11/7/12

Our pipe?




Pipe Ceremony?
Once again while going through my Visitor Tracker, I find that some 75% of the visitors are still asking about our Pipe ceremony, so a little updating may be necessary?
Our pipe?
As with many of our ceremonies, the pipe is a ceremony based on prayer too, and blessing from Creator.
Tribes around Mother Earth go about this basically the same way while using material found around their own area. Reasonable because of travel restrictions!
The central and western parts of Indian country use a type of stone found around their area.
The East coast, my people used a few things however, the easiest was wood because at that time trees were everywhere.
Anyone can make and use a pipe however, and this must be repeated, HOWEVER, only a pipe built, offered to Creator, excepted in the ceremony and blessed by Creator can be used in our ceremonies!
Our Native American pipe ceremony
6/10/11 Native American pipe ceremony, Traditional
My fathers, fathers, father, a war chief, receiver a pipe from his father.
The spiritual leader took this pipe to Creator in our ceremony and it has been past down since as our friendship pipe.
Back then after defeating your enemy you as the War Chief receive a pipe. After this ceremony you must seek out your defeated enemy and smoke the pipe of friendship!
After this Friendship ceremony you become brothers!



11/5/12

Native American Indian flags funerals?


Welcome to Thibodaux Louisiana
To my blog posting
Traditional Native American (Indian ) Burial Information.
Looking for information about a flag at our funerals?
Native American Indian flags funerals?
Remember that we are of an Eastern coast native tribe and some ceremonies and our cultures may be a little different.
I am not sure why anyone in Indian country would have a flag at funerals (most of us have out Birds of Prey Staffs) however, we do allow the American and a state flag?
If this did not help please write back with more information and I will see if we can help you.
I do see from this website
Thibodaux, LA Profile
That it is stated No Native Americans in your part of Louisiana only mixed whatever that is?
Population by Race~White~64%~African American~34%~Native American~0%~Asian~1%~Hawaiian 0~%~Other/Mixed~1%
The Bayougoula, a once very proud race did live around you until the Spanish and French came to your area!
Our friends on the United Houma Nation
may be able to help you?
Also
Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana
Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana
Jena Band of Choctaw Indians
Tunica-Biloxi Indian Tribe of Louisiana
the United Houma Nation

11/3/12

How to take advantage of a corrupt government


Without Reservation: The Making of America's Most Powerful Indian Tribe and Foxwoods the World's Largest Casino
How to take advantage of a corrupt government and a president with no knowledge or concern for the traditional people!
This review is from: Without Reservation: The Making of America's Most Powerful Indian Tribe and Foxwoods the World's Largest Casino (Hardcover)
This story is another follow up of
The forgotten Indians without Filed under: Sachem's words — Leave a comment October 29, 2012


One of the many things you need to remember while reading the rest of this posting. The three women spoken about were Mohegan not Pequot as part of some families sent over years earlier to occupy the village so as not to lost it to the Europeans.
My family is from Uncasvillage just accross the Pequot river.

