Saturday, October 1, 2016

Los Angeles California joins fight against Dakota protest pipeline

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Monday, July 11, 2016

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Monday, July 4, 2016

protection of ceremonies the quiet revolution of the 7th generation

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tiospaye

Apr 27, 2003 - Looking Horse said the directives refer to all the Plains tribes, the I-ni-pi .... and my father, Stanley Looking Horse, decided to allow other native nations to .... We look at the white people now, you can have them at a ceremony http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html Anyone may dance the sun dance if he will do as the Oglalas do," - Chief American Horse (Sept. 14, 1896) https://books.google.at/books?id=PYwV956P_UgC&pg=PA181&lpg=PA181&dq=Anyone+may+dance+the+sun+dance+if+he+will+do+as+the+Oglalas+do,%22+-+Chief+American+Horse+(Sept.+14,+1896)&source=bl&ots=1KvFWh4L9v&sig=f0MhhTtp_6lw_hFFOcR5I_R2KxI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwih64Ln7NnNAhUDkiwKHQ_NBWoQ6AEIJDAB#v=onepage&q=Anyone%20may%20dance%20the%20sun%20dance%20if%20he%20will%20do%20as%20the%20Oglalas%20do%2C%22%20-%20Chief%20American%20Horse%20(Sept.%2014%2C%201896)&f=false http://dragonflydezignz.50megs.com/wahohwahpe/ban16.html These respected elders who gave our Sun Dance its directions are great-grandsons of Afraid Of Bear and Sword, themselves brothers a hundred years ago. The two ancestors had been leaders in the buffalo-hunting days of the Oglalas, and their knowledge, thoughts, and commentary are available to anyone in the book Lakota Belief and Ritual, University of Nebraska Press, 1980. (Anyone wondering about primary source material should consult these narratives collected at the turn of the 20th Century by Dr. James Walker of the Pine Ridge Agency.) These two knowledgeable Oglala elders of the Afraid Of Bear tisopaye, along with others in their circle of families, requested that our Sun Dance respect all life, all colors of the human being, as long as respect for life and culture prevailed and as long as the intent of the heart of the prayer was good. We are only continuing the altar of prayer they have brought forward from time immemorial. The historical autonomy of tiospayes, reflected in the fact that headmen of bands signed the treaties, applies to other facets of Lakota life such as the spiritual business at issue here. All tiospaye bloodlines own the Lakota cultural property rights, along with the power to act on them for the survival and prosperity of their relatives. In this way, respect is most assured. Our actual dance overseers Vern and Joe American Horse are grandsons of Chief American Horse, an Oglala Shirtwearer installed in 1865, who was a signer of the 1868 Treaty at the end of the war with the United States that he helped lead. These elders, whom we hold in the utmost respect, having directed our dance, have never expressed any concern over the non-native dancers or whites in attendance. In fact, they have consistently endorsed the approach of respect for "all our relations," again, as long as respect for origin and place is provided and as long as it is understood that the home of these prayers resides in the tiospaye line. Based as it is on race, we feel the Pipe Proclamation contains an unfortunate racial foundation, and we can not, in the spirit of these ancient prayers, endorse a racist approach. It appears to be an attempt at ethnic cleansing of the ways, and in effect, says, "This is just for us." Not only does this approach run counter to the cultural value of generosity for which the people are known, it presents other complications regarding Hunka relatives, and non-Indian spouses married into the tribe. Based on the teachings we are following from our elders, we have difficulty thus endorsing the potential inhumanity and the heartbreak of exclusivity inherent in the idea behind the proclamation. Having put our minds together, we respectfully submit that the purpose and extent of our prayers can not always be limited by the color of skin nor national origin. The important thing, we find, is intent and the strength of commitment and the history of relations with each and every individual family that our elders host in our annual Sun Dance in the Black Hills. This is the paramount importance to us. Rather than deny or separate our peoples from the range of relatives who pray with us, we say that our prayers and our people are best served by the extension of reverence and goodwill to the Four Directions. We see death and destruction going on in the world along ethnic and religious lines. It is a horrible negative energy based upon fear and paranoia, and seems to be gaining ground everywhere. One could call it worldwide religious extremism whose reactionary conservatism has also affected Native peoples. Exploitations may have occurred and may be occurring, but over-reaction to abuse won't solve the problem. We have to react to abuse specific to the wrongdoer instead of banishing the rest of humanity for the disrespectful actions of a few. It is one thing to strive to protect our ceremonies from abuse and expropriation; it is another thing to dictate to long-established Lakota tiospayes how they must run their sacred ceremonies and to attempt to tell our respected elders that the deepest intent of prayers long held in their hearts is somehow wrong and must be discarded. The issues in the Looking Horse Proclamation have to do with Hunka - "the making of relatives" - and these are approaches that were proclaimed already nearly one hundred years ago, as far as we are concerned. In a 1904 narrative titled "Hunka and the White Man," Afraid Of Bear said, "I can perform the ceremony for anyone who is chosen in the right way. I can do it for a white man." His younger brother Sword said in the same year, "White men were not invited unless they were to be made Hunka. A few white men have been made Hunka." My wife is a direct descendent of Sword and Afraid Of Bear, and both she and I naturally follow their words over recent conclusions on the same subjects 100 years later. When I came back to Pine Ridge for good in the spring of 1975, I became a participant in the Afraid Of Bear Inipi, an authentic tiospaye altar. I followed what I saw and copied things as I witnessed them being done. After sundancing for 23 straight years (four of them at Green Grass), Larue Afraid Of Bear named me to lead a Sun Dance he and his brothers wanted to establish at the Wild Horse Sanctuary in the Black Hills, a place of ceremony for the past 10,000 years. We are approaching our sixth year there (my 28th altogether), on private land. Well versed with the protocols attendant to ceremonial abuse and other issues concerning the protection of what we hold sacred, we have been satisfied that our ceremony is proper. From time immemorial, the sacred pipe has acted to bring stability to the lives of individuals and families of the people. It has been so for me and my relatives. To the extent we have been successful for 30 years, I attribute to our adherence to this sacred pipe religion and by doing things with a good heart. We are all related, and certainly some of us are more related than others. Let us not deny our relatives, our relationships, our inter-relatedness, or the great need of the world around us to understand and relate to all the elements of our universe. To those who believe Native people should hold their ways only to themselves, our elders say, "they should know the spirit of The People is in the converging flow of the river." Mitakuye Oyasin! Tom Kanatekeniate Cook is Wolf Clan Mohawk from Akwesasne married on Pine Ridge. He is Field Coordinator for Running Strong for American Indian Youth, a member of the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs, President of the High Plains Community Development Corporation, and President of the Chadron Native American Center. He and his wife Loretta (Afraid Of Bear), of Slim Buttes community, reside in Chadron, Neb., and are Sun Dance leaders and co-sponsors of the American Horse/Afraid Of Bear Sun Dance in the Black Hills. http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html

