Dear Family of Light,
What a week this has been! The Fire in the Mountain has been lit and the cosmic energies are in motion. We finally got confirmation that Danilo Villafane, an Arhuaco Elder from the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in Colombia will be coming to the 4 Directions Gathering. May 17-20 see www.chetsnow.com
None of the Mamos had visas and the only one was Danilo, who is the main representative of the 4 main tribes of the Sierra, the Kogi, Arhuaco, Wiwa and Kankuamo. He has been working directly with the Mamos and is very involved in the next Washington -NY trip planned for mid-June sponsored by the United Nations Developement Program and the Inter-American Development Bank. see http://www.tribalink.org/Kogi.html
We travel to Hopi land with Grandfather Martin after Sedona and return to Miami May 25.
Fundraising Party May 25 -8 pm
Music by Phisonica, www.myspace.com/phisonica
Teri Catlin www.myspace.com/tericatlin
and a few surprises -
@ Moksha Family - www.myspace.com/mokshafamily
228 NE 59 St
Press Conference -Sat May 26 at 11 am at the Colombian Consulate -
280 Aragon Ave, Coral Gables, Fl 33134
We will do a sacred ceremony in Miami at the Miami Circle
Sat May 26 - 4 pm
www.miamicirclesite.com
Info on 4 Directions Gathering-
NOT another Conference but A HEART SPACE to “talk story” with our elders to learn practical tools to face the coming changes or “Purification,” as the Hopi say, that is required before Mother Earth can birth the 5th World. This may be one of our last chances to meet personally and share with these respected elders before the Purification begins. Do not miss this unique chance in Sedona's special energies!
In-depth teaching by Native American elders – one for each of the 4 Directions, including Flordemayo (Maya), Auntie Pua (Hawai’i)… plus Grandfather Martin, traditional Hopi elder, representing the “Center” here in this sacred land and Grandma Agnes Baker Pilgrim of the Pacific North-West. Willard and Marie Pine of the Ojibwa nation from Lake Superior will represent the East. We also will have the participation of Inca shaman, healer & musician, Wachan, and his wife Martika.
An extra bonus is the participation of a representative from the legendary Kogi~Arhuaco ("The Elder Brothers") the 2 key tribes from Colombia.
2 Short Films on the Sierra will be presented by Luis Mejia "L Condor"
Special presentations by Russell Means, see Russellmeans.com ,
Rev. Michael Beckwith & Rev. Rickie Byars Beckwith.
Participation by Synergy, an ancient quartz crystal skull with Sherry Whitfield Merrell. Crystal skulls represent our wise ancestors and have long been used in sacred ceremonies by indigenous people, especially in Central & South America and Tibet.
Co-produced by Karen Koebnick of Sedona Spiritual Journeys.
http://stellarproductionslive.com/
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From Last Washington- NY trip - 9-06
A Message from the Heart of the World
A presentation by the Kogi, Arhuaco, Wiwa, and Kankuamo indigenous groups from the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta, Colombia. These elders are appearing outside their country for the first time to present their urgent appeal on environment, land, and culture.
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES FROM COLOMBIA MAKE FIRST-TIME VISIT TO PRESENT MESSAGE ON LAND, NATURAL RESOURCES AND CULTURE
The Sacred Message
“The sacred territory of the Sierra Nevada since time immemorial has been the foundation of our culture. It contains the laws and the symbols that determine our way of thinking and our identity. We should all comply with these norms and laws to safeguard the Universe. The territory must be sustained through daily activities
that allow the culture and all its components to reproduce. In this sense the concept of ancestral owners of the territory is based on knowledge about everything that lives in the territory; in other words, nature teaches us how to live in harmony. It is an open book where we learn about its stories and past, and this is what our children and future generations will learn. Knowledge depends on the careful study of the very meaning of the territory and allows us to remember the role of our ancestors, and the real meaning of each individual and their mission, not as an Indigenous person but as a human responsible for caring for the planet that is threatened when the sense of responsibility is abandoned.”
The issue of territory
• Four indigenous groups totaling 50,000 persons live in Colombia’s Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, the world’s highest coastal mountain (5,775 meters/18,946 feet).
• Their traditional territory, which they believe is the “Heart of the World,” includes snowy peaks, cloud forests, rain forests, coral reefs, mangrove swamps, deserts and almost every sub-climate in the world and is delineated by a series of sacred sites.
• The indigenous peoples (Kogi, Wiwa, Arhuaco and Kankuamo) practice 1000 year old traditions that predate the arrival of the Spaniards and are one of the most authentic and unaltered surviving civilizations of pre-Colombian America.
• Today, an estimated 220,000 non-indigenous people have settled in the middle and lower portions of the Sierra Nevada. Many are refugees from the violence of the Colombian conflict.
• The loss of their traditional lands, encroachment into areas where they currently hold title, the advancing agricultural frontier, illicit crops, climate change, the western vision of progress, and the conflict in Colombia have all contributed to the destruction of 72 percent of the area’s original forests, depletion of rivers and streams, loss of biodiversity, and soil erosion. These factors threaten the future of this territory and its people, and jeopardize the water resources upon which 1.5 million people and the area’s agro-industry and tourism sectors depend.
• Despite considerable progress over the past several decades in creating reserves to safeguard the land rights of the indigenous groups, only one third of their traditional territory—or 14.8 million acres (6 million hectares)--has legal protectionas “resguardos”.
• Lands that have been legally returned to these groups have undergone significant environmental renewal, have helped to improve the living conditions of the indigenous population and strengthened their cultural systems and traditional organization. Of the total amount of territory acquired through legalization and extension, 70 percent is dedicated exclusively for natural regeneration and ecosystem and water resource conservation.