"Without Reservation: The Making of America's Most Powerful Indian Tribe and Foxwoods, the World's Largest Casino" by Jeff Benedict is an absorbing portrait of an extraordinary phenomenon - the emergence from obscurity within the past three decades of the Mashantucket Pequot Indian tribe and their rapid climb to unparalleled wealth through their Foxwoods Casino in Ledyard, Connecticut. I am sure that many people view these events as a particularly gratifying example of a "rags to riches" story, given the justifiable sympathy now widely felt towards Native Americans after centuries of betrayal and injustice. However, as someone who has spent most of his adult life as a resident of southeastern Connecticut and who is personally acquainted with some of the people discussed in Benedict's book, I have been long aware that the story of the Pequot's and their casino is more complex and perhaps less inspirational than might appear at first glance.
"Without Reservation" raises serious questions about whether the Mashantucket Pequot's are who they claim to be, a legitimate tribe of Native Americans. Simply put, are they instead merely opportunists claiming an Indian identity to fraudulently cash in on laws and programs intended to help genuine Native Americans? Some historic tribes in the East after centuries of intermarriage with persons of European and/or African descent and through acculturation with the white society have ceased to exist. According to Benedict's research, Richard "Skip" Hayward, the leader who formulated and led the supposed resurrection of the Mashantucket Pequot tribe in the 1970's, has no traceable Pequot ancestry at all. Benedict contends that Hayward's entire Indian descent comes solely through his great-great-grandfather, a man who identified himself not as a Pequot, but as a Narragansett (ironically, the Narragansett's were one of the tribes who allied themselves with the English during the 17th Century war which destroyed the power of the original Pequot tribe). Records indicate that Hayward had consistently identified himself as being "white" until the mid-1970's when it suddenly became advantageous to claim he was a Native American to gain possession of the small "Western Pequot" reservation maintained by the State of Connecticut and to pursue a legal claim against neighboring properties. Benedict further asserts that the Mashantucket Pequot tribe, when granted Federal recognition by a special Act of Congress in 19XX, would have been wholly unable to meet the Bureau of Indian Affairs requirements for such Federal recognition. In his view, many people, sincere in their desire to help Native Americans obtain financial and cultural security, were deceived into supporting a fraudulent cause and unintentionally allowed a small group of imposters to gain extraordinary power by operating a gambling casino shielded from taxation and state regulation. The enormous quantity of dollars flowing through Foxwoods Casino has radically altered the economic structure of the region, for good or ill, and has given the Mashantucket's enormous clout through their frequent and heavy contributions to political parties and elected officials.
Hayward as presented in Benedict's book is a fascinating paradox. Is he a charismatic visionary who followed his dream to skillfully lead his people into wealth and independence, or is he a deceptive manipulator who lied and cheated nearly everyone en route to personal riches and influence? The answer supplied by Benedict's book seems to be that Hayward is both. "Without Reservation" does not stop with Skip Hayward's climb to wealth and power, but continues on through his subsequent fall from tribal leadership, overthrown by other Mashantucket's whose claim of Pequot identity is as suspect as that of Hayward himself. The picture which Benedict paints is one of naked greed and arrogance rising to the top.
I am certain that some people will dismiss Benedict's book as being "anti-Indian", but that is not the case. His contention is that the Mashantucket Pequot's are simply not an Indian tribe in any genuine sense of the term, and that they have taken advantage of and have perverted situations created for the benefit of actual Native American peoples. I am equally certain that his claims will be vigorously denounced by the Mashantucket's, and I eagerly look forward to seeing what evidence, if any, can be produced to counter Benedict's arguments.
Jeff Benedict has written a book which tells a compelling story, although undoubtedly it will not be the final word on the subject. It is a story skillfully told in a gripping narrative which vividly depicts the actors in the drama: the Mashantucket's, the politicians, the ordinary citizens who woke up to find the world's largest casino springing to life in their rural community, and of course the ever-present lawyers, eager to distort and shade the truth in their roles of advocates (or in their chase of the big bucks). 

11/2/12

We must remember, I am a Native American


The League of Women Voters ask Gov. Rick Scott to extend early voting
Democratic head asks Scott to extend voting time also.
TALLAHASSEE — The League of Women Voters on Thursday joined a call by the chairman of Florida's Democratic Party for Gov. Rick Scott to extend early voting through Sunday following reports of record turnouts and long lines of voters at poll sites statewide.
First - we must remember, as a Native American, my past postings and where I stand for women in this country!
Second - the League of Women Voters is doing a wonderful job around the country for women and families in general.
Third – not necessarily so in Florida!
If the women in Florida had joined this group in mass back when then state house leader (Margo Rubio) needed to help them pass the ERA ( Equal Rights Amendment) and/or while Rich Scotts money ramrod’s him into office, this and so many more women's rights would not be a, too late subject, (5) days before an election!
Rubio's statement of not important enough would have lit a fire under me, how about you?


Scott won't extend early voting through Sunday
The League of Women Voters on Thursday joined a call by the chairman of Florida's Democratic Party for Scott to extend early voting following reports of record turnouts.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Thursday rejected calls to extend early-voting hours through Sunday despite reports of record turnouts and long lines of voters at poll sites statewide.
If they won't say it by golly I will!
Scott needs to pay back all of the millionaires, billionaires and the republican party for their money support so that he can retrieve his money back after that run for the office!
If our president gets four more years he (Scott) the millionaires, billionaires and republican party will have a bigger problem collecting their money back at our expense

11/1/12

Selling anything you are calling SACRED is wrong!


Caught between a rock and a hard place, as my brother use to say!
Michigan Native Americans back 'historical' prosecution in illegal sale of eagle feathers
Selling anything you are calling SACRED is wrong!
No traditional Native American would ever sell or buy anything called Sacred!
Timothy Clinton-Paul Oleniczak, 21, was sentenced Wednesday, Oct. 31, by U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker in Grand Rapids.
Yes, Timothy sold Eagle feathers and No he is not a member of the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians, haven met many of them one cannot hold that against him.
However, Yes he is Indian (Native American).

Did he get the feathers correctly?
Did he sell to a Native American?
Was the selling them only to members of the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians?
All of that said, the law, ever though this law is wrong, is the law!
Despite the reverence given eagle feathers, they are not protected because of spiritual or religious significance, Jonker said.
They are protected to deter those trying to sell them on the black market.