Current:Home > Finance'Like a living scrapbook': 'My Powerful Hair' is a celebration of Native culture -InvestPioneer
'Like a living scrapbook': 'My Powerful Hair' is a celebration of Native culture
View
Date:2025-04-17 15:07:27
My Powerful Hair is a new picture book that turns a painful truth about racism into a celebration of Native culture.
When Carole Lindstrom was a little girl growing up in Bellevue, Nebraska, she really wanted long hair. She would put the blanket she had as a baby on her head and, "pretend I had long hair, you know, swing it around," she laughs.
She couldn't understand why her mother wouldn't let her. "Every time it got a little bit long, she said, 'We have to cut it. It's too wild,'" Lindstrom remembers.
She says her mother didn't seem to have a good explanation. One clue was a black and white photograph that sat on top of the TV set — a picture of her grandmother and two great aunts. "They were wearing these white smocks and their hair was just really chopped short and they had bangs. They just didn't look right," says Lindstrom. "And I remember asking my mom about that picture...and my mom didn't really know much about it other than to say, 'Well, that was when grandma and your great aunts were sent to boarding school. Indian boarding school.'"
A brutal effort to erase Native culture
At Indian boarding schools, children were forbidden to speak their Native languages and forced to cut their hair, among other indignities.
As an adult, Lindstrom set out to find out more about her culture and learned the truth about hair. "The hair is such a big part of who we are and our identity," she says, "It's like a living scrapbook."
In My Powerful Hair, a little girl relates the events of her life with the length of her hair.
"When my baby brother was born, my hair touched my shoulders. The gift of welcoming him into the world is woven into my hair," Lindstrom writes.
Lindstrom is Anishinaabe/Métis and an enrolled citizen of of the Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe.
Ten year old Talon Jerome, who lives on the Turtle Mountain Reservation, identifies with her new book. "Our hair is the source of our strength and power and memories," he says.
Talon and his mother, Cherona Jerome, are members of the Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe. Cherona teaches at Talon's school. She says books like My Powerful Hair are important for her students to read.
"It's a beautifully written story and very relatable to our own experiences," Jerome says. "My mother was a boarding school survivor and I do recall pictures of her also with very, very short hair. Her and some of my aunts who went to boarding school also."
In the story, the young girl cuts her hair when her grandfather (Nimishoomis) dies. "I sent it into the spirit world with him so that he could have my energies," she says.
"[This] kind of brought back some memories of my grandmother's passing," says Jerome. "I also cut my hair...and it went with her in the grave. It's just a sign of mourning for us."
Bringing more diverse books to readers
Jerome also relates to Lindstrom's desire to teach children Native traditions. She says the hard truth is that her mother and grandparents' were taught to be, "ashamed of their culture. They they weren't allowed to be proud of it." She continues, "We're the generation that's teaching them our culture again."
Lindstrom says there was a time when publishers wouldn't even look at her stories about Indigenous culture. "So I was writing tooth fairy stories and all those things," she jokes. Then, she says, We Need Diverse Books came about. The campaign, launched in 2014, pushed for greater diversity in publishing. "And when that happened, the world kind of suddenly went 'click,'" she says.
A publisher snapped up her book We Are Water Protectors. It won a Caldecott Medal and became a bestseller.
Lindstrom wishes the world had "clicked" sooner. She says she almost never saw children who looked like her in the books she read as a little girl. Those she did see, were depicted as savages. She says My Powerful Hair is her "gift" to children who look like her.
"I just want them...to see themselves in a positive way when they pick up a book. I didn't have that. It was always blonde hair, real light colored skin, not who I was when I was younger," she says, "I just didn't know where my people were."
Lindstrom says her mother died in 2015 without ever learning the power of her hair.
This piece was edited for radio and digital by Meghan Collins Sullivan. It was produced for air by Isabella Gomez Sarmiento.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Bo Hines, who lost a close 2022 election in North Carolina, announces another Congress run
- Watch as barred owl hitches ride inside man's truck, stunning driver
- Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak hospitalized in Mexico
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- The average long-term US mortgage rate falls to 7.5% in second-straight weekly drop
- Jelly Roll talks hip-hop's influence on country, 25-year struggle before CMA Award win
- From Hollywood to auto work, organized labor is flexing its muscles. Where do unions stand today?
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Nigeria’s president signs controversial bill for a presidential yacht and SUVs for lawmakers
Ranking
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Revisiting Bears-Panthers pre-draft trade as teams tangle on 'Thursday Night Football'
- Matt Ulrich's Wife Pens Heartbreaking Message After NFL Alum's Death
- Massachusetts is running out of shelter beds for families, including migrants from other states
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Jimmy Buffett honored with tribute performance at CMAs by Kenny Chesney, Alan Jackson, more
- Myanmar’s military chief says a major offensive by ethnic groups was funded by the drug trade
- Danica Roem makes history as first openly transgender person elected to Virginia state Senate
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Pizza Hut in Hong Kong rolls out snake-meat pizza for limited time
North Carolina woman and her dad get additional jail time in the beating death of her Irish husband
Justice Department opens civil rights probe into Lexington Police Department in Mississippi
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Jury rejects insanity defense for man convicted of wedding shooting
Myanmar’s military chief says a major offensive by ethnic groups was funded by the drug trade
Vinny Slick and Fifi among 16 accused mafia associates arrested in U.S.-Italy takedown