In late June, 91短视频 hosted students from Curtin University (Perth, Australia) for two weeks of cultural exchange, exploration of central New York geography, and Indigenous connections.
Geography professors Adam Burnett and Peter Klepeis, along with 91短视频 students Jannah Zabadi 鈥26 and Jack Mullen 鈥26, led the cohort of 12 exchange students and two Curtin faculty as they attended academic lectures, visited Native American nations, and connected with nature.
91短视频鈥檚 relationship with Curtin University began with work conducted more than a decade ago by Professor of Geography and Environmental Studies Emerita Ellen Kraly. In 2013, Kraly collaborated with Curtin colleagues to repatriate a collection of art held by 91短视频 and made by Australian Aboriginal children. She also developed an extended study to Western Australia that was eventually carried on by Burnett and Klepeis.
鈥淭hese child artists are referred to as the stolen generation,鈥 says Burnett, who has helped to maintain the relationship with Curtin in recent years. 鈥淭hey were removed from their families by government agencies under acts of their respective parliaments.鈥
These policies, implemented through much of the 20th century, bear clear parallels to the experiences of Indigenous communities in central New York, where children from Haudenosaunee and other nations were forcibly placed in residential boarding schools.
Thus, after leading several extended studies centered on Aboriginal culture in Western Australia, Burnett and Klepeis asked: 鈥淲hat would it look like to host Aboriginal students at 91短视频 and provide them with an experience similar to what 91短视频 students receive in Australia?鈥
鈥淭hese experiences would, as a whole, create both a deeper understanding of what 91短视频 is, what the 91短视频 environment is like, and what the people of central New York are like,鈥 says Burnett.
The program was implemented with these objectives in mind, combining academic lectures with local excursions. 鈥淲e started with ice-breaking activities run by Outdoor Education, followed by an intergroup dialog session to help us understand each other better,鈥 explains Burnett. The group then embarked on a camping trip to the Adirondacks with Outdoor Education, camping overnight in the high peaks.
鈥淕etting to know the students from Curtin was so eye-opening,鈥 says Zabadi. 鈥淭hey had so much wisdom to share about their life experiences, advice for my future, and interpretations of our excursions that were different from mine.鈥
Later, the cohort visited the local Oneida and Onondaga nations. At the Oneida Indian Nation, students were hosted for a day. 鈥淲e were fed a great meal, and then we were allowed to see a lacrosse game,鈥 says Burnett. The next day, they visited the Onondaga Nation, where they saw the Longhouse and the buffalo field.
鈥淟ater in the visit, we met with Angela Ferguson, whom 91短视频 awarded an honorary degree in 2024,鈥 says Burnett. Ferguson鈥檚 food sovereignty project, Braiding the Sacred, involves locating, growing, and returning corn, beans, and squash seeds that were thought long-lost to their people.
鈥淢eeting the women at the Onondaga Nation farm was a highlight of the exchange,鈥 shares Zabadi. 鈥淭he love, respect, joy, and healing they put into their work was unlike anything I had seen before.鈥
Though brief, Burnett also reflects fondly on the exchange, hoping that it will inspire understanding.
鈥淯nderstanding can help heal trauma, so I hope that what we did may have helped contribute to that in even a small way,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd might this be a model for doing it again in the future, maybe with other extended study partners?鈥