Category Archives: Events

Two Row Campaign at Judson Memorial Church

Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign at Judson Memorial Church
55 Washington Square South
New York, New York
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Starting Sunday January 27th,11:00am, Judson will be hosting a series of Native American Testimonies on the last Sunday of every month, as part of the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign.  The first guest speakers will offer poetry and information on the campaign.
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Firewolf Bizahaloni-Wong is Dine’ (Navajo & Apache) and her clans are Bitter Water born for Red Clay.  Her father, Jimmie Bidziil Bizahaloni, was a member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) and Indians of All Nations that took over Alcatraz Island in 1969.  A lifelong activist, Firewolf became a member of AIM as a teenager, has been part of the Black Mesa Coalition since it’s inception, and is a co-founder of Native Resistance Network.
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Sally Bermanzohn, an ally of Indigenous rights, is active in the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign, and a member of Native Resistance Network.  Now retired, she taught social movements and Native American Studies at Brooklyn College, and wrote Through Survivors’ Eyes, and coauthored Violence and Politics: Globalization’s Paradox.
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The Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign:
A partnership between the Onondaga Nation and Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation (NOON) is developing a broad alliance between the Haudenosaunee and their allies in New York and throughout the world. This statewide advocacy and educational campaign seeks to achieve justice by polishing the chain of friendship established in the first treaty between the Haudenosaunee and Dutch immigrants. Environmental cleanup and preservation, and opposition to hydro-fracking are the core components of the campaign.

Two Row History:
The Two Row Wampum belt is the symbolic record of the first agreement between Europeans and American Indian Nations on Turtle Island/North America. 2013 will mark the 400th anniversary of this first covenant, which forms the basis for the covenant chain of subsequent treaty relationships made by the Haudenosaunee and other Native Nations with settlers on this continent. The agreement outlines a mutual, three-part commitment to friendship, peace between peoples, and living in parallel forever (as long as the grass is green, as long as the rivers flow downhill and as long as the sun rises in the east and sets in the west). Throughout the years, the Haudenosaunee have sought to honor this mutual vision and have increasingly emphasized that ecological stewardship is a fundamental prerequisite for this continuing friendship.

Symbolic Enactment:
A focal point of the year-long educational and advocacy Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign will be a symbolic “enactment” of the treaty in the summer of 2013. It will bring the treaty to life with Haudenosaunee and other Native People paddling side-by-side with allies and supporters down the Hudson River from Albany to New York City. These two equal, but separate rows will demonstrate the wise, yet simple concept of the Two Row Wampum Treaty.

International Day of Solidarity

Update February 8, 2013:
THIS EVENT HAS BEEN POSTPONED DUE TO A MAJOR STORM AND UNCERTAINTY ABOUT WHETHER OR NOT RIVERSIDE CHURCH WILL BE OPEN.
.Part1 copyRiverside Church
91Claremont Avenue, New York, NY
Room 10T
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Film “Warrior: The Life of Leonard Peltier”
Produced and Directed by Suzie Baer
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The shocking true story of Leonard Peltier, American Indian leader locked away for life, convicted of the alleged murder of two FBI agents during a bloody shoot-out on the Pine Ridge Reservation in 1975.  Around the world, his trial and conviction have been denounced as a sham.  Amnesty International, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Desmond Tutu, and many others have appealed for a new trial for the man who has come to symbolize the continued oppression of America’s indigenous peoples.  To understand Peltier’s story, Warrior takes us back to the violent confrontations at Pine Ridge and Wounded Knee in the Seventies, and then to today’s Indian reservations, where the government’s plans for uranium mining and waste dumping are still being resisted by Native activists.  The heart of the film, though, is a detailed painstaking account of Peltier’s harrowing odyssey through the American justice system.
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The Wachamchick Warrior Society Drum Group
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Light Refreshments                                 Donation at Door
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Sponsored by
The Riverside Church Prison Ministry
NYCLPDOC
and NYC Jericho Movement
For more information: nyclpdoc@gmail.com
nycjericho@gmail.com  646 429-2059

Sharing the River of Life

Part
Monday, February 11, 7 pm
Syracuse Stage, 820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse
Doors open at 6 pm for benefit silent auction which will continue after the presentation until 9:30 pm.
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Traditional Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address
by Tadadaho Sid Hill
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Presentation about the Two Row Wampum and the Covenant Chain of Treaties
by Chief Jake Edwards
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Multi-media presentation about the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign
by Lindsay Speer and Hickory Edwards
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We are seeking donations of artwork, goods and services valued at $25 or more for the Silent Auction to benefit the Campaign. To learn more or offer to donate, contact Erica Schwabach, , Silent Auction Coordinator at ejschwab@syr.edu or (315) 868-0737.

www.honorthetworow.org
www.peacecouncil.net/noon
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Check out our online fundraising campaign, going through January 15.

