Showing posts with label missouri humanities council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missouri humanities council. Show all posts

Friday, December 21, 2007

Prijedor: Lives from the Bosnian Genocide

Image of exhibit ribbon-cuttingWhat if you'd been born in a place of death? What if you grew up not knowing why you hated yourself? These are a part of the human experience in a remarkable Missouri community of 50,000 Bosnian refugees. The people from the city of Prijedor told their stories in an oral history and exhibit project we supported last year. The exhibit opened at the St. Louis Holocaust Museum and Learning Center on November 25 with a crowd of many hundreds of people. You can see the exhibit for yourself through May of 2008. More on this moving event in an illustrated story by Patrick McCarthy....
-Michael Bouman





By Patrick McCarthy

Director, Medical Center Library

St. Louis University


Image of people viewing exhibit

They came by the hundreds – old and young, Bosnian and American.



image of children cutting ribbon to open exhibit

Zerina Musić (center) born fifteen years ago in the Trnopolje concentration camp, cuts the ribbon with Vedad Karahodžić to open the exhibit, Prijedor: Lives from the Bosnian Genocide at the Holocaust Museum and Learning Center, November 25, 2007.


Even before the official opening time, Museum staff stopped counting the numbers of people entering the building at 400 – and still they kept coming – on a cold and rainy Sunday afternoon that ended the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. A bus brought 60 Bosnian elderly into an already packed facility, where the line to get into the exhibit now filled the entrance hallway and backed up a flight of stairs leading to the gallery space.

The overflow crowds had come to see the new multi-media exhibit Prijedor: Lives from the Bosnian Genocide at the St. Louis Holocaust Museum and Learning Center. With major funding and support from the Missouri Humanities Council, the exhibit is a unique collaboration among Bosnians from Prijedor, the staff of the Holocaust Museum, and students and faculty from Fontbonne University who conducted video interviews with local survivors from Prijedor.

From the outset, it was apparent that the day’s events would be much more than an ordinary exhibit opening. The young woman who cut the ribbon to open the exhibit, Zerina Musić, had been born fifteen years earlier in the Trnopolje concentration camp just outside Prijedor. Her mother Erzena was told by the Serb authorities who attended the birth, “If the baby is a boy, we will take him. If it is a girl, you can keep her.” 

Award-winning British journalist, Ed Vulliamy, the first print reporter to gain access to Prijedor’s wartime network of concentration camps, provided the keynote address following brief remarks by Jean Cavender, the Museum Director, Amir Karadžić, the overall exhibit project coordinator, and Dr. Bisera Turković, Ambassador to the United States from Bosnia-Herzegovina.

In the packed gallery space, Bosnian survivors from Prijedor and their children pressed shoulder-to-shoulder with Americans who came to learn more about the experiences that brought the large local Bosnian community to live, work, and rebuild their lives in St. Louis, Missouri. Now numbering more than 50,000, Bosnian refugees in St. Louis form the largest such community of any city in the world.

Image of people viewing exhibit

Bosnian visitors view exhibit panels about attacks on the towns of Kozarac and Hambarine, near Prijedor.


Tears flowed freely among Bosnian and American visitors who quietly viewed a series of exhibit panels detailing the chronology of events in Prijedor during the war years 1992 to 1995. Many lingered at a display case containing the sweater and boots recovered with the body of Dr. Kemal Cerić, one of Prijedor’s intelligentsia targeted for liquidation, whose remains were identified using DNA comparison with relatives. Hushed conversations stopped when visitors came to photographs of camp prisoners with washboard ribcages that recalled images from the permanent Holocaust exhibit in the next room.


Image of emaciated man

Exhibit panel with a photo on an inmate at the Trnopolje concentration camp.  (Panels designed by Barbara Nwacha).


For some, it was the first time they had directly confronted what had taken place in Prijedor: an organized and systematic terror campaign that consisted of the forced deportation of nearly all of the area’s non-Serb population and the imprisonment of thousands in concentration camps where they were subjected to mass killing, sexual assault, torture, and humiliation on a scale unseen in Europe since the end of the Second World War.   

