People & Culture

Skywalkers: the Kahnawá:ke Mohawks who built New York City

Episode 16

Just an 18-minute drive from downtown Montreal is Kahnawà:ke, a lively community with a vibrant culture, rich history and an interesting backstory 

  • Feb 25, 2025
Construction workers eat their lunches atop a steel beam 800 feet above ground, at the building site of the RCA Building in Rockefeller Center in New York, Sept. 29, 1932.
Expand Image

Listen & Subscribe

Advertisement

You’ve seen them: the black and white image of ironworkers eating lunch on a beam in the skies above New York City. Meet the Kahnawá:ke Mohawks who, over the past century, have helped build America’s most iconic skyline. In this episode, we learn about their storied home across the bridge from Montreal in Kahnawake Mohawk Territory, a place that could not be more different than the city they helped build.

Every July, the Kahnawake Mohawk Territory comes alive with an exciting annual event: the Echoes of a Proud Nation Powwow. For more than three decades, this powwow has been held to honour the Oka Crisis, a land dispute that shone light on Indigenous sovereignty and social justice. Today, this powwow is a lively, colourful weekend-long celebration drawing in thousands of tourists as the biggest influx of visitors Kahnawake sees all year.

But during a quieter time and you will be rewarded because there’s another story in Kahnawake — one that’s touched virtually every local family in one way or another.  And once you know that story, you’ll begin to find evidence of it all over town. It’s a story that has allowed the people of Kahnawake to reach far beyond the borders of their nation and shape worlds far, far away.

Special thanks to James Gray for our theme song music.

Advertisement

Help us tell Canada’s story

You can support Canadian Geographic in 3 ways:

Related Content

Travel

Blue space: a 1,900-kilometre feat on paddleboard

Dan Rubinstein, an increasingly obsessed paddleboarder embarks on a quest to become one with the water

  • 2064 words
  • 9 minutes

People & Culture

Lois tressées en ceintures : trois ceintures wampum Haudenosaunee à connaître

Le sous-chef Cayuga et gardien de la foi, Jock Hill, explique comment les ceintures wampum ont vu le jour – et les connaissances qu’elles contiennent.

  • 2397 words
  • 10 minutes

People & Culture

She who holds the canoe: a ceremonial pilgrimage along the Peacemaker’s Trail

Cayuga Elder Norma Jacobs follows the historic path of the Messenger of Peace — an exploration and discovery of the traditional territories, her culture and herself

  • 1822 words
  • 8 minutes
The view of Brooklyn Bridge from Manhattan (Photo: Suiseiseki/Wikimedia Commons)

Travel

Seth Kamil’s New York City

The Big Onion Walking Tours founder reveals his 10 favourite spots

  • 724 words
  • 3 minutes