Community Corner

Isle A La Cache Presents Contemporary Native American Exhibit

The "Indige-Facts" exhibit runs from Sept. 21, to Dec. 8.

ROMEOVILLE, IL — A new traveling exhibit coming to Isle a la Cache Museum in Romeoville will help visitors educate themselves on contemporary Native life in the United States, according to a release from the Forest Preserve District of Will County.

The “Indige-Facts” exhibit runs from Sept. 21, to Dec. 8. Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays to Saturdays and noon to 4 p.m. on Sundays. Two related programs will be held in conjunction with the exhibit.

"The exhibit raises and answers questions such as: Are Native Americans U.S. citizens? How many Indigenous people live in this country? Do all American Indians live on reservations? What are the right words to describe the people who have always lived here?," according to a release.

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The Mitchell Museum of the American Indian in Evanston created the traveling exhibit, which is on loan to the Forest Preserve District's Isle a la Cache Museum in Romeoville.

The traveling exhibit covers topics ranging from accepted terminology to population size to the sovereign rights of Native people, the preserve said.

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The exhibit has been updated by its creators to include two new panels that focus on recently passed laws in Illinois that protect Native peoples. It also highlights the fact that the state is now home to a federally recognized Tribe, said Jen Guest, facility supervisor at Isle a la Cache Museum.

Also, museum staff expanded the exhibit with various works from Native artists and information from other Native organizations, Guest said in a release.

“We are making a continual effort to work with Native community members and Native organizations while also reaching out to Tribal leaders,” she added. “We are committed to amplifying the voices of Native peoples to share their own cultural histories and stories.”

The exhibit expands Isle a la Cache’s interpretive focus on the 18th-century Fur Trade Era, when the Potawatomi exchanged goods and ideas with French voyageurs, said Sara Russell, a Forest Preserve interpretive naturalist.

“Many visitors see Native Americans frozen in time, never changing or existing in the modern world,” Russell said in a release. The reality is, the fur trade was just a tiny slice of Native history. Native peoples were here; they are still here.”

The exhibit is brought to Isle a la Cache Museum through the support of The Nature Foundation of Will County.

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