7/23/18

Mountain View, California

Welcome to the visitor from Mountain View, California
To one of our ceremonies in our culture

How to open a Native American pipe?
08/18/2011
Lately for some reason, this subject seems to be coming up often?
So I have added links to this one.
One must always remember while coming to one of our websites and blogs, I write your answers from the teaching of my ancestors, other tribes in other states might have different answers.

Let’s take another trip down the ‘Memory Trail' again?


Let’s take another trip 
down the ‘Memory Trail' 
again?

 Please hang in there I am answering many questions hoping that this can clear things up a little.

To Our sacred prayers at ceremonies?

The only question asked as often as a question about Native American tobacco, on my tracker is a question about our sacred prayers at ceremonies!

Questions like.

(1)- What way is the peace pipe passed traditionally?
East or West coast tribes?
Our people
East, West, South, North, East, Our Mother, Father Sky, back to East.
According to my elders, now ancestors, tribes in and around the New England area never had a ‘Peace pipe' because we were never given 'the opportunity for a chance for peace'!

Our ancestors offered a ‘Friendship pipe’ to their visitors and a ‘Sacred Pipe' in their ceremonies’

(2)- What prayer is at a Native American Funeral?
(3)- What is the naming ceremony prayer?


and


(4)- Native American wedding prayers?


and


(5)- How to do a traditional smudge?


(6)- How to build a sweat lodge?


“Spiritual Leader"

A Spiritual Leader (teacher), never handles a ‘Sacred Pipe’ once 'Awakened', this is the reasonability of 
the ‘Keeper of the ‘Pipe’!


 "The four directions"?


Awakening a pipe


As you must see from the information post ‘Awakening a pipe’

This is an extremely ‘Sacred Ceremony’ one should never taken lightly, 
so no pipe after being 
‘Traditionally Awakened’ 
will ‘Ever’
 be given to a non-native,
 (ever)!



Pipes made east of the Mississippi river are
 made from material found east of the Mississippi river,



 pipes made west of the Mississippi river and 
made from ‘Pipe Stone’



7/20/18

Welcome to Healy, Alaska



Welcome to Healy, Alaska
Sorry it looks like something was cut off 
of the address
 that you were looking for?
Please try this?
Tobacco (Herbs) as a Traditional Native American Gift.
04/08/2011

Welcome to Ottawa, Ontario


Welcome to our visitor from Ottawa, Ontario
To one of our postings about ‘Gifting’
Tobacco (Herbs) as a Traditional Native American Gift
04/08/2011


Last I heard was that Canada is a large part of North America and therefore this applies to your area?

I know, if the country directly below yours does not get our act together, your country might start to regret your friendship!

Remember

More of our people voted for our real president, President Hillary Clinton, the corrupt political party corrupted our election and we are stuck with this infection, infesting our country for a little while!

O.K.

Back to your business.

Gifting as in Smudging, is a prayer from you to Creator for a blessing to you and the person being gifted.

So, always take the time to get it right?

At no time should wampum (money), pass hands.



'Shechaim Chief, Anthony Van Dunk'


The Ramapough and decolonization - Anthony Van Dunk


Shawnee Elder, 'Tah' (Donna), and I met 'Shechaim Chief, Anthony Van Dunk' a number of times at his gatherings.

The Ramapough Lenape Indians are an East coast people, or were at that time?

 In other words, a Matriarch Tribe.

How can a tribe, a traditional tribe, vote out a Sachem (Shechaim), their leader of the tribe?

You can vote out a president, senator, congressman or woman, mayor and governor of this country.

However, a traditional tribe is none of the above!

The same reason as in this country, "Money talks, tradition, culture, and ceremonies Walk"!

The elders (ancestors), of our ‘First People, are rolling over in their graves and Creator is ‘fit to be tired’ because of today’s tribes!


Shechaim Chief, Anthony Van Dunk of the Ramapough Lenape Indians.



December 25, 2016 


Ramapough Mountain Indians


Our friend

Ronald Van Dunk, 68, Chief Red Bone of the Ramapough Mountain Indians, Is Dead

By DOUGLAS MARTINAPRIL 8, 2001

Ronald Van Dunk, who led the Ramapough Mountain Indians in their continuing fight to win federal recognition as a tribe, died last Sunday at a nursing home in Suffern, N.Y. He was 68 and had lived in Hillburn, N.Y.

The cause was heart failure, said his wife, Sheila.

Mr. Van Dunk, who was known as Chief Red Bone, held the title of grand chief of the 3,000 Ramapough Mountain Indians, who belong to three groups or clans living in Hillburn, in Rockland County, and across the state line in Mahwah and Ringwood in northeastern New Jersey.

They were recognized as a tribe by New York and New Jersey in 1980, but the federal government has denied their application for tribal status, filed in 1979.


Anthony van dunk Ramapough Lenape Indians obituary