A Voice from the Eastern Door
Sorted by date Results 201 - 212 of 212
When Skennenrahowi walked among the Iroquois 850 years ago he sought not only to bring an end to war through the creation of the Great Law of Peace but also created a society in which women were assured of their natural liberties as free human beings. He acknowledged that women were the lifegivers of the planet and as such carried a great responsibility to nurture and protect our sacred mother earth for all time to come. Along with this status came great political ad spiritual powers for it was the women who cultivated the land and it was they...
After five decades, and two full generations, the Mohawks can sit on the shores of Kaniatarowanenneh, our ‘big river”, and see the great and permanent changes the St. Lawrence Seaway has brought about to our lives. Once we were masters of the rapids, a people strong and healthy who were known throughout the world for our ability to take delicate watercraft into areas others feared. From our homes astride the Big River we guided the courier des bois deep into the continental interior as no other group was as adept as the Mohawks in nav...
Becoming an elder among the Mohawk people means being acknowledged as one who has weathered the many trials of life and, somehow, acquired a bit of wisdom which, according to our customs, is to be shared with the younger generations. But when does one become an elder? Some would say the sixth decade, others the seventh while some may believe it is not determined by years but the number of gray hairs lightly blowing across the scalp. Or maybe it is attached to the list of physical ailments we can boast about-proud evidence of those wild and...
This past week I had the opportunity to witness a positive event at Akwesasne, which may well lead to the resolution of the tobacco trade issue. A group of men from the Kanienkehaka Kaianerehkowa Kanonhsesne met with Mohawk Council of Akwesasne Grand Chief Tim Thompson in an atmosphere of mutual respect to discuss the movement of tobacco products across Mohawk territory. All participants were concerned about the incident on May 27 in which the MCA police attempted to effect the arrest of a resident of Kawehnoke as that person was attempting t...
I have had the honour, and duty, of serving the Mohawk Nation Council as one of its land claims negotiators from 1984 to 1991. I took a firm, unyielding stance against the United States-New York State offer to exchange (meaning extinguish) sections of our aboriginal territory at Akwesasne for a few million dollars and a few thousand acres of forest astride the St. Regis River. When commercial gambling became available Governor Mario Cuomo adopted the tactic of offering casinos for land, which was rightfully rejected by the Nation. One of the...
On a recent trip to the southwest I had the opportunity to listen to the concerns of Native people in that region. They, like the Haudenosaunee, are worried about the loss of their indigenous languages, the intrusion of the media on the youth, widespread substances abuses, the overall decline in health for all age groups and the excesses of Indian governments across the continent. Most worrisome for many was the removal of Natives from tribal roles for what many claimed were personal vendettas. They also believed it was an increasingly...
There is a saying that we never quite appreciate what we have until it is gone. That is as true of our friends and relatives as it is of our material possessions. The passing of time compels changes, which means we lose things and people as we journey through life. But it is important to stop, rest, reflect and look back; to remember the trail. From March 28-30 students and faculty from the University of Buffalo organized an event which brought together dozens of community leaders to rec...
Eighty years ago the Haudenosaunee, and particularly the Mohawks, were confronted with a serious threat to our ability to secure a living by practicing the skill of ironworking in the US. The US Immigration authorities were determined to arrest, confine and deport those Iroquois who resided in Canada but worked south of the border. The Americans may have been upset with the Haudenosaunee for its rejection of US citizenship after Congress had enacted the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924. The Haudenosaunee leadership realized that by accepting...
The February 22 decision by the Bureau of Indian Affairs to place 13,000 acres of land in central New York in“trust” for the Oneida Nation is not a cause for celebration but alarm. If there is one undeniable truth in Iroquois-US relations it is this: the Americans will do what they can to eradicate the Haudenosaunee as a distinct people. Whether this means eclipsing our humanity by portraying us as sub-human savages, forcibly removing us from our ancestral lands or destroying our culture by imposing alien values on our children the process of o...
The past few months have not been good ones for Canada’s relationship with aboriginal people. First, the Conservatives who are in power in Ottawa rejected the United Nations Declaration of Indigenous Rights despite the approval of over 140 other nations. If Canada had endorsed the Declaration it would have pressured the country to respect aboriginal territory and culture while undermining the “doctrine of discovery” as the basis for its current legal relationship with the first nations. Tens of millions of hectares of land stolen Native peopl...
The decision by the US Department of the Interior to reject the St. Regis Tribal Council’s plans for a Monticello casino has provided Akwesasne with an opportunity to reflect on commercial gambling in general and the Tribe’s goals specifically. We should take this time to inquire about Empire Resorts and its financial and administrative status. The company took a huge blow when the Monticello deal was turned down. It was already on shakey fiscal ground which has to call into question whether it was the right partner for the Tribe. Empire did...
For those Akwesasnorons lucky enough to have come of age during the late 1960’s and 70’s our home was the center of aboriginal political action across the continent. The touring group White Roots of Peace and the newspaper Akwesasne Notes inspired thousands of people, Native and non, to get involved in preserving their heritage and promoting indigenous self determination. The Mohawk Nation Council of Chiefs was the guiding entity for both Notes and the Roots. From the Nation came powerful speakers, great singers and highly effective com...