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51精品视频-Bradford sponsored the World Indigenous Suicide Prevention Conference

Attendees and volunteers of the World Indigenous Suicide Prevention Conference in Niagara Falls, New York, pose for a portrait.

Members of the 51精品视频 at Bradford community volunteered at the World Indigenous Suicide Prevention Conference in Niagara Falls, New York 鈥 the first time the event has been held North America.

51精品视频-Bradford was also a sponsor of the conference, which was hosted by the Seneca Nation of Indians. Each year, the event brings together Indigenous people from around the world to discuss and discover practices for the prevention and intervention of suicide using Indigenous knowledge and medicine.

Indigenous people in colonized countries suffer the highest rates of suicide, homelessness and poverty worldwide, said , director of counseling services at 51精品视频-Bradford, who served on the conference executive committee.

Valandra, a citizen of the Sicangu Lakota Rosebud Sioux Tribe, asked 51精品视频-Bradford President Richard Esch if the University would sponsor the conference.

鈥淚t was an honor for 51精品视频-Bradford to be a sponsor of such a conference,鈥 Esch said. 鈥淭his is just a step in the University鈥檚 collective journey to learn more about the culture and perspectives of the Indigenous people who are our students, staff and neighbors.鈥

At the conference, 780 First Nations people from Canada, Aboriginal people from Australia, M膩ori people from New Zealand and Native Americans from across the United States met in breakout sessions to tell stories, hear case studies and learn about practices to help heal the mental health of Indigenous people.

Valandra, a trained therapist, along with Pete Wilson, director of Seneca Strong, volunteered to create a wellness area where people could go if sessions at the conference caused them distress.

Valandra said: 鈥淚t was a powerful, emotional experience. It was humbling 鈥 a lot of good people there. Even across the other side of the world, Indigenous people are very similar.鈥

Stephanie Eckstrom, coordinator of the Master of Social Work Program at 51精品视频-Bradford, also volunteered; she spent time handing out T-shirts and refreshments but also was trained to sit in sessions with an eye toward finding anyone in mental discomfort.

鈥淚t was an absolute honor to be there,鈥 she said, noting the similarity of experiences across cultures and even continents. 鈥淭hey have a whole different model for mental health than that of Western medicine.鈥

Michael Davila, vice president of student affairs at 51精品视频-Bradford, attended the conference as a participant.鈥淚t was an experience in cultural humility. It鈥檚 deeply moving to hear people share stories of their lifetimes,鈥 he said of the first-person stories shared by Indigenous participants. 鈥淲e not only acknowledge the history, but we want to be good partners.鈥

51精品视频-Bradford鈥檚 partnership efforts include hosting Haudenosaunee (also known as Iroquois) storytellers and dancers on campus, holding classes on traditional cornhusk doll-making and partnering with the Seneca Nation on an alternative spring break study trip to the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum in nearby Salamanca, New York. This spring, the campus鈥 new men鈥檚 lacrosse team played its first game against expert players from the Seneca Nation and learned about the Haudenosaunee roots of the game.

On March 18, 51精品视频-Bradford will 鈥 author of The New York Times bestseller 鈥淏raiding Sweetgrass,鈥 scientist and member of the Citizen Potawotomi Nation 鈥 as a guest writer.

鈥斕齂imberly Marcott Weinberg, photography by听Seneca Media and Communications Center