For others, the response was much more personal and emotional. For Alisa Gutić, from Kozarac whose father was killed in the war, the exhibit and opening program provided a transformative release for pent-up feelings kept private for most of her life. “Through the years, I have cursed and hated myself for being Bosnian because I was only three years old when I lost my father,” Alisa wrote in the days following the exhibit. “Still today my father has not been found and I curse everything about the war!”  

Now a student at Saint Louis University, Alisa continued:
“I see my life differently now…For years I have been searching for myself and trying to find out who I really am, and your exhibit and the beautiful messages are just leading me in the right direction. Today, I can finally say what I couldn't a week ago, that I am very proud to be Bosnian and that my hatred can one day cease as I discover who I am and why I am here today and not dead like so many in Bosnia.”


Image of Ed Vulliamy with students

Journalist Ed Vulliamy speaks with young Bosnians after his keynote address, including Alisa Gutić, far right.


“You are not supposed to be here,” Ed Vulliamy said as he began his remarks, addressing the members of the audience from Prijedor. “You are supposed to be dead.”

Vulliamy’s comments passed liked an electrical current through the tightly packed audience, who paid rapt attention to the man to whom many credit their survival. Within days of Vulliamy’s August, 1992 visit to Prijedor’s camps, a series of reports he wrote for the Guardian newspaper contributed to a worldwide outcry that brought abrupt closure to the concealed places of despair and death from which there had previously been no exit.

Vulliamy’s presence before the survivors and their families brought an emotional intensity to the crowded room that was palpable as they spontaneously rose to their feet to welcome him with loud applause. Vulliamy’s impassioned call for “reckoning” with the genocide in Prijedor as a necessary prelude to reconciliation resonated deeply with Bosnians seeking to “forgive but never to forget” while offering important solace to those torn between looking back into the darkest chapters of their lives and moving forward into the future.

As he continued his comments (simultaneously interpreted from English to Bosnian by Kemal Cerić’s son, Jasmin), Vulliamy asked those assembled, “Why should you be asked to reconcile with the perpetrators of crimes that are not even admitted, let alone reckoned with?”

“It is not the Jews who are building monuments in Berlin and museums like that at Dachau, but the Germans,” Vulliamy remarked, as he highlighted efforts to minimize, obscure, and dismiss the experiences documented in the new exhibition.

While noting that comparisons of the Bosnian genocide with the Holocaust were not appropriate, Vulliamy related an earlier discussion with Walter Reich, then Director of the United States Holocaust Museum, in which they agreed that “echoes” of the Holocaust were certainly apparent in the “ethnic cleansing” of Prijedor.

Image of crowd in the auditorium


As the crowds moved into the large atrium space in the Museum building for a closing reception of Bosnian food prepared according to Jewish dietary laws, Amir Karadžić, former Prijedor resident and the project’s overall head, whose unannounced visit to the Holocaust Museum’s Director more than two years earlier provided the initial impetus for the exhibit, reflected on the huge turnout. “This was the right place and the right time. We needed to tell our story, and we are grateful to the many friends who made it possible for us to do so.”

The members of Karadžić’s Union of Citizens of the Municipality of Prijedor, who developed the exhibit’s content with Fontbonne University faculty members Dr. Ben Moore and Dr. Jack Luzkow, are now discussing plans to move the exhibition to other U.S. cities with large Bosnian communities after its St. Louis run ends in May, 2008. 

Image of people viewing the exhibit

Exhibit guests Subhija and Rešad Kulenović, whose son was killed in Prijedor in 1992.


“This exhibit is not meant to feed a spirit of vengeance and retribution,” said Karadžić. “We want our children to know what happened in Prijedor so that they can prevent this from ever happening again to anyone, anywhere.” 

Survivor and exhibit consultant, Dr. Said Karahodžić, poignantly summarized the sentiments of many about Prijedor’s recent past when he said, “We are ready to forgive, but first someone has to say, ‘I’m sorry.’”



