From Acadian to Cajun a Unique Culture Defines This Louisiana Destination

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

From Acadian to Cajun a Unique Culture Defines This Louisiana Destination From Acadian to Cajun A Unique Culture Defines This Louisiana Destination Raceland, Louisiana (August 12, 2020) – This Saturday, August 15, is National Acadian Day as observed in parts of Canada. It celebrates Acadian culture and coincides with the Catholic feast of the Assumption of Mary, the patron saint of the Acadians. But who are the Acadians and why are we telling you about them? We work with Lafourche Parish, Louisiana, affectionately nicknamed “Louisiana’s Cajun Bayou.” In Louisiana, the Acadians are better known as “Cajuns,” and their unique culture is a big part of what makes the state – especially this region about 45 minutes from New Orleans -- so incredibly diverse and fascinating. The Acadians came from western France to settle in eastern Canada in the early 1600s, in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. They were considered British subjects, and during the French and Indian War in the mid-1700s, the British military suspected that the Acadians were supporters of France despite the fact that most Acadians had adopted a neutral stance. As punishment for this presumed treason, British troops imprisoned and deported nearly 11,500 Acadians between 1755 and 1764. It’s estimated that a third of them died during this mass deportation, called the “Great Expulsion.” Some Acadians were sent to the American colonies, which at that time were also under British rule, to become indentured servants; others were sent to the Caribbean or England. Still others ended up back in France, and a good many of that group returned to North America when the Spanish government recruited French citizens to populate Louisiana, which at that time was a Spanish colony. Louisiana was a far cry from the lush green landscapes of France or Canada, and the Acadians had to figure out how to adapt to an environment that was the antithesis of everything they’d previously known. Ultimately, though, in Louisiana this displaced and transplanted group didn’t just survive ... they figured out how to thrive. They brought with them their French language, their Catholic morals, and a temperament that equipped them to be incredibly adaptable and resilient. It was in Louisiana that the “Acadians” became “Cajuns,” and they now lay claim to one of the most unique cultures anywhere in the United States. They’re an indelible part of Louisiana’s story. When you hear the word “Cajun,” you probably think of people who possess a certain joie de vivre (translated from French, “joy of living”), a passion for music and dancing, and a collection of the best recipes any chef has ever tried. All that positivity and freedom of expression exists despite the circumstances that brought the Cajuns to Louisiana, and it’s important to preserve and celebrate their culture. In honor of National Acadian Day, we wanted to share a few places in Louisiana’s Cajun Bayou where visitors can pass some time learning more about what it means to be Cajun. This region prides itself in delivering authentic Cajun experiences at every turn, including these: • Louisiana’s Cajun Bayou Visitors Center: A great place to start a tour of Lafourche Parish is at the visitor center in Raceland. This isn’t a hum-drum place with a brochure rack and rows of rest rooms; it’s an interactive museum through which visitors learn of the history and traditions that bring this entire region alive. • Cajun Bayou Food Trail: Many would argue that the best part of Cajun culture is the food, and the 17 restaurants on this trail hold tight to Cajun traditions. Chefs often use recipes that have been passed down for generations and everyone has his or her own take on how to transform local ingredients into memorable dining experiences. But each of those chefs will tell you that there are just two simple ingredients required for every Cajun meal: make it with love and serve it to guests you welcome like your own family. • Swamp Tours: If you want to get a true feel for the subtropical environment that became the new home to the Cajuns in the late 1700s, get out on a swamp tour. Led by genuine Cajun captains, these boat tours take participants deep into the swamps of Lafourche Parish. Besides introducing guests to countless birds and alligators, the tours also offer unique insights into the people who call this place home. • Center for Traditional Louisiana Boat Building: Located along Bayou Lafourche in the town of Lockport, this facility houses a collection of wooden boats and artifacts that unlock the mysteries of the boat-building traditions of the Cajuns and other Louisiana residents. Among the displays are pirogues, “Cajun kayaks” that are how some families continue to traverse the bayou today. The center holds