Sandra Shotridge
"I grew up in my grandma's kitchen," says Sandra Shotridge, who was
raised in Angoon, Alaska, where most residents are Native Americans of
the Tlingit tribe. "I baby-sat when I was 8 years old. I lived the
life, 'It takes a village to raise a child.' My grandparents had around
25 grandkids." Shotridge arrived in Eugene at age 13, when her mom and
stepdad couldn't find work in Sitka. "It was culture shock for me," she
says. "I went through a lot of racism at Cal Young Junior High and
North Eugene High School." She returned to her grandma's kitchen for a
year at Sitka High School and another at an Alaska Native boarding
school, then came back to Eugene and completed a GED at Lane Community
College. In the photograph, Shotridge, at age 60, makes her usual
Thursday evening visit to the community potluck dinner at the Many
Nations Longhouse on the University of Oregon campus, where she also
participates in its annual storytelling event. Married, divorced, and
the mother of 5, she spends most weekdays at the home of her mother,
caring for her own grandchildren. Her many volunteer efforts include
sign-waving and phone-banking for local politicians Peter DeFazio and
Val Hoyle. She helped to organize the March Against Monsanto and the
protest against Columbus Day that led to Indigenous Peoples' Day in
Oregon. She makes frybread for the annual Public Interest Environmental
Law Conference at the UO. Other volunteer efforts include Occupy
Medical, the Egan Warming Center, and 3 trips to North Dakota in 2016
to bring donated supplies to pipeline protesters. "It's an endeavor
that broke me financially," she admits, "used up all my funds." On
January 20 of this year, Shotridge was honored as a recipient of the
Eugene Human Rights Commission's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Leadership
Award.
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 13 February 2020
|
|