Category Archives: Events

Escuelita Zapatista and Tar Sands Resistance

freedom_geo_calendar.psdFREEDOM  IN  OUR  CALENDARS  AND GEOGRAPHIES

ESCUELITA ZAPATISTA AND TAR SANDS RESISTANCE – REFLECTIONS FROM A SUMMER OF BUILDING AUTONOMY AND SOVEREIGNTY
Saturday, 12/21/13, 6p-8p @ Project Reach, 39 Eldridge between Canal & Hester in Chinatown
with La Unión, Native Resistance Network
All welcome, please invite all! $5-$35+ No one turned away for lack of funds
For childcare & interpretation, please email to info[at]nativeresistancenetwork.com

This summer, at the invitation of the autonomous zapatista caracoles lands in rebellion, a group of Sunset Parkers traveled to Chiapas, Mexico to join 1000+ students from around the world to participate in the zapatista’s first Escuelita Zapatista, La Libertad Según Los y Las Zapatistas (The Little Zapatista SchoolFreedom According to the Zapatistas). The escuelita was a profound experience and opportunity to learn about how the zapatistas have built, incorporated and imagined their autonomy into daily life and their Good Government. In this reflection, we will share our own journey, fotos, stories, art, short video clips, sound, as well as our experiences with the zapatistas to explore possibilities for autonomy in our own ‘calendars and geographies’ here.

Additionally, we will present on the resistance to tar sands development by indigenous and settler activists across Canada. This talk will focus on tar sands resistance and its expression of Indigenous sovereignty through land defense, blockading, and healing walks. Turtle, an NYC/NJ area activist and student, has spent the past two summers living in Alberta, participating in a growing anti-tar sands movement. This past summer, they travelled to the autonomous Unist’ot’en Action Camp in British Columbia ((http//unistotencamp.com/); to Fort McMurray, for grassroots healing walks (http//www.healingwalk.org/); and canoed down the Athabasca River to the small First Nations community of Fort Chipewyan. The latter which is a community heavily impacted by upstream tar sands mining. Turtle will share videos, photos, and memories of time spent and friendships made, learning about the various forms of resistance to tar sands development.

ESCUELITA ZAPATISTA Y TAR SANDS RESISTANCIAREFLEXIONES SOBRE CONSTRUIR AUTONOMIA Y SOBERANIA
Este verano, por invitación de los caracoles autónomos zapatistas, un grupo de vecinos de Sunset Park viajamos a Chiapas y participamos en la 1a Escuelita Zapatita, La Libertad según los y las zapatistas. Ven a compartir lo profundo de esta experiencia y a explorar con nosotr@s las posibilidades para crecer en autonomía en nuestros propios calendarios y geografías. Traemos fotos, videos, audios, historias y nuestras experiencias vividas. Trae las tuyas!

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Uptown location coming soon hopefully!
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NEW HORIZONS FOR THE OLD LEFT – WHAT THE ZAPATISTAS TEACH CHILDREN OF LEFTIES
Sunday, 12/29/13, 1p-4p @ The Commons
388 Atlantic Ave, Brooklyn
Donations will be asked
For childcare & interpretation, please contactour.autonomies<at>gmail<dot>com or
(917) 525-3518

Join us, three children of Lefties, in reflecting about our time with the zapatistas this summer at the escuelita. In this workshop, we’ll explore perceptions that the Left and the non-Left have of one another and share strategiesas the non-Left, how do we navigate the Left? And to the Left, how do you not be irrelevant or alienating to others? We draw on a mix of being raised by Maoists and other Leftists, our experiences with the zapatistas, and our experiences organizing and studying. Be prepared to participate and donate funds as you will.

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Wednesday, 1/1/14, Time & Locations TBA
Co-sponsored by Bluestockings
¡Celebrate! 20 years of zapatista uprising. Movies, pictures, escuelita report-back, fun!

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For more info and updates, visit http//bit.ly/ourautonomies

Contact us (our.autonomies<at>gmail<dot>com, 917-525-3518) if you can’t make it and you want us to come to your neighborhood, church, state, crew, city, school–near or far–to share freedom in our calendars and geographies!

Download the flyer in English.

Download the flyer in Spanish.

