SEATTLE — Hillel Echo-Hawk wants to answer your questions, no matter what they might be — and she’s gotten some dumbfounding ones. She’s the force behind Birch Basket, a Seattle private-chef and catering company focused on indigenous-based, pre-colonization foods.
A chef and an educator, Echo-Hawk possesses the gift of patience. She speaks of the ignorance she encounters with a remarkable gentleness. “Even here in Seattle, people are like, ‘Native people are still alive?’ ” she says quietly. “Oh my God, yes.” She’s had people ask her, “So, you get a check every month, right?” Some tribes’ members do get per diem payments, she’ll explain, but not all, and not hers. She’s Pawnee, and, she says, “My tribe, we’re poor — real poor.” She’s been asked to confirm, multiple times, that she “just automatically gets into college for free?” “No. No,” she says, calmly. Even when impassioned, Echo-Hawk remains remarkably soft-spoken. (In the restaurant kitchens she’s worked in, “It’s a problem,” she notes. “They’re always like, ‘Hillel, we can’t hear you!’ “)
Her patience, understandably, reached its end when someone once said, “Oh, wow; so you’re sober now?!” “I almost punched that person in the face,” Echo-Hawk says, still softly.
“What is Native food?” is a more tenable inquiry. Still, it’s more complicated than most people think, the question itself a reductive one. “Well, there are 562 federally recognized tribes,” Echo-Hawk notes. “So you would have to ask one of those tribes what Native food is for them.” And even for her — one person — it’s complex. “I grew up in Alaska, and I’m Pawnee, which is traditionally from the Kansas/Nebraska area. And so my Native food goes two places.”