Patrick McCarthy is exhibit advisor to Prijedor: Lives from the Bosnian Genocide and is Director of the Medical Center Library at Saint Louis University. He can be contacted by e-mail at mccartpg@slu.edu.

Exhibits for Schools and Libraries

After 18 months of touring, the Sac and Fox Heritage Exhibit has been refurbished and readied for more touring to small venues. It is 10 feet wide and 8 feet tall, and it has its own built-in lighting. It is ideal for libraries or small museums. Contact me, Michael Bouman, about booking it at your museum, school, or public library in 2008.

A touring exhibit on Osage Heritage is also in production for the same venues.

The Impact of the Governor's Humanities Award

The deadline for submitting nominations for the 2008 Governor's Humanities Awards is January 25. Information on submitting a nomination is on our web site. This month I want to share a first-person account of what this award means from one of last year's winners, Janice Lee Urton of the Urich Community Historical Society. Turn the page and ask yourself if you know of such an organization. -Michael Bouman


I recently had the pleasure of speaking with Janice Lee Urton of the Urich Community Historical Society. I called to ask about the meaning of their 2007 Governor’s Humanities Award.  Mrs. Urton was kind enough to take time out of her busy schedule, holidays notwithstanding, to share with our readers just how much this award means to them and about the impact this award has had on their organization and community.

Their story demonstrates what can happen when a group of people come together with a similar vision and the determination to realize it.  Is there an organization that is doing exemplary work like this in your community? Mrs. Urton's story exemplifies just one of our award categories. We hope you will look at the categories of award and see if you know of a person or an organization that is deserving. Nominations are being accepted until January 25, 2008.  More information is available on our website, or by contacting me at megan@mohumanities.org or (800) 357-0909. -Megan-Marie K. Cahill

By Janice Lee (Gates) Urton, UCHS Vice President

In 2006 the Board of the Urich Community Historical Society became aware that there was an award called the Governor's Humanities Award.

At that time we were still working on the completion of our museum building (remodeling the near derelict structure, originally the James A. Kerr Drug Store built in 1885) and preparing for our fall activities of honoring our American military and making plans for our first Christmas Open House.

After watching a small core of people work tirelessly, sacrifice a huge amount of their time, and give of their many talents toward building a place that would house the treasures of the community, I thought we had the time to create a presentation book that featured many of the aspects of UCHS' involvement in strengthening the community.  We had been formed seven and a half years ago by a dedicated group of both rural and townspeople who wanted to see Urich, population 499, survive and thrive once again.  At one time Urich boasted a population of 1,000 and was the hub of the wheel of crossroad communities and smaller towns around.

There are many stories about the people and the events in their lives that have to be told about a place we call Small Town, Hometown, Heart of America, U.S.A.  Urich is a symbol of thousands of small towns scattered across the nation.  She is rich in history.  Her people have kept the town alive when "forces of progress" had diminished her size and almost destroyed her.

When asked what we gained or what the impact of this award has been on our community, my answer is, it has given us HOPE; hope that Urich is now recognized as a contributor to the richness of the State of Missouri, not just a place to pass by en route to somewhere else, but a place to inquire of, to get to know and perhaps even to call "home."  Her people are precious. Her land is where the veterans of both sides of the Civil War and their families made the effort to secure peace among themselves and that "re-union" has continued for 113 years.  Her future is bright. 

Hope has a way of changing one's perspective from dwelling on the past despair of circumstances beyond one's control to looking forward to the future and one that has a promise of more good things to come. 

We were greatly blessed to have been chosen.  We are deeply honored to have been given this very prestigious award.  Our official grand opening was 07/07/07.  The Governor’s Humanities Award in the Category of Community Heritage was presented to the Urich Community Historical Society on October 10th.  We shall never forget the year 2007 and our new beginning.

High-Tech Benefits in "New Harmonies"

This is the last month we can accept community applications to host a touring Smithsonian exhibit on American "roots music" in 2009.

