Tuesday, October 13, 2009

National Congress of American Indians is in Palm Springs in 09

This very Important event is happening here in our homelands...






66th Annual Convention and Trade Show
October 11-16, 2009

This is an election year for the National Congress of American Indians. We encourage all tribal leaders and members of NCAI to participate in the elections at the Annual Session in Palm Springs. NCAI is a great organization with a very important mission: to work in unity with Indian tribes for the protection of tribal sovereignty and treaty rights and to promote the welfare of Indian people. It is up to all of us to elect the members of the Executive Committee who will take on the responsibility to provide the leadership and ensure that this mission is accomplished.

http://www.ncai.org/Home.422.0.html

Meeting Location
Palm Springs Convention Center
277 N Avenida Caballeros
Palm Springs, CA 92262-6440
Sponsors

We would like to acknowledge our Annual Convention Sponsors












Saturday, October 10, 2009

Sweat Lodge Tragedy >>>---------> gone wrong!

2 die, 19 overcome at Arizona retreat sweat lodge





AP – This undated photo provided by the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office shows a 'sweatbox' structure at Angel …
By FELICIA FONSECA, Associated Press Writer – Fri Oct 9, 7:34 pm ET
PHOENIX – A sauna-like sweat lodge at an Arizona resort meant to provide spiritual cleansing became a crime scene Friday after two people died and others became ill during a two-hour session inside the crude structure.
In all, 21 of the 64 people crowded inside the sweat lodge Thursday evening were transported to hospitals. Four remained hospitalized Friday evening — one in critical condition and the others in fair condition.
Authorities haven't determined the cause of the deaths and illnesses; tests for carbon monoxide and other contaminants were negative. Yavapai County sheriff's spokesman Dwight D'Evelyn said authorities were checking into whether any of the attendees had pre-existing medical conditions and the possibility that some of them might have been fasting.
Among those sickened were a middle-aged man and a woman who were unconscious, according to a 911 call, and a third person who was found not breathing.
"It's not something you'd normally see at one of the resorts there, and it's unfortunate regardless of the cause," D'Evelyn said.
Investigators were working to determine whether criminal actions might have been a factor in the incident, D'Evelyn said.
The Angel Valley Retreat Center sits on 70 acres nestled in a scrub forest just outside Sedona, a resort town 115 miles north of Phoenix that draws many in the New Age spiritual movement.
Self-help expert and author James Arthur Ray rented the facility as part of his "Spiritual Warrior" retreat that began Oct. 3 and that promised to "absolutely change your life." The schedule had few details about what participants could expect, other than thrice-daily meals and group gatherings that started at 7 a.m. and ended 16 hours later.
The details came in a lengthy release of liability that acknowledges participants may suffer "physical, emotional, financial or other injuries" while hiking or swimming, or during a multi-day personal and spiritual quest in the wilderness without food or water or the sweat lodge.
No one was required to participate in the activities.
Some participants told detectives they paid up to $9,000 for the event. In a testimonial on the Angel Valley retreat's Web site, Ray said it "offers an ideal environment for my teachings."
Ray spokesman Howard Bragman confirmed that his client was holding an event at the retreat, as he has done in the past. Authorities said Ray was inside the sweat lodge Thursday evening and was interviewed.
"We express our deepest condolences to those who lost friends and family, but we pray for a speedy recovery for those who took ill," Bragman said. "At this point there are more questions than answers, so it would not be appropriate to comment further."
Ray's company, James Ray International, is based in Carlsbad, Calif.
Ray's most recent posting on his Twitter account said: "Still in Spiritual Warrior ... for anything new to live something first must die. What needs to die in you so that new life can emerge?"
The posting and two others were deleted Friday afternoon.
A woman who answered the phone at the Angel Valley resort Friday said its founders, Michael and Amayra Hamilton, would have no comment. A call to the Hamiltons' home went unanswered.