Landing in New York City

Two Row Wampum Symbolic Enactment
HISTORIC JOURNEY TO HONOR NATIVE TREATIES AND PROTECT THE EARTH LANDING IN NEW YORK CITY ON AUGUST 9th

Over 200 Native and Non-Native Peoples
Paddle Down Hudson River Together

August 7, 2013- New York, NY— On Friday, August 9 at 10 am over 100 canoe and kayak paddlers will land at Pier 96 (57th St.) on the Hudson River, completing a 218 mile journey from the Onondaga Nation, located south of Syracuse, NY.  The Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign is coming to NYC to honor and renew the 400-year-old first treaty between the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) and the Dutch.  Following a welcome from local dignitaries and Dutch Consul General Rob de Vos at Pier 96, a march will head to the United Nations for the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples.  Events will occur over the last few days of the journey in Piermont, NY; Yonkers, NY; Inwood Hill Park, Pier 96, the United Nations, and near the World Financial Center in NYC.

—-CONTACT LINDSAY SPEER 315-383-7210 TO ARRANGE PASSAGE ON THE BOAT LAUNCH 5 FOR ON-THE-WATER FOOTAGE—

Near Albany, NY on July 28th Edwards and the fifteen paddlers from the Onondaga Nation were joined by approximately 200 other paddlers from 20 different Native nations, 14 states, Canada, and the Netherlands.  Over 500 Native and Non-Native people have participated over the course of the 13 day trip, traveling down the Hudson River in two rows to bring to life the imagery of coexistence as explained by the Two Row Wampum.  This agreement formed the basis of all diplomacy between the Haudenosaunee and the Dutch, French, English, the United States and Canada, and is still in effect to this day.

“Each line of the wampum belt represents each of our laws, governments, languages, cultures, our ways of life,” Jake Edwards of the Onondaga Nation Council of Chiefs explains. “It is agreed that we will travel together, side by each, on the river of life… linked by peace, friendship, forever.  We will not try to steer each others’ vessels.”

“The Two Row is the oldest and is the grandfather of all subsequent treaties,” said Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper of the Onondaga Nation’s Turtle Clan who has represented the Haudenosaunee in world councils at the United Nations and elsewhere. “The words ‘as long as the sun shines, as long as the waters flow downhill, and as long as the grass grows green’ can be found in many treaties after the 1613 treaty,” Lyons said. “It set a relationship of equity and peace. This campaign is to remind people of the importance of the agreements.”

“This trip together helps to renew the ties of peace and friendship between our peoples,” noted Jeanne Shenandoah of the Onondaga Nation.  “It is an opportunity to learn from one another.”

On August 10th a day-long festival is planned in the outdoor plaza between Brookfield, World Financial Center and the North Cove Marina. The festival is organized by the American Indian Community House and will include many world renowned performers including Comedian Charlie Hill (Oneida, Mohawk, Cree) who will act as Master of Ceremonies. Performances by the Akwesasne Women Singers, Sherri Waterman & The Haudenosaunee Singers and Dancers, SilverCloud Singers (intertribal), Josephine Tarrant (Kuna/Rappahannock/Hopi/Ho-Chunk). Speakers include Tadodaho Sid Hill, Chief Oren Lyons, Chief Jake Edwards.

“Americans have largely forgotten the importance of treaties, even though Article 6 of the U.S. Constitution states that treaties are the supreme law of the land,” explains Andy Mager, the Project Coordinator for the campaign and a member of Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation.  “In the 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua, George Washington promised protection for Haudenosaunee territories.  Understanding and honoring the Two Row Wampum can improve relations between our peoples and remind us of our responsibilities to the Earth which we all share.  We need this more than ever.”

Protection for the environment is at the heart of this campaign.  The Haudenosaunee work closely with their neighbors to protect the environment, as evidenced by their work to address Superfund sites at Onondaga Lake and along the St. Lawrence River, and the strong stance they have taken against hydrofracking, the extreme energy method of extracting methane gas from shale.  As paddlers passed the Indian Point nuclear facility south of Peekskill, NY they carried signs calling for its closure.  A similar increasingly urgent message of peace and healing for all living beings is being made by Indigenous peoples across North America, including the Dakota Unity Riders from Manitoba, Canada, who have joined the paddlers on horseback at various events.      “An important aspect of this agreement was that we live in the river of life and we all need to take care of it,” Freida Jacques, Clanmother of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation reminds us.  “The environment was a part of this agreement.” As climate change inflicts severe flooding and storms, drought and melting ice caps, the lessons of the Two Row Wampum agreement are particularly timely.