classes in traditional wooden boat building throughout the year. • Chine’s Cajun Net Shop: Even if you’re keeping your eyes peeled as you drive into the town of Golden Meadow, you could motor right past this shop. It’s nondescript from the outside, but walk through the door and you’ll be transported into a fascinating new world. You’ll find a small group of men holding huge needles and sewing gigantic nets ... the kind used to pull oysters and shrimp from the waters all around this region. You can ask questions, take pictures and – if you play your cards right – walk away with the gift of a tiny net. It’ll be perfect for your next crawfish boil! Due to enhanced safety measures because of COVID-19, two of the best places to interpret the story of the Cajuns are currently closed to the public. If you’re keeping a list of what to visit in the future, we encourage stops at these two stellar museums: • Wetlands Acadian Cultural Center: A part of Jean Lafitte National Park, National Park Service facilities that encompass six different locales across the state of Louisiana, this site focuses on Cajun cuisine, religion, music, crafts and home life. The center offers daily programming aimed at preserving Cajun traditions, from Monday-night music jams to French language circles on Tuesdays, to guided boat tours along the bayou on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. • Bayou Country Children’s Museum: Described as a children’s museum with a “Cajun twist,” this interactive facility takes daily scenes from life along the bayou and transforms them into learning opportunities for the youngest members of your family. From working on a shrimp boat to tossing beads from a Mardi Gras float and from navigating across a pretend gator- filled swamp to playing a washboard, little ones get a big dose of the Cajun life here. This year has been a tough one, as evidenced by the fact that some of the attractions that would ordinarily help share the unique stories of the Cajuns can’t even open right now. But the Cajuns will be the first to tell you that they’ve seen rough times before and have always found their way back. Louisiana’s Cajun Bayou Tourism encourages you to learn more about the Cajuns and meet the residents of Lafourche Parish when the time is right. Meanwhile, here’s a message from them: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rj8zQfVzTdQ # # # Louisiana’s Cajun Bayou is located just 45 minutes from New Orleans, in the coastal destination of Lafourche Parish. Visitors seeking authentic Cajun experiences are embraced by true Southern hospitality as they sample the outdoor adventures, culture, food, music, and festivals that make any journey up and down Bayou Lafourche truly personal, memorable and distinctive. MEDIA CONTACT Mindy Bianca [email protected] 919-200-6060 .
Recommended publications
  • Queer(Y)Ing Quaintness: Destabilizing Atlantic Canadian Identity Through Its Theatre
    QUEER(Y)ING QUAINTNESS: DESTABILIZING ATLANTIC CANADIAN IDENTITY THROUGH ITS THEATRE LUKE BROWN Thesis submitted to the University of Ottawa in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Arts degree in Theatre Theory & Dramaturgy Department of Theatre Faculty of Graduate Studies University of Ottawa © Luke Brown, Ottawa, Canada, 2019 Brown ii Abstract The Atlantic Canadian provinces (Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia) have long been associated with agricultural romanticism. Economically and culturally entrenched in a stereotype of quaintness (Anne of Green Gables is just one of many examples), the region continuously falls into a cycle of inferiority. In this thesis, I argue that queer theory can be infused into performance analysis to better situate local theatre practice as a site of mobilization. Using terms and concepts from queer geographers and other scholars, particularly those who address capitalism (Gibson-Graham, Massey), this research outlines a methodology of performance analysis that looks through a queer lens in order to destabilize normative assumptions about Atlantic Canada. Three contemporary performances are studied in detail: Christian Barry, Ben Caplan, and Hannah Moscovitch's Old Stock: A Refugee Love Story, Ryan Griffith's The Boat, and Xavier Gould‘s digital personality ―Jass-Sainte Bourque‖. Combining Ric Knowles' "dramaturgy of the perverse" (The Theatre of Form 1999) with Sara Ahmed's "queer phenomenology" (Queer Phenomenology 2006) allows for a thorough queer analysis of these three performances. I argue that such an approach positions new Atlantic Canadian performances and dramaturgies as sites of aesthetic and semantic disorientation. Building on Jill Dolan's "utopian performatives" (Utopia in Performance 2005), wherein the audiences experience a collective "lifting above" of normative dramaturgical structures, my use of "queer phenomenology" fosters a plurality of unique perspectives.