A Bold Proposal
• These indigenous peoples have set a goal to recover an additional 835,216 acres/338,000 hectares of their traditional territory over a 20-year period. Their initial goal is to recover 210,000 acres/85,000 hectares where their main sacred sites are located. This proposal would greatly contribute to water resource and biodiversity conservation that is crucial for the entire region.
• They are requesting international support to raise $15 million for an Indigenous Fund to acquire this land. The Fund will be jointly administered by the Consejo Territorial de Cabildos (CTC) (the Indigenous organization) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
• The program will be carried out in accordance with a previously established framework agreement signed by the CTC and the Colombian government.
• The purpose of the Indigenous leaders’ visit to Washington, D.C. and New York City is to disseminate their message and enlist support for funding to acquire and recuperate their traditional territories. The visit, which is historically unprecedented for these peoples’ traditional authorities, is being facilitated by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the UNDP.
Indigenous peoples and the Inter-American Development Bank
• The Inter-American Development Bank is committed to supporting the development aspirations of indigenous people while protecting their identity and individual and collective rights.
• The IDB’s Indigenous Peoples and Community Development Unit was created in 1994 to define ways in which the Bank can achieve development with identity of indigenous peoples and to mainstream indigenous issues throughout the institution’s project portfolio.
• The vision, objectives and priority areas of the IDB’s work in the area of indigenous issues are set forth in two documents: the Strategy for Indigenous Development and the Operation Policy on Indigenous Peoples, that entered into force in August 2006.
• For further information on the Bank’s work in this field, please see www.iadb.org/sds/ind.
Indigenous peoples and the United Nations Development Programme
• The UNDP promotes the inclusion of indigenous peoples in the discussions on the Millennium
Develop Goals programs and objectives; it support the adoption of the recommendations made by the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and the Special Rapporteur for Indigenous human rights; and it promotes the development of national policies and programs with a specialized approach and protection of rights.
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/
• The UNDP focuses its support for Indigenous peoples in the following areas: institutional strengthening, establishment of territorial rights, promoting the role of traditional practices in confronting humanitarian crises, and establishing links between indigenous organizations and national government institutions.
• The UNDP has proposed strategic areas of support for Indigenous peoples in the document UNDP and Indigenous Peoples: A Policy of Engagement.
• For further information on the Bank’s work in this field, please see http://www.undp.org/cso/ip.html
______________________________________________________________________
For more information, contact Luisz Olmedo Martinez, of the UNDP’s Unidad de Medio Ambiente y Desarrollo Sostenible (luisz.olmedo.martinez@undp.org)or Danilo Villafañe (gonawinduatayrona@yahoo.com) from the Gonawindua Tayrona Indigenous Organization in Colombia; or Anne Deruytttere, of the IDB’s Indigenous
Peoples and Community Development Unit (anned@iadb.org) in Washington, D.C.
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Tribal Ink News www.tribalink.org is supporting this project as a Humanitarian Media NGO in strategic alliance with Airline Ambassadors Int. www.airlineamb.org
Free Media 4 Our Elders, A Voice 4 the Future.
Good article From Cultural Survival
Who Loses What in a Civil War? The Kogi-Wiwa-Arhuaco of Colombia
January 25, 2002 | World Indigenous News
The Kogi-Wiwa-Arhuaco Reserve, home to several of Colombia’s indigenous groups, are the ultimate losers in the ongoing civil war that threatens to take from them what is left from the passage of time.
The Kogi-Wiwa-Arhuaco Reserve, an area containing several indigenous towns in Colombia - Bunkwimake, Gúmake, Jiwa Chivilongui, Acleyzhi, Ulueyzhi, Goksheyzhi, Kemakumake and Kalabangaga - still constitutes an intact pre-Columbian high civilization, one that has survived both Spanish and industrial colonizations over the course of time. The natives belonging to this country have preserved their ancestral ways of life, maintaining a rich culture and continuing in the education of their so-called “Mamas”, priests of the Kogi nation, wise men trained since their childhood both to preserve and work in the spirit world.
The Kogi area is one of those indigenous populations that belong to Colombia , a country not simply going through a situation of internal fighting, but suffering a civil war. The same kind of civil war that, for whatever reasons, we have seen in many countries. However, the case of Colombia is different in one respect. The complicated array of numerous warring and quarreling groups has trapped within it an equally diverse number of indigenous people, who have essentially nothing to do with the current internecine situation, a situation that is part of a world they simply do not belong to.
What has not been eroded with the passage of time is in danger of being eradicated by warring squads, all products of national chaos and violence. According to Danilo Villafañe, a representative of the Kogi community acting under an organization called “Gonawindua Tairona”, heavily armed men, apparently members of the Self-Defense Union of Colombia (AUC), invaded part of the northern coastal province of Magdalena (which includes part of Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta), where the Kogi nation and other indigenous tribes live. Mr. Villafañe explains that the Kogi had never sought help before.
Not so now. They are presently trying to bring their appeals to the attention of the President of Colombia through simple letters, as well as seeking to attract the attention of human rights organizations. Upon actually reading those letters, one realizes the simple validity of their claims, asking for the rights that are intrinsic to humans irrespective of their level of civilization or development. They ask for the simple right to live.
But in a war, the right to live –the most basic right of all - does not turn out to be a valuable one. It is as devalued as the bank accounts of those enduring the war from the vantage point of a more 'advanced' civilization.
Sources and Further Reading:
[JoeKulin@aol.com] January 1, 2002
http://www.cs.org/publications/win/win-article.cfm?id=279&highlight=
Monday, May 07, 2007
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