“Our ancestors made this great agreement on our behalf 400 years ago,” notes Hickory Edwards, the lead paddler for the Onondaga Nation.  “Now is the time to think about people living in the next 400 years.”

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August 8:  

10 AM LAUNCH at Piermont Pier

1:30 PM WELCOMING at Kennedy Marina – Deputy Mayor Sue Geary; Chuck Lenit, City Council President; Judith Schwartzstein from Sarah Lawrence College; Yvette Hartsfield, City of Yonkers Parks Commissioner; Tony Moonhawk, Marcey WindintheTrees, Ramapough Lenape;

5:00 PM LANDING at Inwood Hill Park, near La Marina.

6:30 PM Poetry and Spoken Word: Two Rows and More at Inwood Hill Park near La Marina

Welcoming by Shorakapok Earth Keepers and Harlem Samba band Special guest readers include Janet Rogers (Mohawk)*, Daygot Leeyos (Oneida) and Suzan Harjo (Cheyenne & Hodulgee Muscogee). There will also be an opportunity for open mic time.

August 9:      

6:30 AM LAUNCH from Inwood Hill Park near La Marina

10 AM LANDING at Pier 96 on W. 57th Street. The paddlers will be welcomed by local dignitaries, the Dutch Counsel General Mr. Rob de Vos and a Thanksgiving Address by Tadodaho Sid Hill of the Haudenosaunee.

11:30 AM supporters are welcome to join the paddlers as they walk across Manhattan on W. 59th street to Columbus Circle, down Broadway, across E. 50th street and down E. 2nd street to Dag Hammarskjold Plaza.  The permitted march is a display of solidarity with the rights of indigenous peoples all over the world and the responsibility of all peoples to the environment.  At Dag Hammarskjold Plaza the walkers will be greeted by the Chair of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, Mr. Paul Kanyinke Sena.

3:00 – 6:00 PM Special event in commemoration of the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples at UN Headquarters, Conference Room 2 (a Two Row campaign delegation of approximately 100 people will be in attendance). The event will be webcast live at webtv.un.org.  Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper to the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation, will speak.

August 10:  

12:00 -5:00 PM NYC Two Row Wampum Festival.  Brookfield Place/World Financial Center, 200 Vesey St., NYC.  Performances by the Akwesasne Women Singers, Sherri Waterman & The Haudenosaunee Singers and Dancers, SilverCloud Singers (intertribal), Josephine Tarrant (Kuna/Rappahannock/Hopi/Ho-Chunk). Speakers include Tadodaho Sid Hill, Chief Oren Lyons, Chief Jake Edwards.

Honor Native Treaties & Protect the Earth 

Support the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign

www.honorthetworow.org

Lindsay Speer

Community Organizer 

512 Jamesville Ave | Syracuse, NY 13210

315-475-2559 phone | 315-475-2465 fax

lspeer@mrss.com
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Photo courtesy of Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign

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Historic Journey to Honor Native Treaties and Protect the Earth

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Over 200 Native and Non-Native Paddle Down Hudson River Together

 Hudson River, NY— It has been 400 years since the first treaty was signed between the first European (Dutch) settlers and the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy), an agreement that formed the basis of all later treaties with the English and the United States.  The Haudenosaunee are still here, and this year, peoples from all around the world are joining them to honor and renew this inspiring treaty of peace and friendship.

On July 28th, over 200 Native and non-Native paddlers launch near Albany to paddle over 140 miles to NYC side-by-side in two lines to honor and bring to life the imagery of the Two Row Wampum, the beaded record of this treaty.  Full itinerary and events along the way available at www.honorthetworow.org.  They land at Pier 96 in NYC at approximately 10 AM on August 9th to walk to the United Nations in honor of the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples.  They will be greeted by the Dutch Consul General, other non-Native dignitaries, representatives of Native nations, and many supporters.