You can find a basic description of the exhibit on our web site. This article is all about why you should consider jumping in.

Brother Oswald image
These exhibits are extremely popular in communities because they generate so much spirit and community involvement. The reason is, the exhibit is just the beginning! Host communities often create a local exhibit to go with the Smithsonian one. Where the subject is music, you can imagine the potential! Host communities also organize community activities. Again, just imagine the potential!

Do you have musical instrument makers in the vicinity? They could participate in fascinating ways? Do you have local people who compete in Bluegrass competitions or who represent other American musical traditions? How many people in your town do you imagine learned to play a musical instrument as some point in their lives?

Anything you can imagine about public activities or an exhibit can be enhanced, with our help, by setting a goal of creating some content for a web site. A library or museum might want to learn to create a downloadable audio recording of a local musician, or a podcast of an oral history interview with former students of a beloved band director. Or you might want to learn how to create an interactive feature where people in town can share pictures related to the theme of American music.

Involvement in the Smithson's exhibit program opens up all sorts of doors to involving the community and learning how to extend the life of your work on the internet. For any sponsor town that requests our help, we will organize training in techniques of gathering content so that it can be used in a variety of ways and of displaying content in a variety of formats.

We are very excited about helping people learn to function more comfortably in oral history, documenting, and disseminating. We'll help you set a goal and help you reach it.

The deadline for submitting an application is December 31, though. We want to give the six selected towns many months of lead time to create plans and work with us on ways and means of achieving them!

Contact my esteemed colleague, Patricia Zahn, if you need more information. -Michael Bouman

Thursday, October 25, 2007

On Family Reading: The Pleasure of a Good Scare!


Julie Douglas imageBy Julie Douglas, Family Program Specialist

It was a dark and stormy night….

One of my fondest childhood memories is being about 10 years old and sitting on the front porch late at night trading creepy, spooky stories with my friends. Just beyond the amber glow of the porch light lurked ghosts and other assorted creatures of the dark. Every neighbor out on an evening stroll who passed by looked suspiciously zombie-like. The phone ringing inside the house was not a call from the other side of town, but from the Other Side. Everywhere we looked there was fodder for a tale of terror.

Many of the tales we swapped were of the “urban legend” variety and usually began, “This really happened to my ___(fill in the blank with a relative, neighbor, or friend)." We would all sit knee to knee, clutching hands and barely daring to breathe. The storyteller would unravel the details slooooooooowwwly in a low, solemn voice. The events unfolded and the apprehension grew. Footsteps drew closer; chains rattled; whispering voices beckoned. Descriptions were vivid and over-the-top. Howling wind and diabolical laughter added to the drama. When the tension was almost unbearable, the storyteller would shout out the ending and be rewarded with shrieks and screams.

Why do we love a good scary story? Psychologists suggest that when we identify with the protagonist in the story, we can experience triumph over fear. Horror allows us to confront our emotions and safely explore our dark side. Perhaps (gasp!) we even empathize with the monster on some level. Like those who love roller coasters and skydiving, fans of scary movies and stories enjoy the tension, thrills, and sense of relief they experience.
Whatever the reason, many adults and children love a good scare. If you happen to be one of them, check out some of the books below. When choosing any book for children, use your own judgment and knowledge of what is appropriate for your child. A child’s age and temperament will determine if a book is right. In this genre especially, there is no “one size fits all.”

Now, if you’ll excuse me, there’s a scratching noise coming from the attic and I need to go investigate. Where did I put that flashlight with the very low battery?

Scary, Scary Halloween by Eve Bunting, illustrated by Jan Brett (Clarion Books, 1988)

Book image
Jan Brett's brightly illustrated Halloween costumes and Eve Bunting's wonderfully rhythmic verses pair up for a slightly spooky romp on Halloween. Appropriate for even the youngest audience.

