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Let your Spirit rise!
11/14/2020

Let your Spirit rise!

This is song #3 of the Sacred Flow concept album. The concept of this album is to make songs from sacred practice or symbol, transforming the experience of ...

09/20/2020
Join with the Change Makers, bringing Light to the Dark!
09/17/2020

Join with the Change Makers, bringing Light to the Dark!

The “live from home” event begins Friday, September 18th at 8 AM Pacific Time and runs through the weekend, culminating on Monday, September 21st for the International Day of Peace.

Some wisdom to live by...
07/28/2020

Some wisdom to live by...

Love!
06/18/2020

Love!

This was written by Chief Dan George, in 1972..

"In the course of my lifetime I have lived in two distinct cultures. I was born into a culture that lived in communal houses. My grandfather’s house was eighty feet long. It was called a smoke house, and it stood down by the beach along the inlet. All my grandfather’s sons and their families lived in this dwelling. Their sleeping apartments were separated by blankets made of bull rush weeds, but one open fire in the middle served the cooking needs of all.

In houses like these, throughout the tribe, people learned to live with one another; learned to respect the rights of one another. And children shared the thoughts of the adult world and found themselves surrounded by aunts and uncles and cousins who loved them and did not threaten them. My father was born in such a house and learned from infancy how to love people and be at home with them.

And beyond this acceptance of one another there was a deep respect for everything in Nature that surrounded them. My father loved the Earth and all its creatures. The Earth was his second mother. The Earth and everything it contained was a gift from See-see-am… and the way to thank this Great Spirit was to use his gifts with respect.

I remember, as a little boy, fishing with him up Indian River and I can still see him as the sun rose above the mountain top in the early morning…I can see him standing by the water’s edge with his arms raised above his head while he softly moaned…”Thank you, thank you.” It left a deep impression on my young mind.

And I shall never forget his disappointment when once he caught me gaffing for fish “just for the fun of it.” “My son” he said, “The Great Spirit gave you those fish to be your brothers, to feed you when you are hungry. You must respect them. You must not kill them just for the fun of it.”

This then was the culture I was born into and for some years the only one I really knew or tasted. This is why I find it hard to accept many of the things I see around me.

I see people living in smoke houses hundreds of times bigger than the one I knew. But the people in one apartment do not even know the people in the next and care less about them.

It is also difficult for me to understand the deep hate that exists among people. It is hard to understand a culture that justifies the killing of millions in past wars, and it at this very moment preparing bombs to kill even greater numbers. It is hard for me to understand a culture that spends more on wars and weapons to kill, than it does on education and welfare to help and develop.

It is hard for me to understand a culture that not only hates and fights his brothers but even attacks Nature and abuses her. I see my white brothers going about blotting out Nature from his cities. I see him strip the hills bare, leaving ugly wounds on the face of mountains. I see him tearing things from the bosom of Mother Earth as though she were a monster, who refused to share her treasures with him. I see him throw poison in the waters, indifferent to the life he kills there; as he chokes the air with deadly fumes.

My white brother does many things well for he is more clever than my people but I wonder if he has ever really learned to love at all. Perhaps he only loves the things that are his own but never learned to love the things that are outside and beyond him. And this is, of course, not love at all, for man must love all creation or he will love none of it. Man must love fully or he will become the lowest of the animals. It is the power to love that makes him the greatest of them all… for he alone of all animals is capable of [a deeper] love.

My friends, how desperately do we need to be loved and to love. When Christ said man does not live by bread alone, he spoke of a hunger. This hunger was not the hunger of the body.. He spoke of a hunger that begins in the very depths of man... a hunger for love. Love is something you and I must have. We must have it because our spirit feeds upon it. We must have it because without it we become weak and faint. Without love our self esteem weakens. Without it our courage fails. Without love we can no longer look out confidently at the world. Instead we turn inwardly and begin to feed upon our own personalities and little by little we destroy ourselves.

