• Bloodlines: Tales of Indigenous Women

  • Auteur(s): Jeane Burgess
  • Podcast

Bloodlines: Tales of Indigenous Women

Auteur(s): Jeane Burgess
  • Résumé

  • In the lives of Native Americans, we all have one thing in common- bloodlines. The bloodlines are what connect our past to our future. In this podcast, we talk with Indigenous women who are impacting their world for the better in big ways and small ways, while never forgetting to go back to their roots. Join, Jeane Burgess, member of the Peoria Tribe of Oklahoma, as she has conversations with powerful Native American women who are making a difference in their neighborhood, communities and their world. Please subscribe, share, and review Bloodlines. Thank you for joining us here.
    © 2025 Bloodlines: Tales of Indigenous Women
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Épisodes
  • Gena Price
    Jan 21 2025

    Gena Price is a member of the Cherokee tribe and was raised in the Tulsa/Claremore, Oklahoma area. She move to Houston, Texas in her Junior year of high school, where she met her husband Chris. Gena and Chris have been married for 43 years. She is a proud mother and grandmother of two children, five grandchildren and five great grandchildren. They moved their family to Cleveland, Oklahoma in 1992 to follow a dream of owning and operating a restaurant. She has since owned two restaurants, and a Christian bookstore. Gena works for the John 3:16 Mission in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and makes her home in Collinsville.

    Her email is: gprice@john316mission.org

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    33 min
  • Sherri Mount
    Jan 13 2025

    Sherri Mount, holds an A.A. degree in Accounting from NEO A&M College and a B.S.B.A. in Accounting from the University of Tulsa. She joined our team in January 1994. Sherri specializes in leasing and consumer/commercial loans. Sherri is a proud grandmother, who loves spending time on her farm.

    Website: Welch State Bank | Community Banking Made for You

    Email: smount@welchstatebank.com

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    23 min
  • Lynda Kay Sawyer
    Jan 6 2025

    Lynda Kay Sawyer is a multidisciplinary artist (photography, jewelry, writing, filmmaking), devoted to preserving and inspiring appreciation for First American Native history and culture, featuring her Choctaw heritage. She creates art based on stories handed down and extensive research.

    Her photography depicts the Chahta spirit in people, artifacts, nature, and historical places. She captures images from the mountaintops where the last strain of Choctaw horses roamed, to the faces of those keeping the spirit alive today. Her photos have been published in national magazines and on the book covers of Touch My Tears and Anumpa Warrior: Choctaw Code Talkers of WWI, and coincide with historical fiction books by author Sarah Elisabeth Sawyer. Photographing images across the United States, Lynda Kay views the world through her camera lens by the light of her Christian faith in the Creator.

    Inspired to preserve and honor the legacy and faith of her ancestors, Lynda Kay's jewelry designs tells their stories. With imagistic form, coordinate colors and creative stories, she journeys through the lives of her forebears.

    As a filmmaker, Lynda Kay had the opportunity of producing an artist profile documentary for the Artist Leadership Program of the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institute. Producing short films to hone her skills, she hopes to immortalize her ancestors' dedication to future generations by putting their stories on the big screen.

    Lynda Kay Sawyer is a registered artist of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. You can discover her work at ChoctawSpirit.com


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    28 min

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