Tag Archives: Honoring

An Evening with Ben Carnes 8-5-2010 at 5pm

Ben Carnes is a Choctaw activist and writer who received the 1987 Oklahoma Human Rights Award for making a stand against forced hair-cutting policies while incarcerated. He was paroled in August 1988, and has been involved in organizing events and demonstrations on behalf of Native people and Native prisoners, including Leonard Peltier. He is currently immersed in several writing projects, including his biography that he hopes t…o have published before the end of 2010. http://eaglemanz.blogspot.com/

An Evening with Kevin Locke “Make No Bones About It.” August 22, 2010 5pm

Kevin Locke is the world-renowned Lakota visionary Hoop Dancer and preeminent player of indigenous Northern Plains flute, a traditional storyteller, cultural ambassador, recording artist and an educator. Kevin has travelled to over 80 countries and works tirelessly to convey something universal about our human condition through the folk art of his community. Kevin believes that we can each draw from our individual heritage to create a vibrant, evolving global civilization that embraces and celebrates our diversity and collective heritage.

Through the medium of the ancient Native American Hoop Dance, Kevin Locke presents a worldview that includes all cultures and all peoples. Lakota mystic Black Elk called this worldview the ‘Great Hoop of Life’. Through words, music, and dance, this presentation will convey Kevin’s own voice and the voice of his ancestors, who were stewards of the earth and a people committed to living with the land. This presentation will also emphasize the voice of the marginalized peoples.

Historically, these peoples have created sustainable life systems, and knowledge traditions still exist within indigenous beliefs that can enhance our current efforts to create a sustainable world. Teaching through the domain of the arts, Kevin offers a program that will appeal to visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learners by generating an experience that creates an awareness of our shared humanity.

“We need to remember who we are and where we are from but also remember that our reality is our soul, our spiritual reality, and that transcends gender, ethnicity, and language. It is possible to be decent members of the human being tribe no matter where we live or who we are!”

Visit Kevin at http://www.kevinlocke.com

We are Spirit we are Soul…Our reality is our soul, our spiritual reality  transcends gender, ethnicity and language. – Kevin Locke

Kevin Locke from Jack On the Road on Vimeo.

An Evening with Charleen Touchette -“Messages from the Earth”

An Evening with Charleen Touchette -“Messages from the Earth”

 

Charleen Touchette is an artist, author, activist and mother of four living in the mountains in Santa Fe, New Mexico where she is the New Mexico Coordinator of Martin Luther King III’s Realizing the Dream Initiative. She was born in Woonsocket, Rhode Island in 1954 and authored t…he award-winning It Stops with Me: Memoir of a Canuck Girl, and NDN Art: Contemporary Native American Art. Charleen was awarded the Women’s Caucus for Art President’s Award in 1998. She is Québècois, Acadian and Métis of mixed blood French and Canadian First Nation ancestry and grew up bilingual in French and English. Charleen writes on the arts, handwork, sustainability, indigenous thinking, healing and nurturing creativity at OneEarthBlogblogspot.com. She is a staff writer for EcoHearth.com where you can find her “Messages from the Earth” Eco Blog, articles for Eco Zine and Eco Op-Ed pieces

An Evening with Ben Carnes on “Make No Bones About It.”

 

Ben Carnes is a Choctaw activist and writer who received the 1987 Oklahoma Human Rights Award for making a stand against forced hair-cutting policies while incarcerated. He was paroled in August 1988, and has been involved in organizing events and demonstrations on behalf of Nati…ve people and Native prisoners, including Leonard Peltier. He is currently immersed in several writing projects, including his biography that he hopes to have published before the end of 2010.

http://eaglemanz.blogspot.com

Conscious Empowerment for the Gulf Coast – Red Road Perspective

This is a conversation on how the Gulf Coast events may play into Hopi prophecy and what the bigger picture might represent in terms of underscoring a need for change to avoid ever more harmful environmental fallout as a result of lack of respect for our fragile ecosystem. Raven Redbone – hosts a show on Native issues and showcases elders who remind us to seek out the wisdom of indigenous cultures. We are encouraged to value development of stronger community role models and include sacred prayer as a daily practice … He highlights a list of influential Native Americans worth finding out more about. Find him at http://www.ravenredbone.wordpress.com or on Facebook at Make no bones about it.

Hosted by: Wendy Garrett

Check out the show : Raven Redbone and Wendy Garrett

Make No Bones about It. April 4th 2010 5pm

Tune in tomorrow for Make No Bones About It. on
KAOS 89.3 FM radio -www.kaosradio.org 5 pm with your host Raven.

Raven talks with Maria A. Trevizo about the upcoming ceremony Call to Prayer for the Salish Sea, and Special Guest Robert Satiacum will be in the house to  talk about The Canoe Way and how he is working towards restoring the original aboriginal indian name to Ti’ Swaq’ a.k.a Mt.Rainier.

Listen live http://kaos.evergreen.edu/listen.html

Honoring my Pop

My show changed to honor my father and for all those in transition. I will playing spirit calling and honoring songs. Grateful and thankful Creator for all that you bless us with. This Sunday~ 5pm