The Little Old Lady Who Was Not Afraid of Anything by Linda Williams, illustrated by Megan Lloyd (HarperTrophy 1988)

Book image
Bring this ghostly story to life by using props and sound effects when reading it to children. The little old lady will have listeners joining her in proclaiming, "I'm NOT afraid of you!"

Go Away, Big Green Monster! by Edward R Emberley (LB Kids,1993)

Book image
Preschoolers will boldly send the monster packing while listening to this imaginative book by Caldecott Award-winner Emberley. Readers are treated to rich descriptions and vocabulary as they are introduced bit by bit to the big green monster.

Shake Dem Halloween Bones by W. Nikola-Lisa, illustrated by Mike Reed (Houghton Mifflin, 2000)

Book image
Children won't be able to sit still for this one…and that’s a good thing! Perfect for an interactive storytime.

Spooky Hour by Tony Mitton, illustrated by Guy Parker-Rees (Orchard 2004)

Book image
Count on some spooky fun as the monsters make their way to a Halloween party. This not-at-all scary story might be a good way for young children to explore some of the costumes and decorations they will see during the holiday.

Mommy? by Maurice Sendak, Arthur Yorinks, and Matthew Reinhart (Michael di Capua Books / Scholastic, 2006)

Book image
A small boy shows a houseful of ghoulish characters that he's in charge in this masterfully illustrated, nearly wordless pop-up book. Adults will enjoy the nods to well-known monsters such as Nosferatu and Frankenstein, while children will appreciate the youngster's triumph over them.

Frankenstein Makes a Sandwich by Adam Rex (Harcourt Children's Books, 2006)

Book image
With titles like "The Yeti Doesn't Appreciate Being Called Bigfoot" and "The Invisible Man Gets a Haircut," you know you are in for silly, scary fun with this collection of monster-themed poems. Even the dedications are good for a chuckle.


Oh No, Not Ghosts! by Richard Michelson, illustrated by Adam McCauley (Harcourt Children's Books, 2006)

Book image
Rhythm, rhyme, and the repetitive phrase "Oh, no, not…" make this a frighteningly fun read aloud.


The Scary States of America by Michael Teitelbaum (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, 2007)

Book image
Nine to twelve year olds are the target audience for this creepy collection of paranormal stories from each state, but younger listeners will enjoy them as well.

In a Dark, Dark Room and Other Scary Stories by Alvin Schwartz and Dirk Zimmer. (HarperTrophy, 1985)

Book image
Future fans of Stephen King can cut their teeth on the stories in this collection. Wonderfully creepy…but it would be prudent to preview them first before sharing with kids.

Podcasting History

Two months ago I attended an exciting training program for "Border War" history organizations in Missouri and Kansas. The program took place at the Cass County Library, and the computer room was packed with people from twenty organizations. The organizations are all learning how to conduct good oral history interviews and to produce podcasts.

A podcast is a short package of audio or video content that you record and make available for playback on a computer or miniature playback device such as an iPod. You make it available by putting it on a web site.

A good place to look for a youth-oriented style of podcasting is the Kansas Historical Society. They have a good podcasting operation there, and a great overall web site. Listen to Episode 25, "Civil Defense Food Kit," in their "Cool Things" section to see how one of their better ones comes across.

There's a different approach to podcasting at Biltmore in North Carolina. Listen to episode 19, on the wedding of George and Edith Vanderbilt. To my ear, the choice of a "local news broadcaster" sound for the introduction is a jarring contrast to the more natural speaking style of the voices who narrate the real content. This "broadcast style" is something people learn for an industry that values sameness, like the unvarying flavor of a McDonald's french fry. "Sameness" is the last thing I would want in an interpretive program that seeks to highlight distinctive features of a place. If I were running that outreach program, I'd seek a voice that does not belong on a local news TV set. It's something to consider if you're doing this for a historical society. Where there are distinctive voices and cadences, please use them! In a podcast, which is a very intimate medium, like radio, sound is a message unto itself. Find voices that sound at ease, pleasant to hear, natural in delivery.