    [Show full text]
  • ACADIA PLANTATION RECORDS Mss
    ACADIA PLANTATION RECORDS Mss. 4906 Inventory Compiled by Catherine Ashley Via and Rebecca Smith Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections Special Collections, Hill Memorial Library Louisiana State University Libraries Baton Rouge, Louisiana 2005 Revised 2015 Updated 2020, 2021 ACADIA PLANTATION RECORDS Mss. 4906 1809-2004 SPECIAL COLLECTIONS, LSU LIBRARIES CONTENTS OF INVENTORY SUMMARY .................................................................................................................................... 4 HISTORICAL NOTE ..................................................................................................................... 5 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE ............................................................................................................... 8 SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE ................................................................................................. 10 LIST OF SERIES AND SUBSERIES .......................................................................................... 11 SERIES DESCRIPTIONS ............................................................................................................ 12 INDEX TERMS ............................................................................................................................ 25 CONTAINER LIST ...................................................................................................................... 28 Appendix A: Oversized materials from Series II, Legal Records, Subseries 1, General Appendix B: Oversized
    [Show full text]
  • Acadiens and Cajuns.Indb
    canadiana oenipontana 9 Ursula Mathis-Moser, Günter Bischof (dirs.) Acadians and Cajuns. The Politics and Culture of French Minorities in North America Acadiens et Cajuns. Politique et culture de minorités francophones en Amérique du Nord innsbruck university press SERIES canadiana oenipontana 9 iup • innsbruck university press © innsbruck university press, 2009 Universität Innsbruck, Vizerektorat für Forschung 1. Auflage Alle Rechte vorbehalten. Umschlag: Gregor Sailer Umschlagmotiv: Herménégilde Chiasson, “Evangeline Beach, an American Tragedy, peinture no. 3“ Satz: Palli & Palli OEG, Innsbruck Produktion: Fred Steiner, Rinn www.uibk.ac.at/iup ISBN 978-3-902571-93-9 Ursula Mathis-Moser, Günter Bischof (dirs.) Acadians and Cajuns. The Politics and Culture of French Minorities in North America Acadiens et Cajuns. Politique et culture de minorités francophones en Amérique du Nord Contents — Table des matières Introduction Avant-propos ....................................................................................................... 7 Ursula Mathis-Moser – Günter Bischof des matières Table — By Way of an Introduction En guise d’introduction ................................................................................... 23 Contents Herménégilde Chiasson Beatitudes – BéatitudeS ................................................................................................. 23 Maurice Basque, Université de Moncton Acadiens, Cadiens et Cajuns: identités communes ou distinctes? ............................ 27 History and Politics Histoire
    [Show full text]
  • Conversational Cajun French 1
    Mais, sa c’est queque chose quand meme! Apprendre le français cadien par la lecture! Cajun French is still widely heard throughout Louisiana. However, this language—spoken by the descendants of the exiled Acadians—is in danger of disappearing. It was illegal to speak it at one time and even today, the teaching of Cajun French in schools is a controversial issue. With the publication of Conversational Cajun French 1, the first systematic approach to teaching the language, Cajun French becomes Conversational Cajun French 1 accessible to those born outside Cajun families. Authors Randall Whatley and Harry Jannise, Cajuns who speak fluent Cajun French, originally developed this handbook for a series of informal conversational Cajun French classes for the Louisiana State University Union in Baton Rouge. As an introduction Conversational to Cajun French, the book is extremely practical. Conversational Cajun French 1 focuses on everyday words and common phrases that can be understood everywhere the language is spoken, despite the various dialects Cajun French 1 and subdialects. Included are lessons in everyday words such as days and months, holidays, parts of the body, numbers, clothing, colors, rooms of By Randall P. Whatley and Harry Jannise the house and their furnishings, foods, animals, fruits and vegetables, tools, plants, and trees. In addition, there is a section of useful expressions and a list of traditional Cajun names. Although the book is designed to be used in conjunction with audio CDs or downloads (available from Pelican), a pronunciation guide enables even the beginning student working alone to learn enough to converse Whatley/Jannise with Cajuns—or at least enough to stay out of trouble in South Louisiana! Conversational Cajun French 1 is an important book not only because it provides a means for those trying to learn Cajun French on their own, but also because it marks an effort to preserve the language and culture and to win a wider acceptance for this unique aspect of Louisiana’s—and indeed the United States’—heritage.
