Showing posts with label African-Native American woman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African-Native American woman. Show all posts

Saturday, October 3, 2015

African-Native Americans: We Are Still Here!


Kaiyentowah Rose, Cherokee/Shinnecock



Many people believe racial and ethnic groups in North America have always lived as separately as they do now. However, segregation was neither practical nor preferable when people who were not native to this continent began arriving here. Europeans needed Indians as guides, trade partners and military allies. They needed Africans to tend their crops and to build an infrastructure.

Later, as the new American government began to thrive, laws were drafted to protect the land and property the colonists had acquired. These laws strengthened the powers of slave owners, limited the rights of free Africans and barred most Indian rights altogether. Today, black, white and red Americans still feel the aftershock of those laws.
In order to enforce the new laws, Indians and Africans had to be distinguished from Europeans. Government census takers began visiting Indian communities east of the Mississippi River in the late 1700s and continued their task of identifying, categorizing, and counting individuals and "tribes" well into the 20th century. In the earlier days of this process, Native American communities that were found to be harboring escaped African slaves were threatened with loss of their tribal status, thereby nullifying their treaties with the U.S. government and relinquishing all claims to their land.

Despite the restrictions imposed by the U.S. government, Indians and Africans still managed to form close bonds. Some Native American communities ignored the laws and continued to aid fleeing African slaves. Some free Africans aided displaced Indians. Sometimes the two groups came together in "prayer towns" -- European communities that welcomed and protected converts to Christianity, regardless of race. Sometimes, Indian women married African men when the number of men in their own communities was decimated by war or natural disaster. Some Native Americans listed themselves as "Negro" or "mixed" in order to retain ownership of their land.


DID YOU KNOW ???

At the time of Columbus, the subcontinent of India was referred to as Hindustan or the Deccan. The European term for indigenous peoples all over the world was "Indians" from the Spanish "In Dios" meaning "God's people".

Some Native Americans refused to sign the census rolls during the 18th and 19th centuries, some refused to register with the Bureau of Indian Affairs or to allow themselves to be "removed" to "Indian Territory" in Oklahoma during the 1800s. As a result, many of their descendants grew up in urban environments instead of on reservations. This isn't the image of Native American experience most people carry in their heads but, in this part of the country, it is quite prevalent.

There are no villages tucked away in Suffolk county -- or anywhere else, for that matter -- where people live in teepees, hunt with bows and arrows and cook over open fires. Our lives reflect the same diversity as any other cultural group in America. We are wealthy, middle class and impoverished. We are educated and ignorant. We are employed and unemployed. We are Americans.

What sets American Indian cultures apart from many others is our attitude toward life. Simply stated, we believe we were not born ON this Earth, we were born OF this Earth. In other words, the Earth is our mother and we would no sooner mistreat her than you would the woman who raised you. This is the primary ingredient in the cultural glue that holds us all together.

Hollywood has taught us to associate the facial features you see here with red skin and sweeping Southwestern vistas, yet these people have skin tones that range from coffee to cream and most live in the New York metropolitan area. They are of African descent but they are also Blackfoot, Canarsie, Caribe, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, Lenape, Matinecock, Mohawk, Munsee, Ramapo, Shinnecock, Seminole, Unkechaug, Taino. They have spiritual names in addition to the names that appear on their birth certificates; they dance at powwows wearing full regalia; they have naming ceremonies for their children. Some of them speak indigenous languages, some fast on the full moon in accordance with ancient religious beliefs, and all are extremely proud of their mixed heritage. They embody the intertwining of two of America's most stalwart and dynamic ethnic communities.

DID YOU KNOW ???
The first slaves in the "New World" were Indians. However, colonists found them difficult to contain -- they knew the surrounding countryside and those who had not been captured often organized successful rescue efforts. For a time, slave merchants continued to raid Native American communities along the central and southern shores of the Eastern Seaboard and to encourage local warriors to barter captives they would otherwise kill for European trade goods. The women and children the merchants acquired were sold alongside Africans to buyers in the north while the men were shipped to plantations in the Caribbean.
"AFRICAN-NATIVE AMERICANS : WE ARE STILL HERE" is based on an exhibit, curated by Ms. Eve Winddancer and with photos by Mr. Louis B. Myers, at the William and Anita Newman Library, 3rd fl.


Eve Winddancer Young is an artist, advocate, and independent producer in NYC.
Louis B. Myers is a Freelance Photographer in NYC. In addition to the current exhibit, he has done two additional ones for the Newman Library, Latino Entrepreneurs in New York City and African American Entrepreneurs in New York City.

Dawn Wolf in ceremony in Washington DC 2015

 

Saturday, January 4, 2014

SACRED WOMAN elder wisdom





Beautiful Namorah Byrd

Chitimacha/Cherokee & African heritage

Namorah Byrd, Spirit Keeper

Namorah "Spirit Keeper "Byrd is a poet, writer, storyteller, singer, musician, and lecturer.