People from all six Haudenosaunee nations (Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora) are participating in the journey, as well as people from 20 other Native nations and people from across NY State and beyond.  Over 85 organizations have co-sponsored the campaign.  The honorary advisory committee includes Pete Seeger, Bill McKibben of 350.org, Jane Goodall, Oren Lyons (Onondaga), Tonya Gonnella Frischner (Onondaga), Rick Hill (Tuscarora), Joanna Macy, Onondaga County Executive Joanne Mahoney, Leonard Peltier, Tom Porter (Mohawk), Syracuse University Chancellor Nancy Cantor, and Suzan Shown Harjo (Cheyenne & Hodulgee Muscogee), an original plaintiff in the Washington Redskins case.

“Each line of the wampum belt represents each of our laws, governments, languages, cultures, our ways of life,” Jake Edwards of the Onondaga Nation Council of Chiefs explains. “It is agreed that we will travel together, side by each, on the river of life… linked by peace, friendship, forever.  We will not try to steer each others’ vessels.”

“The Two Row is the oldest and is the grandfather of all subsequent treaties,” said Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper of the Onondaga Nation’s Turtle Clan who has represented the Haudenosaunee in world councils at the United Nations and elsewhere. “The words ‘as long as the sun shines, as long as the waters flow downhill, and as long as the grass grows green’ can be found in many treaties after the 1613 treaty,” Lyons said. “It set a relationship of equity and peace. This campaign is to remind people of the importance of the agreements.”

The Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign was first suggested by organizers of a non-Native ally group known as Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation (NOON) in 2011, who learned the history and meaning of the Two Row Wampum, and felt a responsibility to share this information.  Americans have largely forgotten the importance of treaties, even though Article 6 of the U.S. Constitution states that treaties are the supreme law of the land.  In the 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua, George Washington promised protection for Haudenosaunee territories.  This act of paddling together is a recognition of the troubled past, and renewal for the future.

“Understanding and honoring the Two Row Wampum can improve relations between our peoples,” explains Andy Mager, the Project Coordinator for the campaign and a member of Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation, “and remind us of our responsibilities to the Earth which we all share.  We need this more than ever.”

Protection for the environment is at the heart of this campaign.  The Haudenosaunee work closely with their neighbors to protect the environment, as evidenced by their work to address Superfund sites at Onondaga Lake and along the St. Lawrence River, and the strong stance they have taken against hydrofracking, the extreme energy method of extracting methane gas from shale.  A similar increasingly urgent message of peace and healing for all living beings is being made by Indigenous peoples across North America, including the Dakota Unity Riders from Manitoba, Canada, who will parallel the paddlers on horseback.

“An important aspect of this agreement was that we live in the river of life and we all need to take care of it,” Freida Jacques, Clanmother of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation reminds us.  “The environment was a part of this agreement.” As climate change inflicts severe flooding and storms, drought and melting ice caps, the lessons of the Two Row Wampum agreement are particularly timely.

“Our ancestors made this great agreement on our behalf 400 years ago,” notes Hickory Edwards, the lead paddler for the Onondaga Nation.  “Now is the time for us to think about the people living in the next 400 years.

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Schedule for Events and Paddling down the Hudson
July 27 – August 10

Two Row Wampum Renewal Send-off Celebration Festival
Saturday, July 27, 10 am – 5 pm
Russell Sage College, Troy, NY
Tom Porter, Rick Hill, Pura Fe Crescioni, Margo Thunderbird, Akwesasne Women Singers, children’s activities and more.
Contacts: Kevin: kenephew@gmail.com or Lori: l.quigley@sage.edu

Sunday, July 28: Launch of the Two Row Flotilla
10 am Launch Ceremony
Rensselaer Boat Launch, Forbes Ave.,
Rensselaer Land Schodack Island Park 4:30 pm

Monday, July 29: Schodack to Coxsackie
Launch at 10 am
Land Coxsackie River Front Pk 4:30 pm
Sharing the River of Life program, 7 pm
Speakers: Mike McDonald, Akwesasne Mohawk Cultural Specialist and Educator and Aya Yamamoto, organizer with the Two Row Campaign.