    [Show full text]
  • BAYOU LAFOURCHE CORRIDOR PLAN ASCENSION, ASSUMPTION, and LAFOURCHE PARISHES State of Louisiana
    03C0720078 Sliaw® Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure, Inc. FINAL DRAFT BAYOU LAFOURCHE CORRIDOR PLAN ASCENSION, ASSUMPTION, and LAFOURCHE PARISHES State of Louisiana August 2007 Submitted to the Lafourche Parish Government Ascension Parish Government Assumption Parish Police Jury and the following Municipalities: Donaldsonville Napoleonville Thibodaux Lockport Golden Meadow Submitted by Shaw Environmental and lnfrastrncture, Inc. 4171 Essen Lane Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70809 S!Ja·w E & /, foc.·P.iPiAJ/NiNG\WEHN..AFOURCHE PARJSH GOvn 122646-BYU LAf CORRIDOR\J?eporls'&you La!ourclie Corridor P/anl.B}u la!ourcfie Corridor teporl 081407 UC.doc 8.20.01 Sh~ Bayou Lafourche Corridor Plan Shaw Environmenlat & lflfraslruct1.1re, Inc. Table of Contents __________________ 1.0 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................................1-1 1.1 Background ...........................................................................................................................1-1 1.2 Approach and Methodology .................................................................................................. 1-2 2.0 INVENTORY AND ANAL YSIS ........................................................................................................ 2-1 2. 1 Setting-Physical, Social and Cultural .................................................................................. 2-1 2.2 Land Use .............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Bayou Lafourche Permit Processing Instructions Donaldsonville to Larose, Louisiana
    APPENDIX A, Ordinance No. 5 Bayou Lafourche Fresh Water BLFWD 1016 St. Mary Street, Thibodaux, Louisiana 70301 Telephone (985) 447-7155 Facsimile (985) 447-6307 Bayou Lafourche Permit Processing Instructions Donaldsonville to Larose, Louisiana You have received this packet of information because you are interested in obtaining a permit to construct a physical structure and/or do dredging or filling or some other activity in Bayou Lafourche between its head waters at Donaldsonville and the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway in Larose, LA. Besides the permit issued by the Bayou Lafourche Fresh Water BLFWD (the “BLFWD”) as a result of this application, other permits, certifications and/or approvals may be needed for the activity you are undertaking. If you are proposing to dredge or fill any portion of Bayou Lafourche, in addition to the BLFWD’s permit, you must secure a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In addition, if the activity you are proposing is located within the Louisiana Coastal Zone, coordination with Louisiana Department of Natural Resources is required. Finally, it is incumbent upon the applicant to assure the proposed activity does not require coordination with any other federal, state and local governing entity, including but not limited to towns, villages, cities and parishes with jurisdiction over the affected property. It is highly recommended that you contact these agencies prior to the onset of any activity in Bayou Lafourche. The BLFWD patrols and inspects Bayou Lafourche regularly and will report any and all activity to the appropriate agencies in order to assure that proper approvals/permits have been secured.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 Spring/Summer Communication
    2019 Spring/ Summer edition A message from the Editor Bonjour chères lectrices et chers lecteurs, I am delighted to introduce our members to the new Board of Directors for 2019-2020. This group of diverse professionals volunteer their time during the day, at night and on weekends to keep this association vibrant, current and serving the needs of their members in regards to FSL and International Languages in Ontario. Our association is proud to have a wonderful team of directors with a variety of teaching experiences, language backgrounds, and great strengths and from all over our province working on our collective behalf. I encourage you, our readers, to enhance your network and broaden your knowledge by actively using your OMLTA membership. Your membership provides you with free access to resources, leadership opportunities and discounted events. We encourage members to support networking and collaboration by contributing their expertise to our Communication; consider submitting ideas, strategies, resources or articles that support the modern language classroom. Also, this year we will be introducing our activity of the month where we welcome members from across the province to submit classroom strategies and tools to be featured on our website. Other exciting initiatives are being planned, so be sure to follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to keep informed. Je suis tellement fière de faire partie d’une équipe si travaillante et positive. Entrez en contact avec vos directrices/directeurs, venez nous connaitre cette année et profitez de votre adhésion. Suivez-nous sur les médias sociaux. Inscrivez-vous à une de nos conférences ou à un de nos événements.
