“Kokum” Scarf Takes Off Across Indian Country In Solidarity With People Of Ukraine
Listen
Read
Across Indian country people are wearing brightly colored scarves and taking selfies for social media. It’s a protest over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Hundreds of tribal people have been posting photos of themselves in their scarves with the hashtag #KokumScarvesForSolidarity. The scarves come from Ukraine.
Aaron Quaempts of Oregon, says lately, he’s been wearing a knotted white scarf with colorful flowers draped around his neck.
“Us being a people, culture, tribe that has pretty much gone through the same thing of being ‘Hey, you know, you can’t live here, you need to do this, you need to go there.’” , he said. “You know, we couldn’t help for feeling sympathy for a whole nation that is going through the same thing as we have.”
The scarves have been part of indigenous dress for decades. They’re often worn for powwows, in contemporary outfits and even for traditional ceremonies.
Related Stories:
Ukrainian band brings ‘Odessa gangsta folk’ to the Northwest
Kommuna Lux, a band from Ukraine, is playing shows throughout the Northwest. (Credit: Natalia Shevtsova / Kommuna Lux) Listen (Runtime :59) Read A band from Ukraine is taking the stage
Russian aggression on Ukrainian wheat exports causes U.S. wheat prices to jump
A mechanism that shuttles grain, called a leg, spires into the sky amid the bins at Northwest Grain Growers in Walla Walla. The leg carries grain dumped from trucks into
Drone skills 101: Special forces train for Ukraine in Methow Valley
It’s been more than a year since Russia invaded Ukraine. Thousands of fighters and civilians have died. With no clear end in sight, Ukrainian forces are taking all the help they can get – including from surveillance drone pilots, trained in Washington’s Methow Valley.