Tuesday, July 30: Coxsackie to Catskill Pt Pk
Launch 10 am
Land Catskill Point Park/Dutchman’s 4:30 pm
Protecting the River of Life, 7 pm
Speakers: Onondaga Faithkeeper Oren Lyons, David Braun, Wes Gillingham and others

Wednesday, July 31: Catskill to Ulster Landing
Launch 10 am
Land Ulster Landing 4:30 pm
Indigenous Rights and African-American Freedom Struggles, 7 pm
Speakers: Dr. Airy Dixon (scholar on Native American history of Indigenous & African descent), Rev Modele Clark (African American leader in Hudson Valley) and Allison Smith of the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign.
Drummers: Nick Miles, Airy Dixon, and their drum group

Thursday, August 1: Ulster Landing to Norrie Park
Launch 9:30 am, lunc
Land Norrie Park 5:30 pm, 13 miles
A Grand Convergence: The Two Row Wampum Campaign and Unity Riders,11 am Lunch event at Hudson River Maritime Museum, 50 Rondout Landing, Kingston
Speakers: Nina Postupack, County Clerk, Ulster Co., Mayor of Kingston, Tadodaho Sid Hill (Onondaga), Jim Davis, Hawk Storm, Unity Rider Chief Gus High Eagle

Friday, August 2: Norrie Park to Poughkeepsie
Launch 11 am
Land Hudson River Rowing Association 3 pm
Lacrosse: The Creator’s Game, 5:30 pm
Speakers: Alf Jacques [Onondaga Turtle Clan], traditional lacrosse stick carver and lacrosse player; Orris Edwards (Onondaga) player on the Iroquois Nationals under 19 lacrosse team; and Dr. Philip Arnold, professor of religion at Syracuse University and the founding director of Skanonh: The Great Law of Peace Center

Saturday, August 3: Poughkeepsie to Beacon*
Launch 10 am
Land 5:30 pm
Welcome Two Row and Unity Riders on Hudson Walkway, 9:30 am, Highland- Poughkeepsie*
Two Row Festival at Beacon, 11 am – 8:10 pm, Riverfront Park, Beacon.
Haudenosaunee and other native speakers, Pete Seeger, music, social dancing, children’s activities and more.

Sunday, August 4: Beacon to Cold Spring
Launch 11 am
Land Dockside Park, Cold Spring 2 pm
The Two Row Wampum: Past Present and Future, 4 pm
Speakers: Onondaga clanmother, poet and educator Wendy Gonyea, Two Row education coordinator and professor of environmental studies at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry Jack Manno and Two Row organizer Lena Duby (Onondaga).

Monday, August 5: Cold Spring to Stony Point
Launch 10:30 am
Sharing the River of Life, 12 noon, Peekskill Riverfront Park,  Paddlers land 1:30 pm

Speakers: Cayuga Chief Sam George from the Six Nations Territory, Mohawk educator Kay Olan and Brooke Hansen professor of Native American Studies and Anthropology at Cornell University and a Two Row organizer in Ithaca. Music Cayuga artist, musician and Two Row organizer Dan Hill
Land Stony Point Center, 17 Cricketown Rd., Stony Point 5 pm
Intercultural Peace/Friendship Event, 7:30 pm

Tuesday, August 6: Stony Point to Croton Point
Launch 10:30 am
Land Croton Point Park 1 pm, 4 miles
Elders Share Haudenosaunee History, 3 pm
Speakers: Onondaga clanmother and educator Freida Jacques and other Haudenosaunee elders share important aspects of their history.

Wednesday, August 7: Croton Point to Piermont Pier
Launch 11 am
Land Piermont Pier 5 pm
Sharing the River of Life program, 7 pm
Speakers: Tonawanda Seneca Chief Darwin Hill, Ramapough Chief Dwayne Perry and environmental educator and activist and Two Row organizer Laurie Seeman. Music Cayuga artist, musician and Two Row organizer Dan Hill

Thursday, August 8: Piermont to Inwood Hill Park
Launch 10:30 am
Land Inwood Hill Park, NYC 4:30 pm
Poetry and Spoken Word: Two Rows and More, 6:30 pm
Guest readers include Janet Rogers (Mohawk)*, Daygot Leeyos (Oneida) and Suzan Harjo (Cheyenne & Hodulgee Muscogee). There will also be an opportunity for open mic time.

Friday, August 9: Inwood Hill Park to Pier 96*
Launch sunrise
Land Pier 96 (57th St.)
Welcome at the Pier about 10 am. March to United Nations 11:30 am, Welcome by UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues at 1:30 pm at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza

Saturday, August 10: New York City Festival
11 am – 5 pm, Brookfield Place, west of World Trade Center
Comedian Charlie Hill (Oneida, Mohawk, Cree), Akwesasne Women Singers, Sherri Waterman & The Haudenosaunee Singers and Dancers, SilverCloud Singers (intertribal), Josephine Tarrant (Kuna/Rappahannock/Hopi/Ho-Chunk), Speakers: Tadodaho Sid Hill, Chief Oren Lyons, Chief Jake Edwards, native artisans, children’s activities, and more.