protocols sacred instructions medicine turtle

http://medicineturtlecherokee.jimdo.com/ http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html Chief Arvol Looking Horse speaks about the statement of protecting our ceremonies henry red cloud is the family with Chief Arvol Looking Horse medicine turtle and henry red cloud written a book on the protecting our ceremonies the quiet revolution of the 7th generation https://www.amazon.com/quiet-revolution-7th-generation-stille/dp/069267716X I stated that I can not dictate to the Spiritual Leaders who they allow to attend and support ceremonies, who they feel they need to doctor or where they travel. This was to only remind that the white brothers and sisters, they can still attend and pray with us at a ceremony, if the Spiritual Leader allows this. Again it is the hoc'oka, the center, where our Oyate stand, that needs to be protected. This is also a reminder even with our own people, they need to prepare their life to stand in that alter and learn these protocols of a drug and alcohol free life. http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html We are the only Indigenous Nation in the world that has opened our sacred ceremonials, of the alter, out to the public. Now we are seeing the abuse and violations. Anyone can read a book or get close to our ceremonial people, then go out and practice our ways without proper protocols. Anyone may dance the sun dance if he will do as the Oglalas do," - Chief American Horse (Sept. 14, 1896) In the early 70s, Chief Fools Crow and my father, Stanley Looking Horse, decided to allow other native nations to participate in these rites. Their reasons were based on the fact that most nations have lost their ways through assimilation or lack of teachers to teach their indigenous ways," Looking Horse said. http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html