The Angel Valley Spiritual Retreat Center, built on former ranch property in the high-desert and red-rock country of northern Arizona, bills itself as a natural environment for self discovery and healing through a holistic approach aimed at balancing the mind, emotions, body and spirit.
The property includes American Indian structures such as teepees, guest houses and outdoor labyrinths made of stones.
Sweat lodges, like that held on the final day of the Angel Valley retreat, are commonly used by American Indian tribes to cleanse the body and prepare for hunts, ceremonies and other events. The structure used Thursday was crudely built and covered with tarps and blankets.
Stones are heated up outside a lodge, brought inside and placed in a pail-sized hole. The door is closed, and water is poured on the stones, producing heat aimed at releasing toxins in the body.
The ritual is helpful in restoring balance and changing people's attitudes and self-image, said Joseph Bruchac, author of "The Native American Sweat Lodge: History and Legends."
American Indian sweat lodges typically hold a maximum of 12 people.
People have died in sweat lodges in the past. They were either sick tribal elders who voluntarily stayed until they died or people who had heart conditions and were in poor health.
"The sweat lodge needs to be respected," Bruchac said. "When you imitate someone's tradition and you don't know what you are doing, there's a danger of doing something very wrong."
___
Associated Press Writer Jacques Billeaud also contributed to this report.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Yosemite basket maker a living legend....On CNN

By John Torigoe
@ CNN http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/07/aif.yosemite.park.ranger/index.html#cnnSTCText





YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, California (CNN) -- Her hands are like the grand and timeless Yosemite Valley where she has lived the better part of 60 years. They are strong and steady, with the feel of permanence like the smooth granite faces of El Capitan and Half Dome.


Yosemite ranger Julia Parker is a basket weaver and cultural demonstrator.
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Her agile fingers still weave willow branches into masterful baskets. They are traditional baskets that are displayed around the world and have garnered her attention from adoring fans.

She considers the Earth her lifeblood. She is a living metaphor for a hard-earned life spent caring for the land.

Julia Parker, 80, is Native American. Born in Northern California, she is a mix of Coastal Miwok and Kashia Pomo tribes. "I do have an Indian name that was given to me. I'm called Hoo Wee Na, that means 'person of peace.'"

She is a park ranger with Yosemite National Park. She works as Native American cultural demonstrator at the Yosemite Museum. There are many 20-and 30-year employees at Yosemite, but Julia is the oldest and longest-tenured park employee with over 40 years.

"Julia interprets Native American culture to our visitors,"Yosemite National Park spokesman Scott Gediman says. "She shows visitors how baskets were woven, toys or brushes were made and acorns collected from native black oak trees, ground up using a metate and made into mush."

"Julia is truly a national treasure," he adds. "She's been honored by universities, she has baskets all over the country, she's consulted with museums." Watch Parker at work »

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In 1983, Parker presented Queen Elizabeth II a basket she'd worked on for a year. Her work is displayed in museums like the Smithsonian.

Her parents died when she was 12, leaving five children orphans. Since she was the oldest, Parker tried to keep all of the kids together. They went to an Indian boarding school in Carson City, Nevada.

When she turned 17, Parker took a job laundering clothes for the Yosemite Park and Curry Company. She lived in the Indian Village and married Ralph Parker, a Mono Lake Piute. His tribe's Yosemite roots date back nine generations. His mother, Lucy Telles, was a renowned basket maker and, along with the other Yosemite women, passed down their basketry skills to Parker.

Parker's daughter Lucy is learning basketry from her mother.

"She's a living legend," Lucy Parker says. "She's known throughout the world. People will come to Yosemite to visit her here."

Lucy Parker is accomplished in her own basketry and is determined to keep the Yosemite traditions alive.

"My mom Julia has guided me through the heart of basket making. She's taught me to give thanks, give blessings."

Now four generations of Parker women are making baskets. There's Lucy's daughter, Ursula, and Ursula's daughter, Naomi. Its legacy and artistry seem secure.



