BELLINGHAM, Wash. — A Lummi Nation totem pole is making a cross-country journey next month.

The totem pole carved from a 400-year-old red cedar will journey to Washington, D.C., evoking an urgent call to protect sacred lands and waters of Indigenous people.

The Seattle Times reports the journey, called the Red Road to DC, will culminate in early June in Washington, D.C.

The expedition will make stops at Nez Perce traditional lands; Bears Ears National Monument in Utah; the Grand Canyon; Chaco Canyon, New Mexico; the Black Hills of South Dakota; and the Missouri River, at the crossing of the Dakota Access Pipeline, where thousands protested its construction near Native lands.

This fall, the pole will be featured at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.

A special exhibition was developed by The Natural History Museum and House of Tears Carvers at the Lummi Nation, which is gifting the pole to the Biden administration.

Head carver and Lummi tribal member Jewell Praying Wolf James said he and a team ranging in age from 4 to 70 carved the pole beginning this winter.

The pole was carved one figure at a time and includes Chinook salmon, a wolf, a bear, an eagle and even a child in jail — a reference to children presently incarcerated at the U.S.-Mexico border.