What's a culture? What's your culture? Do you have a culture?Everyone
does. The best definition of culture is "the way you see the world."
But you can't SEE the way you see the world. Your own culture is
always invisible to you. We can look at other people's cultures and
know how they differ from our own, but we can't articulate our own
very well.
Cultures are "ways of seeing." Rev. Dr. Michael Oleksa's presentations
are devoted to a discussion of cultures and how they effect us all,
how our own culture focuses on certain aspects of reality and
neglects others. He speaks internationally on how cultures influence
the way we understand each other and how to deal with this in a
reasonable and appropriate way.
Instructor Father Michael Oleksa, Ph.D., recognized as an "Elder" by
the Alaska Federation of Natives, a Distinguished Public Servant by
the Board of Regents of the University of Alaska, and honored by the
Alaska State Legislature and the National Governors Association, Dr.
Oleksa is a storyteller who seeks to foster greater understanding
across boundaries of race and culture. Father Oleksa is a leader in
the development of cross-cultural education in Alaska, an educator of
Alaskan teachers, and a student of Alaska Native languages and
cultures.
Born in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He came to Alaska in 1970 from St.
Vladimir's Seminary in New York at the invitation of the Alutiiq
village of Old Harbor on Kodiak Island. Over the next three decades
he served as a Russian Orthodox priest in over a dozen Alaska Native
villages. In 1988 he completed his doctoral degree at the Orthodox
Theological Faculty in Presov, Slovakia, with an emphasis in Native
Alaskan History during the Alaska Russian period (1741-1867). He
recently has published a book in collaboration with the Association
of Alaska School Boards entitled Another Culture/Another World that
explores the great diversity and common humanity of Alaska's
cultural mosaic.
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23/02/2017 Last update