鲍狈颁-笔别尘产谤辞办别鈥檚 released a described as being by and for Native communities.
Called the 鈥淚ntertribal Canoe Song,鈥 it was written, in part, by children from the Catawba Nation and seven other North Carolina tribes: the Coharie, Haliwa Saponi, Lumbee, Meherrin, Occaneechi, Sappony and Waccamaw Siouan.
The museum stated that the canoe song was written in the spirit of unity. Participating children attended workshops and helped craft the song using their tribes' traditional languages.
The canoe song is intended for ceremonies, gatherings and powwows. But the museum said the song also encourages Southeast Native communities to stay connected when on ancestral waters and to reflect on the waters鈥 significance to Native heritage.
"Each North Carolina American Indian tribe is situated near or on a river that holds cultural, spiritual, historical, and contemporary meaning and importance to their people. 'Indigenous waters' not only includes rivers, but Carolina bays, swamps, and ocean shores that also hold the same meanings." 鈥 Museum of the Southeast American Indian
The canoe song is part of the museum's project, which focuses on the relationships North Carolina鈥檚 American Indian tribal communities have to their indigenous waters.