Julia Parker is sitting in the shade of the willows. She has stripped the stalks of their small leaves and begins fastening a base to a quick basket. Her seasoned hands and sharp eyes thread willow stalks as another basket takes form. She hums a tribal song. Its words are sacred and not for outsiders' ears. The sheer walls of Yosemite Valley frame a living legend.

"I learned from my elders. They told me, 'Julia, you take from the Earth with a please and give back with a thank you."

Teri Greeves, Beadwork I saw on Crafts in America

Teri Greeves

Teri Greeves (b. 1970) is a beadwork artist who lives in Santa Fe, NM. She is enrolled in the Kiowa Indian Tribe of Oklahoma.

Teri follows and updates the Kiowa tradition of beadwork, to tell the story of the American Indian, both contemporary and historical. Her works include beaded books, jewelry, and even high top sneakers! Her work is found in such public collections as the Heard Museum in Phoenix, the Museum of Arts and Design, the Brooklyn Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the National Museum of the American Indian, the Museum of Fine Arts of Santa Fe, and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, among others.






Teri Greeves, We Gave Two Horses for our Son: Beaded Tennis Shoes, 1999, Courtesy of the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Craig Smith photography

Link >>>>------> http://www.craftinamerica.org/artists_fiber/story_401.php?PHPSESSID=2a0960f95e183d22eaa656179ae97764

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Crowd braves dreary weather to bless site of mound in Oxford



by Dan Whisenhunt
Staff WriterAug 31, 2009 | 2893 views | 25 | 31 | |

Protesters and supporters gathered Sunday to bless an American Indian mound in Oxford. Approximately 80 people attended the event despite foul weather. Photo: Trent Penny/The Anniston Star
OXFORD — The steady rain Sunday afternoon watered down a planned re-blessing of a stone mound behind the Oxford Exchange.

The mound, believed to be 1,000 years old and of American Indian construction, has been the subject of controversy since a contractor hired by the city's Commercial Development Authority began tearing away the hill underneath it. The initial plan was to use it as fill dirt for a Sam's Club. Oxford Mayor Leon Smith now says the contractor is not touching the mound. A private land owner says the contractor is getting dirt from him.

Sunday's event got off to a bumpy start. The American Indians and other people who showed up for the ceremony gathered behind the Home Depot and began to set up tents to shelter a drum. Employees at the Home Depot came and told them they could not set up tents on the store's property.

The group relocated a few feet over to a bridge connecting the shopping center to the hill, the tents surrounded by a large puddle of water. About 80 people came, according to event organizer Mark Davis, less than the 150 to 300 people that were expected. Several people drove up to the ceremony and watched from their cars. Among the apparent no-shows was Lou White Eagle, a Cheyenne priest and elder, invited to lead the ceremony.

Nearby, Oxford Police Chief Bill Partridge watched the events from a white car. He said he was there to make sure no one got hurt.

Davis, a Weaver resident who says he is of Cherokee and Tuscarora descent, originally planned to go on top of the mound to re-consecrate it. He later changed his plans after he was advised against it by the police department. There was also a plan to visit nearby Davis Farm, believed to be associated with the mound, but that was scrapped as well.

While the group waited for White Eagle, they played the drum, sang and burned white sage. Ruth Davis, Mark's wife, passed out small "prayer ties" with tiny bags of tobacco. The people who attended tied them to a gate separating them from the hill they'd come to bless.

"It's so our ancestors know we're here and praying for them," Ruth Davis said. "We're basically apologizing for the destruction of the site."

Area Presbyterian minister Monty Clendenin said a prayer and several people spoke in White Eagle's absence. Harry Holstein, Jacksonville State University professor of archeology and anthropology, fielded several questions about the site from the people gathered around the tents.

"It's been a dreary day but I think it made a statement," Holstein said of the event.

Mark Davis said White Eagle's absence was "somewhat of a setback," because he has expertise in this type of ceremony. He hopes the city will allow him to visit the hill later on and perform the ceremony. Clendenin felt like it was a solid turnout under the circumstances.

