Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Shoshone-Paiute Keepers of the Earth

As you drive south from Mountain Home or north from Elko, 100 miles in either direction through the vast stretches of high desert plains skirted by the Owyhee Mountains, miles of seemingly endless fence lines, mark cattle ranches and frame the highway. But fences suddenly disappear as you enter the Duck Valley Indian Reservation, home to the Newa and Numa peoples — the Western Shoshone and Paiute.

March 2024

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Shoshone-Bannock Keepers of the Earth

In the very heart of Idaho wilderness beneath its most spectacular mountain range, the Sawtooths, springs forth a river like no other river. The Salmon. It carves its way through rocky canyons for hundreds of miles. It is home to spawning steelhead and chinook salmon that journey from the sea. Indian people have always fished these waters and they hunted the wild sheep that live among the rocky crags. Lemhi Shoshone people. Keepers of the Earth.

March 2024

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Asking the Stones to Speak

Often the word myth is used in conjunction with these stories. If we interpret stories not literally, but metaphorically; if we look at their symbolism, we can see that they point to all sorts of literary as well as spiritual truths that are shared by all of humanity.

January 2024

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Coeur d’Alene Keepers of the Earth

Their villages were once along the shores of pristine lakes— Coeur d’Alene, Benewah, Chacolet — and wild rivers — the St. Joe, St. Maries, Spokane. They fished for salmon and cutthroat trout, hunted deer, bear and elk, dug camas and bitterroot. They picked huckleberries. Spirituality was their signature on daily living.

November 2023

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Nez Perce Keepers of the Earth

Coyote, ‘iceyeeye, he was going upstream.

Coyote is always going upstream. He was going along and he noticed the salmon were having some difficulty there. So he says. I'll build a fish ladder so that the salmon can go up river and feed my people. And so he's busy working along there and Magpie he flies over and says. Ahg! What are you doing?

And Coyote looks up and he says, ‘I'm building a fish ladder for the fish to go up to feed my people.’

Oct 2023

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Kootenai Keepers of the Earth

In the far northern mountains of Idaho's Panhandle, are found vestiges of grizzly bear, woodland caribou and gray wolf. Animal species whose very existence has been threatened by civilization and which remains precarious today. But these creatures once roamed freely in large numbers and lived peaceably among a people who have protected the land for thousands of years.

August 2023

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Earth Song

“I arrive long before sunrise in this dry part of western Montana. The mountains are black silhouettes around me.”

June 2023

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Going Upstream

Coyote, he was going upstream.

Coyote is always going upstream. He was going along and he noticed the salmon were having some difficulty there. So he says. I'll build a fish ladder so that the salmon can go up river and feed my people.

January 2023

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Nez Perce return to the Wallowa

The longer I live in this stunning Wallowa-Snake River country, the more complicated the past becomes. The present too!

Like the country at large, we are experiencing a Native Revival. Fire, fish, and reconciliation with the past are fueling a nation-wide “surge”—that’s Ojibwe writer David Treuer’s term—and the same is true here.

October 2022

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Nimi’ipuu History in the Wallowa

I first encountered the Nez Perce, or Nimi’ipuu, in 1989 when I walked through the doors of the unique, triangular shaped building of the Nez Perce National Historical Park, near Lapwai, Idaho. Their story was my introduction to Idaho’s native peoples and for the next 13 years, I worked on cultural projects with the Lapwai tribe, including producing features and documentaries for Spokane public radio.

September 2022

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Nez Perce Storytelling

Hello, my name is Jeanette Weaskus and I’m an enrolled

member of the Nez Perce Tribe of Idaho, or Nimiipuu. Today I’ll be talking

about Nez Perce legends and how they relate to the tribal landscape.

As a folklorist, I have gotten to know the mythologies of many cultures

around the world and have learned how traditional stories function within

those cultures. Specific cultural knowledge is conveyed to the listener who

will remember it, thus learning from the stories.

June 2022

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

Coyote Breaks the Fish Dam

Hello, my name is Jeanette Weaskus and I am an enrolled member of the Nez Perce Tribe, or Nimi’ipuu. I used to work for the tribal radio station, KIYE and my show was called “Titwaatit Time” which means “Story Time.” This podcast for The Idaho Mythweaver’s Voices of the Wild Earth focuses on the natural world with topics about trees, wolves, and salmon, and its archive of Indigenous oral histories.

June 2022

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

People and Trees part 2

I always notice trees, I've traveled a lot, I have taken so many different pictures of trees that really speak to me. There is a tree in Lisbon, Portugal, that was absolutely huge. The branches covered a whole plaza. When we were in Africa, on a safari, we came across this very, very old tree. And it was dying, but it was still standing; and I noticed how many colors were in it, so I took a picture of that and then came home and did my own rendition of that.

December 2021

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Jane Fritz Jane Fritz

People and Trees part 1

When a woman was going to make a basket from a cedar tree, she would stand in front of that tree and pray to it. ‘You are a mighty tree. You have been shelter to us in the winter. You give us heat in the winter. You give us shade in the summer. You help us at all times. But now I am going to take some of your bark. I will need this bark to make a basket to carry my huckleberries. I ask your forgiveness. I will take only what I need, and I thank you.

December 2021

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