DONATE to support the Two Row Campaign.

Updates and more details on the web

Seeking Home Stays for Two Row Paddlers

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Our friend Anika is helping to coordinate housing in NYC for paddlers with the Two Row Wampum Campaign (more info below). In brief, the Two Row Wampum Campaign is a statewide initiative with global implications to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the first treaty between the Haudenosaunee and European settlers, recorded on the Two Row Wampum Belt. Honoring the land and respecting native people was (and remains) at the heart of this treaty. To remind/ educate the public about the Two Row Wampum, and all native treaties, the campaign is reenacting a trip down the Hudson River, from Albany to New York City.

The organizers are seeking home-stays for paddlers the evenings of Thursday August 8th and Friday August 9. If you can open your home to participants in this culturally, environmentally, and historically significant event, please complete this survey! The campaign also welcomes donations, here. You can contact tworowhousing@gmail.com (cc’ed) with any questions.

About the Two Row Symbolic Enactment:

From July 27th to August 9th, the Two Row Wampum Campaign will be traveling down the Hudson river in two rows–with Haudenosaunee representatives on one side and allies on the other–from Albany to New York City, holding educational and cultural events along the way. On August 8th, they will arrive in Inwood and hold a community event. On August 9th, they will continue to Pier 96, hold a media event, and march to the United Nations to participate in their activities for the United Nations International Day of the Worlds Indigenous Peoples.

Campaign Overview:

The Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign is a state-wide educational initiative about the first treaty ever made between the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) and settler nations (in this case the Dutch). It was also cited as the foundation of every subsequent treaty made with the French, British, and United States, making it the fundamental basis of the relationship between the United States and the Haudenosaunee.

The Two Row Wampum was created in 1613 and depicts the two sovereign nations–the Haudenosaunee in their canoes and the settlers in their boats–traveling down the River of Life side by side in peace, friendship, and perpetuity, as they care for their shared resources. This relationship has many social as well as environmental ramifications, and illustrates that we have responsibilities not only to one another but also to the environment that we share. This environment is our common ground that we all rely on for life and will continue to be so for all of our future generations.

2013 marks the Wampum’s 400th anniversary. Current environmental devastation gives testament to a failure on the part of settler nations to uphold the Two Row Wampum over the past 400 years. To commemorate the Wampum’s anniversary and encourage citizens of the United States to live up to the Wampum’s tenants the campaign will culminate in a symbolic enactment of the treaty.

Honor the Two Row Web Site

Honor the Two Row on Facebook

Honor the Two Row on Twitter

Thanks much!

Lenny Foster at Casa de las Américas

foster_7

SAVE THE DATE
Lenny Foster: Native American Issues and Leonard Peltier

Friday, May 24, 2013

6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

Casa de las Américas, 182 E. 111th St. (btwn. Lex. Ave. and 3rd Ave.)

Reception from 6:30 to 7 p.m.
Light Refreshments Will Be Served

Lenny will speak on Native American Spirituality, the Prison System, Environmental Issues Affecting Native Lands and Native American Prisoner of War Leonard Peltier

Lenny Foster of the Diné Nation is the Director of the Navajo Nation Corrections Project and the Spiritual Advisor for more than 2,000 Indian inmates in ninety-six state and federal prisons in the Western U.S. He has co-authored legislation in New Mexico, Arizona and Colorado allowing Native American spiritual and religious practice in prison and resulting in significant reductions in prison returns.

He is a board member of the International Indian Treaty Council, a sun dancer and member of the Native American Church. He has been with the American Indian Movement since 1969 and has participated in actions including Alcatraz, Black Mesa, the Trail of Broken Treaties, Wounded Knee 1973, the Menominee Monastery Occupation, Shiprock Fairchild Occupation, the Longest Walk and the Big Mountain land struggle. He was a 1993 recipient of the City of Phoenix Dr. Martin Luther King Human Rights Award.

Lenny will speak on the illegal imprisonment of Leonard Peltier, land and resources taken from Native peoples by the U.S. government, stripmining, uranium mining and the pollution of the land, air and water, Native American freedom of religion and the demand to honor Native treaty rights.