    [Show full text]
  • CAJUNS, CREOLES, PIRATES and PLANTERS Your New Louisiana Ancestors Format Volume 1, Number 18
    CAJUNS, CREOLES, PIRATES AND PLANTERS Your New Louisiana Ancestors Format Volume 1, Number 18 By Damon Veach SIG MEETING: Le Comité des Archives de la Louisiane’s African American Special Interest Group (SIG) will hold a meeting on July 25th, from 9:00 to 11:30 a.m. at the Delta Sigma Theta Life Development Center located at 688 Harding Blvd., next to Subway. The meeting is free and open to the public. Ryan Seidemann, President of the Mid City Historical Cemetery Coalition in Baton Rouge, will speak on Sweet Olive Cemetery. Officially dating back to 1898, Sweet Olive was the first cemetery for blacks incorporated in the Baton Rouge city limits. Burials are, however, believed to have occurred prior to 1898. Members of the group will give short presentations on a variety of African American genealogy topics. Cherryl Forbes Montgomery will discuss how to use Father Hebert’s Southwest Louisiana Records effectively. Barbara Shepherd Dunn will describe how she identified and documented the slave owners of her great grandmother. And, Judy Riffel will speak on the SIG’s efforts to create an East Baton Rouge Parish slave database. Time will be allowed at the end of the program for attendees to share their own genealogical problems and successes and to ask questions. With nearly 600 members, Le Comité is one of the largest genealogical groups in the state today. Its African American Genealogy SIG was formed in 2006 to help people doing African American research in Louisiana have a place to communicate and help one another. The group currently consists of 24 Le Comité members who have begun holding meetings and seminars.
    [Show full text]
  • Island-Wide Celebrations for National Acadian Day 2016 to Take Place August 12Th-15Th Weekend; Souris to Host
    Press Release For Immediate Publication Island-wide Celebrations for National Acadian Day 2016 to take Place August 12th-15th Weekend; Souris to Host SUMMERSIDE (P.E.I.) – Friday, August 8th, 2016 – The president of la Société Saint-Thomas-d’Aquin (SSTA), Guy Labonté, invites one and all to join the Acadian and francophone community of P.E.I. in celebrating National Acadian Day activities which will take place all across the Island on the weekend of August 12th-15th. The SSTA wishes a wonderful National Acadian Day to all! In 1881, at the first Convention of the Acadians, it was decided that August 15th would thereafter be observed as National Acadian Day. This day was chosen for many reasons, namely because as a distinct people, Acadians deserve to have a day of recognition; the later summer date does not conflict with seed-sowing commitments; and it coincides with the Assumption of Mary, patron saint of Acadians. Souris, this year’s host Region – provincial celebrations – Saturday, August 13th to Sunday, August 14th : La Société Saint-Thomas-d’Aquin, in collaboration with le Comité Acadien et Francophone de l'Est, invites the public to a number of free activities in the name of National Acadian Day and le Festival Acadien from August 13th to 14th. Saturday, August 13th, there will be a traditional Kitchen Party from 6 to 9 p.m. Cover is $5 per person and includes access to concerts featuring Island musicians Anastasia DesRoches, Mylène Ouellette, JJ Chaisson & Les étoiles de l'Est. There will also be traditional Acadian dishes such as fricot (Acadian chicken soup) and an Acadian roll.
