Indigenous Poetry Reading

Event description

  • Arts and entertainment
  • Family friendly
  • Inclusion
  • Open to the public

We are excited to announce that poets Taté Walker, Ruben Cu:k Ba'ak, and Ayling Dominquez will visit the Preserve to share some of their poems! Learn more about the poets below...

Taté Walker

Taté Walker (they/them) is a Lakota citizen of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe of South Dakota. They are an award-winning Two Spirit storyteller. Their first full-length poetry book, The Trickster Riots, was published in 2022, by Abalone Mountain Press.

​Taté, a 2022 Pushcart Prize nominee, has written, photographed, and/or edited for various outlets, including The Nation, Yellow Medicine Review, Little Somethings Press, Studies in American Indian Literature, Pipe Wrench, Apartment Therapy, Everyday Feminism, Native Peoples, Indian Country Today, Subaru Drive, and December. They are also featured in several anthologies: FIERCE: Essays by and about Dauntless Women, South Dakota in Poems, W.W. Norton's Everyone's an Author, and Good Eats: 32 Writers on Eating Ethically. Their next book, “Indigenous Voices,” is forthcoming in 2025 from The Quarto Group.

Taté is a co-founder of the Phoenix Two Spirit Community group, which helps organize the annual Arizona Two Spirit Powwow and Rainbow Gathering. They are also a longtime member of—and also serve on the board of directors for—the Oceti Sakowin Writers Society, which has a mission to mentor, empower, and promote Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota literary traditions. Taté is a 2023 ASU Poetry & the Senses Fellow and the 2023 Storyknife Fireweed Fellow. Taté has 20 years of experience in print/digital journalism and advocacy writing, and is a trusted community builder within/for social justice and tribal education spaces. 

Ruben Cu:k Ba'ak

Ruben Cu:k Ba’ak (he/him) is an enrolled member of the Tohono O’odham Nation. He is a traditional O’odham that continues to learn about his O’odham Himdag, through language, philosophies, and songs from his Elders and mentors. Ruben is the Community Engagement Specialist for the Tsosie Lab For Indigenous Genomic Equity & Justice based at Arizona State University. He is currently working on an Ph.D. in Anthropology in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change. Ruben is in recovery and helps people in recovery in their battle with addiction, alcoholism, and violence. He also reads and writes poetry, his poetry is his reflection of growing up on the Rez, living through institutions/systems, recovery, and his message is of healing and perseverance.

Ayling Dominguez

Ayling Zulema Dominguez (they/she) is a poet, mixed media artist, and youth arts educator with roots in Puebla, México (Nahua) and República Dominicana. Grounded in a poetics of anticolonialism, their art and writing ask who we are at our most free, and explore the subversions and imaginings needed in order to arrive there. Their collages juxtapose images of the body with that of structural injustice to prompt critical interrogation of our current systems of punishment disguised as justice.

Ancestral veneration, Indigenous Futurisms, and communing with the archive are major themes in Ayling’s writing. What can language do for our rebellions and resistance efforts? How can we use it to birth new worlds and weave our ancestors into the fabric of them? What to do with all this rage and sorrow and joy, all this inheritance? 

Event contact

Deer Valley Petroglyph Preserve
(623) 582-8007
Date

Saturday, November 22, 2025



Time

11:00 am12:00 pm (MST)


Location

Deer Valley Petroglyph Preserve

Cost

Free with Admission