Sponsors: NYC LPDOC Chapter, NYC Jericho Movement,
ProLibertad (list in formation)

For more info:
nyclpdoc@gmail.com • 646-429-2059

Rev. Nick Miles and Dr. Airy Dixon at Judson

2013_8.5x11_nrn.inddTHE TWO ROW WAMPUM
RENEWAL CAMPAIGN
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A TALK BY REV. NICK MILES (POWHATAN) AND
DR. HERIBERTO “AIRY” DIXON (TUTELO-MUSKOKE)
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Sunday, May 19, 2013 – 11:00 a.m.
Followed by a Discussion with Nick Miles and Airy Dixon
at 12:30 p.m. (after the service)
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“Mitakuye Oyasin” is a phrase that all people should embrace and adopt as the foundation of one’s life.
It is basis of life for the Sioux and embodies
the values of the Christian faith.
How we go about building authentic relationships with
Native American/First Nation People requires that
we educate and live by the 3 R’s:
Remembrance, Reconciliation and Recommitment.

Rev. Nick Miles traces his family back to the uncle of Pocahontas, Opechancanough.  He is a member of the Pamunkey Tribe, Powhatan Nation, in Virginia, his father and brother previous chiefs of the tribe.  Rev. Miles is recently retired, having served for 39 years as the pastor of United Reformed Church in Bloomington, New York.  He continues serving the larger church as an occasional preacher and consultant.  Nick is also the Lead Singer and Drum Keeper of the Cloudbreaker Society, Association of Native Americans of the Mid-Hudson Valley.
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Dr. Heriberto “Airy” Dixon (Tutelo-Muskoke) is an elder of the Saponi Nation of Ohio.  Retired Associate Professor of Human Resources Management at the Milano School of Management, New School University.  Retired Lecturer in Business and Native American History, SUNY New Paltz. Author, presenter, researcher and Seminole reenactor.  Currently researching Eastern Siouen migration north to Iroquoia, and south to the Seminole.  Dr. Dixon is also a student of Native American theology.

A Talk with Freida Jacques and Jack Manno

Frieda Jack Flyer4_7Join us for a Talk
The Two Row History – The Paddle – The Future
by Onondaga Clan Mother, Freida J. Jacques and
Jack Manno, from SUNY Environmental Forestry

Friday, May 17, 2013
7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.

The Nyack Center
58 DePew Avenue (corner of So. Broadway)
Nyack, NY

Talk followed by live music and conversation

Frieda Jacques to speak at NYSDEC Event

For Immediate Release:
Contact: Wendy Rosenbach
Monday, May 6, 2013
(845) 256 -3018
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DEC SERIES AT TIVOLI LIBRARY CONTINUES ON May 16
Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign
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The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) Hudson River Research Reserve (Research Reserve) and the Village of Tivoli continue their monthly series entitled “Tivoli Bays Talks” on Thursday, May 16, 2013, from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Jack Manno, a professor of Environmental Studies at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry and Frieda Jacques, a Clanmother of the Onondaga Nation Council of Chiefs, will enlighten us about the history and future of the Two Row Wampum.
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The Two Row Wampum is a 400-year-old treaty with the Dutch, the founders of New Netherlands, which became New York State.  The concepts explained in this agreement are the basis of diplomatic relations between the Haudenosaunee (also known as the Iroquois Confederacy) and the United States to this day.
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The Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign is a statewide effort to promote understanding and respect for Native Nations. This campaign will also highlight our common obligation to protect our environment.  Our campaign will do this by holding educational events throughout the year, which will include an epic canoe trip in August on the Hudson River.
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“Tivoli Bays Talks” take place seasonally in the Tivoli Free Library. The library is located in the Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli, New York 12583. Programs cover a wide range of topics connecting the Tivoli Bays to the Village of Tivoli and the Hudson River. The library is wheelchair accessible. Talks begin promptly. Admission is free. For directions or further information, call 845-889-4745 x109.
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Tivoli Bays can be accessed from public areas on both Route 9G and Kidd Lane.
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For  more information about the NYSDEC Hudson River Research Reserve:
http://nerrs.noaa.gov/Reserve.aspx?ResID=HUD
http://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/4915.html
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For more information about the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign:
http://honorthetworow.org/