Skip to content

Main Navigation

WiLS
  • Join WiLS
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • MyWiLS
  • Who We Are
    • Mission and Values
    • Who We Serve
    • WiLS Staff
    • Governance
    • Contact Us
    • Get Our Newsletters
    • Reports and Financials
    • Bylaws and Policies
    • History
  • What We Do
    • Cooperative Purchasing
    • Consulting Services
    • Strategic Planning
    • Research and Data Services
    • Collaboration Support
    • Digital Projects
    • Event Management
    • Giving Back to Our Community
  • WiLS For You
  • Join WiLS
  • Ideas to Action Fund
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • MyWiLS
Home | Blog | 2025 Culture Keepers Convening: Honoring Community, Culture, and Collaboration

2025 Culture Keepers Convening: Honoring Community, Culture, and Collaboration

June 13, 2025 WiLS staff
Attendees of the 2025 Culture Keepers Convening

In early May, more than 65 tribal librarians, archivists, museum curators, and cultural heritage professionals from across the Great Lakes region gathered at Legendary Waters Resort & Casino in Red Cliff Nation for the 2025 Culture Keepers Convening – a three-day event focused on community-building, knowledge exchange, and cultural stewardship.

A Collaborative Effort

Lake Superior from Frog Bay, the first tribal national park in the United States, with Apostle Islands visible

Hosted by the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, and supported by the University of Wisconsin-Madison iSchool, WiLS, Nicolet Federated Library System, Green Bay Packers Foundation, Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe University, PBS Wisconsin, Wisconsin Humanities, Friends of the University of Wisconsin Madison Libraries, Office of Tribal Relations at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Mary T. Kellner Teacher Education Center at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, Legendary Waters Resort & Casino, and The Bayfield Inn, the convening continued a longstanding tradition of fostering collaboration and professional development among Indigenous cultural workers.

This year’s gathering was especially meaningful. Although Red Cliff was the first project the Tribal Libraries, Archives, and Museums (TLAM) program collaborated with, the Nation had never hosted a convening. Returning to where it all began carried deep significance for many in attendance. 

Immersive Cultural Experiences

Madeline Island Museum’s exhibit “Passages: Ojibwe Migration to the Place Where the Food rows on Water”

Participants took part in site visits that offered powerful reflections on place-based knowledge and Indigenous continuity. 

The first visit, generously sponsored by the Wisconsin Historical Society, was to Madeline Island, a place of deep historical and spiritual importance to Lake Superior Anishinaabe. At the Madeline Island Museum, attendees were welcomed by Director Mike Wiggins Jr., explored the exhibit Passages: Ojibwe Migration to the Place Where the Food Grows on Water, and enjoyed a delicious spread of food, featuring Lake Superior smoked whitefish.

On Thursday, the group visited the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa’s Library and Museum and Friday, the Red Cliff Library, learning about each community’s efforts to preserve language, stories, and cultural practices through accessible public resources.

These visits highlighted the essential role of tribal libraries and museums as cultural hubs and vital community anchors.

Mashkiiziibii Agindaasoowigamig (Bad River Library)

Moka’aangiizisiban Tribal Museum

Ginanda Gikendaasomin (Red Cliff Library)

Hands-On Learning and Workshops

The convening also featured rich programming focused on preservation, education, and Indigenous methodologies:

  • In “Textile Preservation Materials and Methods”, attendees explored fabric care and conservation techniques.
  • “Housing Heritage: Creating Custom Storage Mounts for Material Culture” offered hands-on instruction in building archival-quality mounts for cultural materials.
  • “Teaching Culturally with the Four I’s (Inform, Include, Integrate, and Infuse) – Indigenous Studies” provided a framework for integrating Indigenous knowledge into learning environments.
  • “Goja Howaite Hi: Connecting Youth Through Language, Culture and Environmental Science” showcased how Tribally driven participatory research can engage youth through science, culture, and language. 

From artifact care to educational innovation, these sessions equipped attendees with skills and inspiration to bring back to their communities.

Carolyn Jenkinson presenting “Textile Preservation Materials and Methods”

Session “Housing Heritage: Creating Custom Storage Mounts for Material Culture”

David J. O’Connor presenting “Teaching Culturally with the Four I’s (Inform, Include, Integrate, and Infuse) – Indigenous Studies”

Session “Goja Howaite Hi: Connecting Youth Through Language, Culture and Environmental Science”

Moments of Connection

Beyond sessions and site visits, the most cherished moments often came through personal connection. Shared meals fostered storytelling and laughter. A gift exchange invited attendees to offer personally meaningful items to one another, fostering conversation and connection. A book club discussion with author Marcie Rendon and facilitator Dee Sweet inspired deep reflection on Indigenous storytelling and lived experience.

These moments of connection were more than just social – they were the heartbeat of the gathering.

(L to R) Dee Sweet and Marcie Rendon discussing being Indigenous writers during the book club discussion

Elders looking at gifts on the gift exchange table


About Culture Keepers
Launched in 2010 by the TLAM Program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison iSchool, the Culture Keepers Convenings respond to the needs of Indigenous cultural workers by offering professional development grounded in Indigenous values. Hosted in tribal communities, these gatherings feature hands-on workshops, community tours, and collaborative planning that center Indigenous knowledge systems. 

After a pause, gatherings resumed in 2024. The 2025 convening in Red Cliff marked a powerful continuation of this legacy of connection, growth, and cultural care.

 

About the Culture Keepers Collective
The Culture Keepers Collective emerged from these gatherings as a way to continue supporting cultural workers beyond convening events. This Native-led initiative, administered by WiLS, offers programming, training, resource development, and relationship-building opportunities year-round.

Posted in Services & Projects, Things You'll Like!
WiLSWorld Shorts

WiLSWorld Shorts: Take It Outside! Creative Library Programming in Outdoor Spaces

December 2, 2025 WiLS staff
It might be cold outside now, but we’re dreaming of sunshine, story time under the...
Continue Reading
Coop Purchasing News

Baker & Taylor Closure Transition: Alternatives from WiLS Vendor Partners

October 14, 2025 WiLS staff
The recent announcement of the closing of Baker & Taylor has caused WiLS members to...
Continue Reading
Learning Opportunities

WiLSWorld Shorts: The People Are The Power

October 10, 2025 WiLS staff
For more than seven years, the WiLS Staff Development Group has been working one-on-one with...
Continue Reading
WiLS logo

WiLS is a non-profit membership organization serving libraries and cultural institutions, primarily in Wisconsin. We help our members turn their ideas into action.

Copyright © 2025 WiLS. All rights reserved.

Contact Us

  • 1360 Regent St. #121
  • Madison, WI 53715
  • 608-218-4480
  • information@wils.org

Quick Links

  • Join WiLS
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • MyWiLS
  • Working at WiLS

Stay Updated

Receive WiLS Communications

Read past Community Chronicles

Read past @WiLS Newsletters
  • Who We Are
    • Mission and Values
    • Who We Serve
    • WiLS Staff
    • Governance
    • Contact Us
    • Get Our Newsletters
    • Reports and Financials
    • Bylaws and Policies
    • History
  • What We Do
    • Cooperative Purchasing
    • Consulting Services
    • Strategic Planning
    • Research and Data Services
    • Collaboration Support
    • Digital Projects
    • Event Management
    • Giving Back to Our Community
  • WiLS For You
  • Join WiLS
  • Ideas to Action Fund
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • MyWiLS