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Benry Fauna Photography
Scierra LeGarde (she/her) a native of Bvlbancha, is a graduate of Ursuline Academy and the University of New Orleans (B.A. History). In addition to her Louisiana Creole roots, she is a member of the Bayou Lacombe Band of Choctaw and is of Lipan Apache ancestry. Scierra is well known for her cultural activism, and is involved in language reclamation as well as restoration of traditional practices such as basket weaving and kabotcha (stickball). She is also a jingle dress dancer and beadwork artist.
In her interview, Scierra discusses the history of the Choctaw people of Bayou Lacombe, the complexities of recognition and the aftermath of trauma from removal. She delves into her personal cultural practices and illuminates matters of personal identity involving mixed-ethnic identity in Louisiana.
The Choctaw are a large and influential Indigenous People of the Gulf South, with traditional territory in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The Choctaw are currently separated into several groups, including four federally recognized groups as well as several other smaller bands.
The Choctaw of Bayou Lacombe and environs have roots on the Northshore region of Lake Okwatta, also known as Lake Pontchartrain. They may be related to the Acolapissa Tribe recorded in that area, another group that was linguistically and culturally similar. The Choctaw on the Northshore have suffered massacres, cultural loss, and two removals of members, some of whom became part of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. The tribe and its cultural practices were extensively documented by David Bushnell of the Bureau of American Ethnology in the early 20th Century. In spite of this documentation, the Choctaw of Bayou Lacombe are still not recognized by the United States Government. The Bayou Lacombe Choctaw today are still active, and continue to reclaim their cultural heritage.
Bushnell, David Ives. "The Choctaw of Bayou Lacombe, St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana." Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin (1909):48:1–37.
Jolivétte, Andrew J. Louisiana Creoles: Cultural Recovery and Mixed-Race Native American Identity (Lanham: Lexington Books, 2007).
Tayac, Gabrielle, editor. IndiVisible: African-Native American Lives in the Americas (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books, 2009).
A conversation with Hali Dardar, John DePriest, Scierra LeGarde, and Monique Verdin.
In collaboration with Ida Aronson, Jeffery Darensbourg, and Hali Dardar
In collaboration with Benry Fauna and Hali Dardar