The Eufaula Indian Community Center came alive Saturday as visitors gathered for an Indian Arts & Crafts event that offered more than displays of handmade work—it revealed a community expressing itself through both creativity and competition.
Guiding the day was organizer Jon Tiger, who moved easily between announcements, introductions, and moments of connection, helping shape the flow of the event from beginning to end.
Inside, tables were filled with beadwork, pottery, textiles, jewelry, paintings, and traditional crafts, each piece reflecting the hands and histories behind it. Across the room, another kind of energy took shape—chair volleyball, where teams competed with intensity and laughter, turning a beach ball and a row of chairs into a spirited contest.
At first glance, the two scenes seemed different. But as the day unfolded, they began to feel connected.
That connection came into focus through the words of Muscogee (Creek) Nation flute maker Nelson Harjo Sr., one of the few continuing a traditional craft that was once close to being lost. Holding one of his handmade flutes, Harjo spoke not just about the instrument, but about what it represents.
“For me, it’s a way to speak,” he said. “Sometimes you have something inside you that needs to come out.”
Harjo described his work as part of an ongoing search—a song in his heart that has not yet been finished.
“That’s what keeps me going,” he said. “I haven’t finished the song yet.”
In many ways, that idea echoed throughout the gathering. Each artist carried their own version of that unfinished song—something shaped by family, memory, and tradition, waiting to be expressed. Whether through beadwork, painting, textiles, or carving, the work on display reflected not just skill, but voice.
Seen together, the pieces suggested something larger: not a single story, but many voices moving in the same direction— each one distinct, yet connected.
That same spirit carried into the chair volleyball matches. Teams, representing tribal communities from across the region, many of them part of Muscogee tribal towns—traditional communities with deep cultural roots that continue to shape identity and connection across generations— played with focus and pride. Though seated and using a large beach ball, the competition was real. Players leaned, stretched, and reacted quickly, digging deep to keep volleys alive, drawing cheers and laughter from those gathered around.
What might appear at first as a slower version of the sport revealed itself as something more—an expression of resilience, camaraderie, and competitive spirit, especially among senior participants who brought both humor and determination to each point.
Throughout the day, visitors were encouraged to do more than observe. Conversations formed easily, as artists shared the stories behind their work and visitors responded with stories of their own.
In those moments, the distance between artist and audience seemed to disappear.
As the event came to a close, organizer Jon Tiger reflected simply on what had taken place.
“It was a day of fellowship,” he said. In many ways, that spirit could be felt and shared throughout the room—in the conversations, the laughter, the competition, and the quiet moments spent looking closely at a piece of art or listening to the story behind it.
It echoed, too, in the words of flute maker Nelson Harjo Sr., who spoke of a song not yet finished, something still being shaped and carried forward.
Across the gathering, that song took many forms. It could be seen in the careful work of an artist’s hands, heard in the rise and fall of a flute, and felt in the energy of players reaching for one more return in a chair volleyball match.
Not one voice, but many – each distinct, each carrying something personal, yet moving together.
And for those who were there, the invitation was simple: to see, to listen, and to feel—that the story is still being told— and still unfolding— through the art, through the people, and in the moments that gather them together… and carry them forward— together.