vladimir's Seminary in New York at the invitation of the Alutiiq village of Old Harbor on Kodiak Island. Over the next three decades he served as a Russian Orthodox priest in over a dozen Alaska Native villages. Dr. Oleksa is a storyteller who seeks to foster greater understanding across boundaries of race and culture. Father Oleksa is a leader in the development of cross-cultural education in Alaska, an educator of Alaskan teachers, and a student of Alaska Native languages and cultures. Check out these videos.

Calricaraq graphic.jpg

Visit the YKHC website for an overview of Calricaraq, a program to strengthen families and prevent suicide by reaffirming the traditional Yup'ik way of understanding the world and our place in its cycles.

Link to article about Rose Domnick and Calricaraq

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