Alaqua never dreamed of being famous. She grew up on the Menominee (muh-NAH-muh-nee) Indian Reservation with her three siblings. (A reservation is an area of land that has been set aside as a place for Indigenous Americans to live.) The kids spent their days swimming, boating, and running around in the woods. Alaqua enjoyed playing many kinds of sports. “We were always outside,” she recalls.
On the reservation, Alaqua was surrounded by people—including her aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents—who shared her Menominee culture. And her family always came together to support her. They learned about deafness, and they studied ASL, or American Sign Language.
But because she was the only deaf student in her middle school, life could still be lonely for Alaqua. People had to translate things into ASL for her, and they didn’t always do it very skillfully. “I was very shy and isolated as a kid,” she remembers.
And Alaqua definitely didn’t see many people who looked like her on television. Most of the Indigenous characters she saw were played by non-Indigenous actors, and there weren’t many deaf or disabled actors either.
“Growing up, I felt kind of low-hearted,” she recalls. “I didn’t see my culture or my disabilities represented on-screen.”