"This is probably a larger turnout than we've had, even (with) inclement weather," Clendenin said.
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Link >>>>---------> http://annistonstar.com/bookmark/3502782/article-

Sunday, October 4, 2009

CSU San Bernadino Native Day 1 2009

Wrightwood fire...

My sacred Place is going up in Flames...Wrightwood fire! sad , Sad day today sis, I wish for rain to just rain now for help...All the animals. the trees that are hundreds of years old, some are thousands years old Mt,Baden-Powel :( i'm prayin for rain!..I wanna go up there..... I wanna help... the dam roads are blocked!..4000 acres burned so far.... hopefully it will stop! three structures burned in the canyon, but has not reached the town...This town is just near of the Power place i go to , to sing to the wilderness..and spirits that have guided me for good works... :(..I weep for my friends the Trees, The Animals.. the mountain.... :(..i would do anything to be right there>>>-----> some of those old trees i know better than some two leggeds. It is a sacred place for me...My Deepest THANKS TO U WHO UNDERSTAND WHAT this all means, it's not just another crying NDN thing. :( it's where Knowledge comes from....for some of us.

Pow Wows for California in October 2009


See other powwows for California for Octoberhttp://www.powwows.com/calendar/displaymonth.php?mode=search&srchMonth=October&srchYear=2009&srchLocation=CA&x=11&y=4

Oct. 2, 3 & 4 powwow in Lucerne Valley
Big Time Gathering and Traditional Pow-Wow
Lucerne Valleys 1st Big Time Gathering and Traditional Pow-Wow. Free to the Public. Authentic Crafts, Food, Dancers and Drums welcome. Held at Midway Park in Lucerne Valley, CA. Corner of Rabbit Springs Rd and Midway Rd.
Gilbert Reyes 951 817-1807 or Ophelia Porter 760 885-5924
http://www.powwows.com/calendar/event-details.php?eventid=8088

October 3, 2009 Saturday
Victor Valley College Pow-wow, Victorville
1 day pow-wow some contest dancing.
11am to 10pm
Host Northern Bear Springs
Nice grassy soccer field
http://www.vvc.edu/student_clubs/native_american_student_association/


Oct. 9, 10 & 11
San Manuel Casino Powwow at Cal State San Bernardino
OVER $250,000 in Contest Prizes
6 Winners from each men's category
Grass, Chicken, Traditional, Contemp Traditional, Northern Fancy , Southern Fancy, Straight.
6 Winners from each womens category
Northern Cloth, Northern Buckskin,Jingle ,Southern Cloth, Southern Buckskin, Fancy Shawl,
Other contests for teens and juniors, and tiny tots.
Sweet Heart Dance
1st $3,000 2nd $2,500. 3rd 2,000, 4th $1,500, 5th $1,000 6th $1,000.
( San Manuel Tribal members will Judge this, not head judges)
Over $150,000 in Drum Prize money
Grand entry 10/09/2009 at 6pm
http://www.sanmanuel-nsn.gov/culture_powow.php

October 16, 17 & 18 Joshua Tree
Joshua Tree 1st Annual Exhibition Pow Wow
& Native American Cultural Days
Sportsman's Park, 6225 Sunburst Ave., Joshua Tree, CA 92252 (left at 3rd traffic light in Joshua Tree)
Open to the public
Free Admission
Friday & Saturday 10:00 AM -- 10:00 PM, Sunday 10 - 7 PM
For Vendor and More Information contact:
Joyce Running Deer (760)408-3944
MEET Native American Celebrities
RUNNING DEER - SAGINAW GRANT - STEVE REEVIS AND OTHERS TO BE ANNOUNCED
MC: Saginaw Grant
Arena Director: Vic Chavez
Head Gourd Dancer: Richard DeCrane
Headman: Dave Patterson
Headwoman: Marcie Patterson
Host Northern Drum: Blue Star
Host Southern Drum: John Begay Singers
All proceeds go to the Joshua Tree No Kill Animal Shelter and Horse Rescue

Joyce and Running Deer who are putting on this powwow coordinated the Desert Hot Springs Powwow for years.There are still vendor spaces available.