Find Us on FacebookSee Our Photos on FlickrListen to Our FREE Lectures on iTunes UniversityTweet with Phil the Sphinx on TwitterWatch Our YouTube Channel Follow our blog Review us on Tripadvisor
Review Penn Museum
header_1600_islam_bowls.jpg

Through July 11, 2011

A Lenape fan made of beads, deerskin and feathers rests in the hands of Shelley DePaul, Director of the Language Program for the Lenape Nation of Pennsylvania and a co-curator of the new exhibition Fulfilling a Prophecy: the Past and Present of the Lenape in Pennsylvania. Photo by Lauren Hansen-Flaschen.Conventional histories of Pennsylvania declare that all but a few elderly Lenape people left the state by the opening of the 19th century. Yet, many remained in secret. Children of the little known Lenape-European marriages of the 1700s stayed on the Lenape homelands, practicing their traditions covertly. Hiding their heritage, they avoided discovery by both the government and their neighbors for more than two hundred years. Now, the descendants of these people have come forward to tell their story.

Fulfilling a Prophecy, organized by the Penn Museum together with the Lenape Nation of Pennsylvania, features never before displayed objects from the private collections of Lenape people in Pennsylvania, in addition to historic and contemporary photographs and archaeological objects from the collections of Penn Museum. Ancient masks, dolls, jewelry, and other traditional arts are featured, as well as a number of once-secret family heirlooms, rich with hidden Lenape symbolism, dating from the early 19th century.

Like half of all Native American groups in the United States, the Lenape Nation of Pennsylvania is not recognized by the federal or state authorities. Though there are many privileges to be gained through recognition, the process of gaining recognition remains both complex and expensive for many Native American groups.

The exhibit also addresses the activities and aspirations of the Lenape of Pennsylvania today, as members of the community speak out through a short video.

Visit the Fulfilling a Prophecy website

Fulfilling a Prophecy: The Past and Present of the Lenape in Pennsylvania

This exhibition is made possible by Diane vS. and Robert Levy, University Scholars at the University of Pennsylvania Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships, the Penn Center for Native American Studies, the National Science Foundation’s Research Experience for Undergraduates “Native Voices” program, University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education, and by Pennsylvania Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities' We the People initiative on American History.