College opens Gadda-Hish Cultural Center
College opens Gadda-Hish Cultural Center
By Jerry W. Kram
Delvin Driver, Sr. is a soft spoken man. He quietly goes about his business teaching the Hidatsa language and traditions to a new generation.
As one of a rapidly diminishing group of elders of the MHA Nation who are fluent in the language of one of the three tribes, he is often called to give a prayer or blessing at the beginning of significant events in the area. Vice president of Native American Studies Alyce Spotted Bear said Driver was part of the bedrock of the program, even to the point of volunteering to teach adult Hidatsa language classes on his own time for no pay.
With this level of respect and dedication it is little surprise that the Cultural Center on the New Town campus was officially named the Gadda-Hish Cultural Center. Gadda-Hish is Driver’s Hidatsa name. In English it means crescent moon.
It was a day for new names as the Fort Berthold Community College announced it would now be known as Nu’eta, Hidatsa and Sahnish College and that the mascot of its soon to be instituted athletic teams would be the Arrows.