protocols way of the Lakota

I stated that I can not dictate to the Spiritual Leaders who they allow to attend and support ceremonies, who they feel they need to doctor or where they travel. This was to only remind that the white brothers and sisters, they can still attend and pray with us at a ceremony, http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html protocols way of the Lakota is mentioned in the quiet revolution of the 7th generation https://www.amazon.com/quiet-revolution-7th-generation-stille/dp/069267716X

Chief Arvol Looking Horse, 19th Generation Keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe

I stated that I can not dictate to the Spiritual Leaders who they allow to attend and support ceremonies, who they feel they need to doctor or where they travel. This was to only remind that the white brothers and sisters, they can still attend and pray with us at a ceremony if the Spiritual Leader allows this. Again it is the hoc'oka, the center, where our Oyate stand, that needs to be protected. This is also a reminder even with our own people, they need to prepare their life to stand in that alter and learn these protocols http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html Chief Arvol Looking Horse, 19th Generation Keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe I stated that I can not dictate to the Spiritual Leaders who they allow to attend and support ceremonies, who they feel they need to doctor or where they travel. This was to only remind that the white brothers and sisters, they can still attend and pray with us at a ceremony, medicine turtle was adopted by a Spiritual Leader of the Lakota Chief Arvol Looking Horse is related to henry red cloud medicine turtle and henry red cloud wrote a book together for the protection of the Lakota ceremonies https://www.amazon.com/quiet-revolution-7th-generation-stille/dp/069267716X the quiet revolution of the 7th generation

protection of ceremonies medicine turtle

Stanley Looking Horse the father of Arvol Looking Horse Stanley Looking Horse allowed and agree that other native nations like Cherokee could carry the way of the Lakota medicine turtle himself is Cherokee born into Cherokee lifeways In the early 70s, Chief Fools Crow and my father, Stanley Looking Horse, decided to allow other native nations to participate in these rites. Their reasons were based on the fact that most nations have lost their ways through assimilation or lack of teachers to teach their indigenous ways," Looking Horse said. http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html Chief Fools Crow was very open to allowing people the rights to learn the Lakota ways. I cannot undo their decision out of respect for our chief and elder. It has also been in our history that our ancestors have respectfully shared our ceremonies with other indigenous nations." "There was an understanding of the sincere spiritual energy and the traditional values passed down through our bloodlines. All the values of compassion, love, honor, respect and truth are molded into the spiritual life they are creating. I hope that one day the future generations will again pick up this important protocol." protection of ceremonies protection of ceremonies medicine turtle and henry red cloud wrote a book for the protection of ceremonies it the first book of it kind the quiet revolution of the 7th generation https://www.amazon.com/quiet-revolution-7th-generation-stille/dp/069267716X Anyone may dance the sun dance if he will do as the Oglalas do," - Chief American Horse (Sept. 14, 1896) Chief American Horse gave the statement that all may dance the sun dance if they do it the way of the Oglala These two knowledgeable Oglala elders of the Afraid Of Bear tisopaye, along with others in their circle of families, requested that our Sun Dance respect all life, all colors of the human being, as long as respect for life and culture prevailed and as long as the intent of the heart of the prayer was good. We are only continuing the altar of prayer they have brought forward from time immemorial. http://saponitown.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-643.html

Seven Sacred Rites the quiet revolution of the 7th generation

http://medicineturtlecherokee.jimdo.com/ My position is only for the Seven Sacred Rites. I cannot dictate to our Medicine People who they allow to attend and support these Rites, in reference to non-Native People. I cannot dictate who they choose to doctor in their ceremonies. I cannot dictate where they travel to the doctor. https://www.amazon.com/quiet-revolution-7th-generation-stille/dp/069267716X