An accomplished storyteller, Namorah brings Black American and American Indian poetry, stories and tales to audiences, passing on the wisdom and knowledge of the Black American experience and the experience of the First People of Turtle Island.

"The ground on which we stand is sacred ground. It is the blood of our ancestors." 
--Chief Plenty Coups, Crow




Wednesday, May 25, 2011

forgiveness:TRUTH to POWER, a teaching

Native spiritual leader Felicita Two Feathers giving prayers


The one and only time I sat with Rainbow Eagle was in the mountains of Virginia. About a mile outside of West Virginia he held a teaching circle for a week. Of the many things he said at Wolf Run these words stand out, "Speak with Integrity say only what you mean. Avoid using the word to speak against yourself, or to gossip about others. Use the power of your word in the direction of truth and love. You will have as much power as you speak the truth." - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories

Junal Gerlach, model, fashion designer


Monday, May 23, 2011

Turning Conflict Into Art

Native American woman Junal Gerlach in her power


There is real difficulty in naming, acknowledging, and owning the experience of violation, and potentially trauma, which can sometimes occur in intense conflicts. It can be even more challenging to move on from conflicts that offer no balm or accountability for the unethical actions of others. We can be hurt so deeply when the acknowledgement of our voice, our perspective, our strength, and the integrity of our intentions is refused. The 'easy', (and sometimes brutish) route of blaming and scapegoating for a conflict situation emerges when another's humanity is denied.


Speaking truth to power is one of the most paradoxically powerful and vulnerable forms of conflict that emerges in our world. Toxic authority — both the kind that is entrenched in outer systems, as well as in inner ways of relating that are learned behaviours - does not like to be challenged, or have its actions questioned in any way. Toxic power can respond to questioning with rage, panic, and ruthlessness. Rather than allow the truth to emerge, cover-ups and denial are the learned modes of operating, thereby creating more and more confusion and despair within the self-regulating system of life. Healthy life systems have their own exquisitely tuned feedback loops, which are always co-creating towards greater self-expression, self-expansion and wholeness.


Learning from the dance of opposites that we find in the natural world, we see the stunning co-creativity that is constantly at work in all dynamics. If we could remember, and truly trust this instinct and impulse, our trauma could potentially become the canvas of the greatest form of expression of the deepest source of our selves. The artist of life, through honouring and expressing the comedy and tragedy of the dance can turn painful conflict into an exquisite new creation.


By MARIA VAMVALIS
MAY 21, 2010
http://rememberingtheancientdeer.blogspot.com/2010/05/turning-conflict-into-art.html

Sunday, May 22, 2011

FORGIVENESS, NDN country & the soul


Junal Gerlach
Everything is negotiable.
Everythin is forgiveable.

The story of abuse, and the darkness behind the image of deep Native spirituality, and cultural superiority toted by many people needs to be told. White America needs to hold on to an image of the Indian that tells precious little about the consequences of conquest, rape, religious intolerance, and cultural contempt that spoiled the land, and relations between the red and white people. Junal Gerlach has a story.


Her video is raw, and to the point: http://www.junalgerlach.com/movie.html 


Thursday, November 25, 2010

an INDIAN WOMAN

KELLI HEALING DOE BENNETT




"There are days we wake up and other days we are awakened. This would be an awakening. These are my words." - Dawn Wolf, Keeper of Stories

Friday, November 12, 2010

Bonnie-Jill Laflin, Native American pioneer


Ms. Laflin is the 1st Female Scout for the NBA working the Los Angeles Lakers and as the assistant general manager of the Lakers' developmental team, the Los Angeles D-Fenders. She was named among the Top Hooters girls of all time as part of the restaurant chain's 25th anniversary in 2008.




 

Monday, September 6, 2010

YOLANDA MARTINEZ, a wonderful friend

Legends Alive Productions, LLC

PO Box 81
Las Cruces, NM 88004
575 373-8642

ydrums@aol.com  / http://www.yolandasdrums.com/

ASCAP - 0034318 Publisher / 1550779 Writer

New Meditation Recording Single Available: http://cdbaby.com/cd/YolandaMartinez1

2004 NAMMY/GRAMMY WINNER for "BEST FEMALE ARTIST"
http://www.yolandamartinezmusic.com/
www.cdbaby.com/artist/yolandamartinez
www.myspace.com/yolandamartinez9797
www.YouTube.com/yolanda97

Yolanda Martinez - Apache singer & drum maker


Friday, August 6, 2010

African Native American woman


THE DANCE

"... she lapses into herself, her beauty the way a body lets itself go into the river racing downstream, and the way one leans into the comfort of a safe moment, a great song, or the arms of a lover." - Dawn Wolf, Keeper of Stories

African Native American woman at the 1st Annual Mountain Eagle Place Inter-Tribal Pow Wow