You and I need the strength and joy that comes from knowing that we are loved. With it we are creative. With it we march tirelessly. With it, and with it alone, we are able to sacrifice for others. There have been times when we all wanted so desperately to feel a reassuring hand upon us… there have been lonely times when we so wanted a strong arm around us… I cannot tell you how deeply I miss my wife’s presence when I return from a trip. Her love was my greatest joy, my strength, my greatest blessing.

I am afraid my culture has little to offer yours. But my culture did prize friendship and companionship. It did not look on privacy as a thing to be clung to, for privacy builds walls and walls promote distrust. My culture lived in big family communities, and from infancy people learned to live with others.

My culture did not prize the hoarding of private possessions, in fact, to hoard was a shameful thing to do among my people. The Indian looked on all things in Nature as belonging to him and he expected to share them with others and to take only what he needed.

Everyone likes to give as well as receive. No one wishes only to receive all the time. We have taken something from your culture… I wish you had taken something from our culture, for there were some beautiful and good things in it.

Soon it will be too late to know my culture, for integration is upon us and soon we will have no values but yours. Already many of our young people have forgotten the old ways. And many have been shamed of their Indian ways by scorn and ridicule. My culture is like a wounded deer that has crawled away into the forest to bleed and die alone.

The only thing that can truly help us is genuine love. You must truly love, be patient with us and share with us. And we must love you—with a genuine love that forgives and forgets… a love that forgives the terrible sufferings your culture brought ours when it swept over us like a wave crashing along a beach… with a love that forgets and lifts up its head and sees in your eyes an answering love of trust and acceptance..."

~Chief Dan George was a leader of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation as well as a beloved actor, musician, poet and author. He was born in North Vancouver in 1899 and died in 1981. This column first appeared in the North Shore Free Press on March 1, 1972. https://www.nsnews.com/nsn-50th/from-the-archives-chief-dan-george-teaches-understanding-1.23925435

I usually try to only post positive news and actions here! But   has just gone too far! As only one of many reasons to c...
06/07/2020

I usually try to only post positive news and actions here! But has just gone too far! As only one of many reasons to condemn this man, using George Floyd’s name in support of ’s victory lap about the “improvement” in the unemployment numbers is unconscionable!!!!! 😠😡🤬

Every last one of us shares a responsibility to speak out against injustice and hate.

Remember...
06/07/2020

Remember...

Remember, each of the living entities on this planet, including us humans, are unique and one of a kind!
06/07/2020

Remember, each of the living entities on this planet, including us humans, are unique and one of a kind!

Why “Black Lives Matter” is important! How do you respond to your fellow human?
06/07/2020

Why “Black Lives Matter” is important! How do you respond to your fellow human?

06/02/2020

Racism is an unacceptable response to our differences as human beings. The time has come to put an end to this disease on all levels. It can no longer be tolerated. The senseless waste of human life must stop. We must come together to say 'No!' to discrimination in all of its forms. We are all a part of the same human race, the same human family. George Floyd is only the most recent casualty in this tragedy of inequality and prejudice, and my heart goes out to all of his family and to all of those who knew and loved him. The same goes for Breonna Taylor, Ahmoud Arbery, Eric Garner and a long list of other names of people of color whose lives have been cut short by their fellow human beings who responded to them with hatred and violence because of their skin color. This is a disgusting phenomenon and the fact that perpetrators so often get away with murder in the United States of America only adds insult to injury— whether they are police officers or not.

As people rise up peacefully and otherwise in the US right now to speak out against this injustice right now, they come together to say 'No more!' Do not be swayed by the misinformation about these current events being portrayed by mainstream media in all of its forms that only seeks to further divides us. For the real story be sure to look beyond CNN, CNBC, Fox News, The New York Times, and so many others. Citizen driven journalism viewable in places like Twitter, Reddit (r/news), and Snapchat are depicting what is actually going on out there in our nation’s streets in real time, without any divisive spin. (Although even Reddit is taking down positive stories like the one posted below in the comments about Flint, Michigan police laying down their arms and joining protestors in solidarity.) As terrible as these senseless murders are, they are bringing us together as people more than ever and voices are speaking out and being heard. As Martin Luther King said, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” The time is now to act for injustice everywhere. Rest In Peace, George Floyd.

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