Phyllis Walluk dances on stage at Nome Elementary School during the 2026 Katiluta Cultural Festival. Quinn White/KNOM

Generations dance together at Nome festival

In May, families from across Western Alaska gathered for the Katiluta Cultural Festival. The three-day gathering hosted by local Alaska Native corporations and non-profits featured art workshops, fish cutting demonstrations, storytelling and more.

Yaayuk Alvanna-Stimpfle was part of a panel of Elders who gathered to discuss the history and significance of dancing in the region. She said that every song has a story, and each movement has a meaning.

“You just don’t go up and move your arms around any old way. You have to be precise,” she explained. “We have to do it correctly, because that’s showing respect and honoring where it came from.”

Inupiaq, Yup’ik and St. Lawrence Island Yupik people have lived in the Bering Strait region since time immemorial. Today, revitalization efforts and events like Katiluta help pass traditions like singing and dancing from generation to generation.

Phyllis Walluk teaches cultural studies at Nome-Beltz Middle-High School. She says it can take a while for students to nail the motions, but one of the most important things is to dance with heart.

“It makes it more fun. It’s like the rush goes in you when the second part of the song goes faster, it just hits you,” she said. “That’s when you need to have fun. Put your whole heart into that dancing.”

On the final night of the festival, dancers of all ages took to the stage inside Nome Elementary School. Audience members followed their rhythmic arm motions, while others sang along with the drummers. 

Opportunities to dance with her community make nine-year-old Azrguq Klescewski feel proud of her heritage. 

“It makes us happy,” she said. “We cannot stop our tradition, because it’s our tradition, and our ancestors did that a long time ago, which is really special, because it makes us remember them.”

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