    [Show full text]
  • Le Forum, Vol. 42 No. 3
    The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Le FORUM Journal Franco-American Centre Franco-Américain Fall 2020 Le Forum, Vol. 42 No. 3 Lisa Desjardins Michaud, Rédactrice Robert B. Perreault Gérard Coulombe Timothy St. Pierre Lise Pelletier See next page for additional authors Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/francoamericain_forum This Book is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Le FORUM Journal by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Authors Lisa Desjardins Michaud, Rédactrice; Robert B. Perreault; Gérard Coulombe; Timothy St. Pierre; Lise Pelletier; James Myall; Julianna L'Heureux; Linda Gerard DerSimonian; Marie-Anne Gauvin; Wilfred H. Bergeron; Patrick Lacroix; Suzanne Beebe; Steven Riel; Michael Guignard; Clément Thierry; and Virginie L. Sand Le FORUM “AFIN D’ÊTRE EN PLEINE POSSESSION DE SES MOYENS” VOLUME 42, #3 FALL/AUTOMNE 2020 Paul Cyr Photography: https://paulcyr.zenfolio.com Websites: Le Forum: http://umaine.edu/francoamerican/le-forum/ https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/francoamericain_forum/ Oral History: https://video.maine.edu/channel/Oral+Histories/101838251 Library: francolib.francoamerican.org Occasional Papers: http://umaine.edu/francoamerican/occasional-papers/ Résonance, Franco-American Literary Journal: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/resonance/vol1/iss1/ other pertinent websites to check out - Les Français d’Amérique / French In America Calendar Photos and Texts from 1985 to 2002 http://www.johnfishersr.net/french_in_america_calendar.html Franco-American Women’s Institute: http://www.fawi.net $6.00 Le Forum Sommaire/Contents L’État du ME.....................................4-20 L’État du NH..................................21-33 The Novitiate in Winthrop, Maine.........4-7 Portrait Claire Quintal se raconte .............
    [Show full text]
  • Settlement Succession in Eastern French Louisiana. William Bernard Knipmeyer Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1956 Settlement Succession in Eastern French Louisiana. William Bernard Knipmeyer Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Knipmeyer, William Bernard, "Settlement Succession in Eastern French Louisiana." (1956). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 172. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/172 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SETTLEMENT SUCCESSION IN EASTERN FRENCH LOUISIANA A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department~of Geography and Anthropology by-. William B* Knipmeyer B. S., Louisiana State University, 1947 August, 1956 ACKNOWLEDGMENT Field investigations for a period of three months were accomplished as a part of the Office of Naval Research Project N 7 ONR 35606, under the direction of Prof. Fred B. Kniffen, Head of the Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University. Sincere appreciation is acknowledged for the guidance and assistance of Prof. Kniffen. Information pertaining to similar problems in other parts of the state was generously given by Martin Wright and James W. Taylor. The manuscript was critically read by Professors Robert C. West, William G. Haag, and John II.
    [Show full text]
  • Louisiana-Recognized Native American Tribal Needs Assessment: Understanding the Perceptions, Resources, and Challenges Involving Opioid Use Disorder
    CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by Louisiana State University Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons Reports Social Research and Evaluation Center 9-2019 Louisiana-Recognized Native American Tribal Needs Assessment: Understanding the Perceptions, Resources, and Challenges Involving Opioid Use Disorder Judith L. Rhodes Kandra Colomb Jada Thomas-Smith Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/srec_reports Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Louisiana-Recognized Native American Tribal Needs Assessment Understanding the Perceptions, Resources, and Challenges Involving Opioid Use Disorder Year 1 Report September 2019 Prepared by: Judith Rhodes, PhD, LMSW Kandra Colomb, MBA Jada Thomas-Smith, MSW, LMSW Acknowledgments Prepared by: Social Research and Evaluation Center (SREC) Louisiana State University College of Human Sciences and Education 313 Hatcher Hall Baton Rouge, LA 70803 [email protected] Authors: Judith L. F. Rhodes, PhD, LMSW Kandra Colomb, MBA Jada Thomas-Smith, MSW, LMSW This report was produced on behalf of the Louisiana Department of Health’s Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) State Opioid Response (LaSOR) Grant (FY 2018). Suggested citation: Rhodes, J. L. F., Colomb, K., Thomas-Smith, J. (2019). Louisiana-recognized Native American tribal needs assessment: Understanding the perceptions, resources, and challenges involving opioid use disorder. Baton Rouge, LA: Social Research and Evaluation Center. 1 Table of Contents
    [Show full text]