In Solidarity and Support of Idle No More

stand-up-united-native-nations

In Solidarity and Support of Idle No More ! ! !

#IdleNoMore Flash Mob Round Dance in NYC

this Friday, December 28th, 2012

3:00 p.m.

Washington Square Park (underneath the arch)

. . . . say hello to us NRN folks!

We didn’t organize this, but some of us will be there!

Image by Dwayne Bird – birdwiremedia.com

National Day of Mourning 2012

Thursday, November 22, 2012
Cole’s Hill – Plymouth, Massachusetts
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Since 1970, Native Americans have gathered at noon on Cole’s Hill in Plymouth to commemorate a National Day of Mourning on the US thanksgiving holiday. Many Native Americans do not celebrate the arrival of the Pilgrims and other European settlers. Thanksgiving day is a reminder of the genocide of millions of Native people, the theft of Native lands, and the relentless assault on Native culture. Participants in National Day of Mourning honor Native ancestors and the struggles of Native peoples to survive today. It is a day of remembrance and spiritual connection as well as a protest of the racism and oppression that Native Americans continue to experience.
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Join us as we dedicate the 43rd National Day of Mourning to our brother, Native political prisoner Leonard Peltier. Add your voice to the millions world-wide who demand his freedom. Help us in our struggle to create a true awareness of Native peoples and demonstrate the unity of Indigenous peoples internationally. Help shatter the untrue glass image of the Pilgrims and the unjust system based on racism, sexism, homophobia and war.United American Indians of New England/LPSG
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Best contact method via email: info@uaine.org
http://www.uaine.org/
facebook group: United American Indians of New England
Absolutely No Drugs or Alcohol Allowed
Pot-luck Social to Follow
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Basic Schedule outline with tentative times:
12 noon prayers (no photos during this time plz)
12:20pm Native speakers
2pm march with rallies by plymouth rock and the site of the Metacomet historical marker
3-5pm indoor potluck social

Honor the Two Row Treaty – Symbolic Enactment

Photo by Jeremy Schaller

Native Resistance Network is a proud sponsor of the Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign, a partnership between the Onondaga Nation and Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation (NOON).  They are developing a broad alliance between the Haudenosaunee and their allies in New York and throughout the world. Their statewide advocacy and educational campaign seeks to achieve justice by “polishing” the chain of friendship established in the first treaty between the Haudenosaunee and Dutch immigrants. Environmental cleanup and preservation is a core component of their campaign.

The Two Row Treaty (pictured above) is a belt of wampum beads.  The two parallel rows of purple beads represent the courses of the Native canoe and the non-Native sailing ship.  The treaty depicted an agreement that both peoples would travel together in their respective vessels as brothers in the river of friendship.  We’d remain on parallel courses, meaning that neither group would attempt to steer the other’s vessel, or to make laws or set policies that would affect the lives of the other.  We’d live side by side in the woodlands, without taking more than we needed.  The treaty was made in 1613.  It is a solemn agreement and the supreme law of the land.

2013 will mark the 400th Anniversary of this treaty.  To honor this anniversary, we are being called upon to “polish the chain” of friendship and to stem the tide of damage being done to Mother Earth.

In Summer 2013, NOON and the Onondaga Nation will be staging a Symbolic Enactment of the Two Row Treaty, in which Haudenosaunee canoes and non-Native sailing ships will travel together down the Hudson River, ultimately arriving in New York City on August 9th, which is the UN’s Day of the World’s Indigenous People.  In late July/early August, members of NOON and the Haudenosaunee Confederacy did a trial run of the Symbolic Enactment.  Members of the Native Resistance Network, along with other Hudson Valley environmental activists, met the boats, canoes and kayaks at Kingston and Poughkeepsie, welcoming them with a pot luck supper.

We encourage you to visit the web sites of NOON and the Onondaga Nation, and to view the video “Brighten the Chain” (12 minutes) which the Onondaga put together to share information about their Land Rights Action.  You can follow NOON on Twitter and like them on Facebook to receive future updates.

All photos of the Symbolic Enactment shown here are by Jeremy Schaller.  See additional photos by Andrew Courtney here.