
Nordic Music Workshop Series w/ Paul Dahlin The Nordic Center is hosting a series of fiddle workshops from November through…

SunFUNdays are back! You and your family have been missing these craft adventures. Please join us at the Nordic Center….

Join us for our new book club! Open to all, we will read a variety of styles of fiction from…

Your membership is so important to the Nordic Center. If you haven’t made a financial commitment for 2023, there is…

This exhibition features traditional and contemporary floral and geometric designs from Ojibwe, Nordic and Sami textile traditions.

Learn about the tale that inspired the Nordic Center’s new logo…the Fire Fox!

Come! Celebrate Earth Day and springtime in Duluth, MN.

Ulla-Karin Warberg, curator at the Nordiska Museet in Stockholm and a lecturer at Uppsala University in Sweden. will use the…
Nordic Center of Duluth Land Acknowledgement Statement
From the shores of Gichi-gami, the Nordic Center of Duluth exists on the traditional, ancestral, and contemporary lands of the Anishinaabe, Cree, Cheyenne, and Dakota people. The Nordic Center recognizes that the land the Center rests on was stolen from the Dakota and Ojibwe people. Indeed, our address on Lake Avenue is located on an ancient trail used by American Indian people to travel from their summer camps at Shagawamik (Park Point) to the winter camps on Canosia Lake (Pike Lake) and Kitchi-sagaiigun (Grand Lake). We pay our respect to the ancestors of this land and reaffirm our relationship with one another as we continue on the path of reconciliation. We acknowledge the painful history of genocide, the forced removal, assimilation, and broken treaties which have alienated Indigenous people from their homelands. The Nordic Center of Duluth is committed to ongoing efforts to recognize, support, and advocate for American Indian peoples and their nations’ sovereignty. Our full land acknowledgement statement is framed on our wall and can be found on our website.