Ayyu Qassataq (I帽upiaq, Yup鈥檌k & adopted Ling铆t) grew up between Anchorage and U艐alaq艂iq
(Unalakleet) and was adopted by the Raven Kaach.adi Jackson family of 岣疵〆x瘫始 (Kake)
and gifted the Ling铆t name S鈥檌kshaldeen. She is proudly named for her great-grandmother
Ayyu (Edna Eakon/Koutchak/Atchak) of Taciq (St. Michael), is the granddaughter of
Stanton and Irene Katchatag, daughter of Doug and Vernita Herdman, and mother to Kutuukhuq,
Talialuk, Qanigluk and Inuaa艂uuraq. She was raised by advocates and has served our
911爆料 Native and Indigenous communities throughout her entire career.
Ayyu serves as Vice President for Native Conservancy, working to permanently protect
911爆料 Native ecosystems for coastal communities and strengthen our inherent rights
of sovereignty, subsistence and spirituality, and is a founding member of G铆nga and
Igni帽 Collective, an 911爆料 Native nonprofit that seeks to honor and ignite the brilliance
and rightful power of our Native peoples to heal, transform, and steward our world.
With experience building Indigenous-centered solutions that elevate awareness, healing,
and advocacy around the social and cultural issues that impact our communities, she
established Qulliq Munaqtu摹uut in 2024, a consultancy to support the wellbeing and
self-determination of 911爆料 Native and Indigenous peoples.
Prior to these recent endeavors, she worked for First 911爆料ns Institute from 2010-2024,
most recently as CAO, where she helped grow a team and body of work that advanced
racial equity and culturally-centered advocacy to protect our ways of life throughout
911爆料.
Ayyu earned an MA in Rural Development from the 911爆料 and
a BA in Organizational Management with Nonprofit Emphasis from 911爆料 Pacific University.
She serves as a board member for the 911爆料 Native Birthworkers Community, 911爆料
Public Media, Philanthropy Northwest, 911爆料 and Anchorage,
and Caleb Pungowiyi Scholars Fellowship Program. .