Here's a distinctive and pleasing local voice from Cass County, Missouri. It's Carol Bohl in her first podcast from the Border War Network. Be warned, this link currently goes to a demo web site, and the "subscribe" link doesn't work yet, though I think everything will work properly by the end of November. Carol is the first person in the Border War Network to own and operate an iPod.

The other thing about podcasting is that the most important art form in the process is the art of storytelling. Especially if you're only using audio, your opportunity to create interest is in how you shape what you have to say. Always look for an opportunity to pose an intriguing question.

Speaking of questions, if you're interviewing someone, it's a very good idea to plan your questions. Naturally, if you think of something during the interview, ask! One podcster to watch closely is Eric Langhorst, an 8th Grade History teacher in Liberty, Missouri. I understand that he is going to produce podcasts next month in association with Ken Burns' TV documentary, "The War." Eric told me about a PDF document on the web site of that series. It explains how to conduct oral history interviews of World War II veterans. You can apply the lessons in that document across the board, I think. Its title is, The Power of Story.

Sac and Fox Exhibit Goes to D.C.

The touring exhibit on Sac and Fox heritage is on display at Van Meter State Park through the end of November. Then it comes back for refurbishment and returns in January for more touring. It easily fits into small spaces in libraries or local museums, and it has its own lighting. Space required is ten linear feet. Set-up and take-down is a snap. Contact Michael Bouman for booking information in 2008. We have one new copy for touring in Missouri starting in January. We will have two copies available after March, when copy 2 returns from a three month engagement at the National Museum of the American Indian at the Smithsonian Institution. Congratulations to Sac and Fox Historic Preservation Officer, Sandra Massey, to Greg Olson (Missouri State Archives), who designed the exhibit, and to Dr. Fred Fausz at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, who helped with the research.

"Consulting Days" at Museums

Are you confused by the term, "charette?" Are you worried that outside consultants will say things that will make you feel bad? These are the usual obstacles to asking about our free consulting service for local museums and cultural institutions. We schedule these "consulting days" on a rolling basis with no deadlines, and we have a great record of helping people see more of their own potential and take immediate steps toward upgrades in the way they operate. The 2008 calendar is open, and I await your call. Information is on our web site.

Prijedor: Lives From the Bosnian Genocide

More than 40,000 people from Bosnia now call St. Louis their home. For the past year the community leaders have been developing an exhibit titled, "Prijedor: Lives From the Bosnian Genocide." Their approach is to help people understand this sort of calamity as a collection of individual stories, with faces and names and memories. A series of community meetings is under way this fall to engage the Bosnian community in the interpretation of their shared story. The final two are on Sunday afternoons at 3:00 pm at Grbic Restaurant (4071 Keokuk, St. Louis, (314) 772-3100) on October 28 and November 11.

The new multi-media exhibit opens on Sunday, November 25, 2007 with a 2:00 pm program and reception at the St. Louis Holocaust Museum and Learning Center (12 Millstone Campus Drive, St. Louis). The exhibit opening program will feature a keynote address by award-winning British journalist Ed Vulliamy (author of Seasons in Hell: Understanding Bosnia's War), one of the first reporters to uncover the network of concentration camps in the Prijedor area in 1992.

The Prijedor exhibit is a unique community collaboration among Bosnians from Prijedor, the Holocaust Museum staff, and students and faculty from Fontbonne University who recorded video interviews with local Prijedor survivors as part of a recent course on the Bosnian immigration. A small research team traveled to Prijedor this summer to gather exhibit materials and conduct additional interviews.

Smithsonian "New Harmonies" Touring Exhibit

Logo image

We're now accepting applications through December to host the touring Smithsonian exhibit on American Roots Music in 2009. These exhibits are a perennial feature of MHC programming because they help local people generate a huge amount of interest in a historical theme. It is always true that far more people visit the exhibit and its activities than actually live in the sponsoring town. More...

Governor's Humanities Awardees 2007

On October 10 over a hundred people came to the Governor's Mansion in Jefferson City to celebrate the achievements of people who earned the 2007 Humanities Awards. Details of the recipients are now on our web site.








