ASU: Labriola Center’s Expanded Staff and New Space Strengthen Connections with Native American Community
Alexander Soto’s excitement and joy was evident as he showed a visitor the new Labriola National American Indian Data Center space inside Hayden Library on Arizona State University’s Tempe campus.
There, said Soto, the center’s director, is the huge wall mural that represents O’odham land recently painted by Indigenous artists Thomas “Breeze” Marcus (Tohono O’odham) and Dwayne Manuel (Akimel O’odham).
The art on those glass walls that enclose the space? It depicts mountains sacred to the O’odham tribe, Soto said, and establishes the tone of what Labriola is doing because it centers the land, the community and the arts in a library setting.
Along that wall, Soto pointed out, are thousands of books by Indigenous authors, multiple quiet spaces to study or hang out and snacks for hungry college students.
There’s also a multi-use area that can be used for book talks, workshops, even a live band, and includes a camera and speakers in the ceiling, a microphone and three monitors for Zoom calls or livestreaming events on social media.
Six thousand square feet in all, the culmination of Soto’s vision to transform the Labriola Center into an Indigenous knowledge zone for Native American students.
“Whether it’s President (Michael) Crow’s commitment to American Indian students or to show the history of Native people and where we are in 2024, library centers like this are needed to access Indigenous information,” Soto said.
“But it must be done in a way that’s going to help students understand where they fit in the solutions moving forward. It’s easy to gripe and point to the past, but this space has an opportunity to help our students see what is possible. With our staff members being all Indigenous, we can provide library services that support Indigenous research methodologies.
“This is a game changer since Native students don’t have to explain themselves to us since we can relate to where they are coming from.”