Missouri Humanities Council's 2007 Governor's Humanities Awards photosetMissouri Humanities Council's 2007 Governor's Humanities Awards photoset on flickr.com





Baby Steps


My October 19 blog at "creatinginterest.blogspot.com" is about climbing life's mountains one small step at a time.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Missouri Passages - September 2007



Volume 4, No. 9: September 2007, from Michael Bouman, Executive Director & Editor

Local Chautauquas Enliven the Fall

Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln will hold a town meeting-style Chautauqua on Saturday, September 15, 2:00 p.m. at Northwest R-1 High School in Cedar Hill (south of St. Louis). This "Taste of Chautauqua" has been put together with MHC support by The Highway 30 Foundation. Carl Sandberg will be there to introduce them. Read on...

See Harry S Truman, Thomas Hart Benton, Mark Twain, and George Washington Carver, along with several others at the two-day "Chautauqua in the 'Burg " in historic downtown Warrensburg, along Holden Street, from the evening of October 5 through the afternoon of the 7th. A special treat will be piano music by John William "Blind" Boone, played by Bob Ault. Sponsored by the Greater Warrensburg Chamber of Commerce under an MHC grant.

History Theatre House Tour in St. Louis

The Etc. Senior Theatre company is presenting a dramatized return of the eminent historian, Francis Parkman, author of The Oregon Trail, to see his old friend, Henri Chatillon and the wealthy entrepreneur, Robert Campbell. The event is a dramatized, costumed guided tour of two of St. Louis's premier historic houses, the Chatillon-DeMenil House and the Robert Campbell House.

The two-house tour is titled "The Oregon Trail." There are three tours on Saturday, September 29, all beginning at the Chatillon/DeMenil House at 3352 DeMenil Place (Highway 55 & Broadway). Times are 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m., and 2 p.m. For reservations, please call (314) 421-0325.

Sac and Fox Heritage Exhibit at Van Meter State Park

Van Meter State Park is one of Missouri's showcase places to interpret Native American heritage. From now through the end of November, the touring exhibit on Sac and Fox heritage will be on display there.

Of special interest is a public program at 10 a.m. on Sept. 22. Representatives from the Sac and Fox Nation of Missouri in Kansas and Nebraska and the Sac and Fox Nation of Oklahoma will be on hand to answer questions and discuss their tribal migration routes from Canada through the Great Lakes region, Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois and the Platte Purchase area of Missouri.

Workshops for Museums, Historical Societies

We are now booking workshops to help museums, historical societies, and historic houses upgrade their thinking about using their assets to create great visitor experiences. Read on ...

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Sac and Fox at the Sikeston Cowboy Festival

The portable exhibit on Sac and Fox heritage has been in continuous demand since it was unveiled in June of 2006. During the summer it resided in Sac and Fox communities in Kansas and Oklahoma, and then it moved to Sikeston. The Sikeston Depot Cultural Center is a lovely facility near a city park.

Beth Felice and I had a wonderful day there talking with Sac and Fox craftspeople who had travelled to give a two-day demonstration during the "Cowboy Up!" arts festival.

Read on: http://mohumanities.org/E-News/August07/sikeston.htm

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

When Love of Books Begins

On Family Reading, monthly column from Julie Douglas

This month Julie thinks about when children develop a love of books. Probably, they don't develop it in a classroom that is dominated by "No Child Left Behind." If not there, where? If not then, when?

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Chautauqua 2008: "That's Entertainment"

My colleague Patricia Zahn has finalized the roster and program for the return of our touring Chautauqua festivals in 2008. The theme is "That's Entertainment!" Four historians from all over the U.S. will interpret some important figures in the growth of the entertainment industry in the U.S. They are:

P.T. Barnum portrayed by Jeffrey Smith

Walt Disney portrayed by William S. Worley

Thomas Edison portrayed by Hank Fincken

Margaret Mitchell portrayed by Debra Conner