Saturday, December 30, 2017

The First Gift of the New Year to Us ...

Greetings All,

The first gift of the New Year to each of us is the opportunity to bring forward the previous 21 day Winter Ceremonies and prepare to step out with them toward building personal ceremony based on personal and collective observation and experience. At this point it may not even be entirely clear what this consists of … but, trust, that the wisdom and knowledge that has been built and accrued  in recent months will coalesce and reveal itself in gentle increments as we seek to remember and 'remember to remember'.

As we allow ourselves to be 'breathed alive' in this and the coming New Year ... our time of scheduled community ceremony will happen where we sit, lie and stand. The conclusion of this 21 day cycle is important and it is important that it be met.

First, set some time aside for as uninterrupted a time as is possible. It you need to break up your ceremony, just pick it back up as you can. There is no wrong way to do it.

To begin, it is suggested that tomorrow, a candle be lit, from the east, for honor the deep, winter fire ceremonies. Greet the sacred herbs and ask for their help, then, 'fan' yourself off with the sage and sweetgrass … incense or wood fire smoke, cedar ... gather these things together, today, for tomorrow's ceremony.

Let us remember that our ceremonies have been directed toward 'firing the seeds of inspiration' for the year to come. Let us remember that we, too, are among tomorrow's seeds. At this point we, too, have revealed ourselves to ourselves, we have seen and been truly 'seen', blessed, honored and prayed over in 'ways' that only time and the coming seasons will reveal. And, so, we begin by granting ourselves the gift of time while at the same time, being 'breathed alive'. 

It is into this very personal Circle of Awareness that we now move, drawing and carrying the illuminating, energizing and warming fire … into our deepest core intention of Life and Love ... the intention that Life is meant to be lived in balance and harmony, all days, all ways, now and forever more.

This Ceremony may include prayers to the Creator of fondly held dreams and wishes, gratitude points for ourselves and others, as well as the personal addresses. Endeavor to remain fluid and detached from outcome. Notice what comes forward for greetings and acknowledgement as well, that which emanates from our deepest soul, spirit, mental, emotional and physical sources. Endeavor to observe and not judge. All things are in flux and dynamic evolution which is and will continue to evolve positively as we breathe and 'are breathed alive' ... Resonate deeply with the chosen, worthy and desirable 'seeds of inspiration' that may reveal themselves as coming forward with us into the mysterious and as yet, largely unknown future. But, this we know, the most beautiful of these things, we are able to 'own' and sit with now, in the 'eternal present'. These things will be among the seeds, gifts and prophesies we bring forward and among those that may await us in the coming year(s). For we remember the old ones have said, 'that which you recognize, you own'.

Many will be feeling very full and perhaps 'pitched' in certain ways. Moving into the Center Circle of Life, giving and getting Creative radiance will offer Sanctuary until the next time we sit together. At that time we will bring forward a very matured seed that will be eager for planting. The look forward through the coming year, month by month, will be completed at that time. 

Now, the 7 days following New Year's Eve is a very important time during which to extend the Quiet Time Activities and 'listen'. I will say no more. This time is for ourselves, alone.

In the Spirit of Love and Light, 
Grandmother

Friday, October 27, 2017

Dream Keepers Awards Banquet 2017 / OU Schusterman Center, Founders Hall, Tulsa, OK / Nov. 7 / 6-9p


Dream Keepers Awards Banquet
Tuesday, November 7, 2017
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM CST
OU Schusterman Center - Founders Hall
4502 E 41st Street, Tulsa, OK

The Greater Tulsa Area Indian Affairs Commission’s annual Dream Keepers Awards Banquet celebrates Native American leaders in our community who exemplify strong character and have made a difference through solid dedication to public service. In conjunction with November being National Native American Heritage Month, the Greater Tulsa Area Indian Affairs Commission will honor these Dream Keeper awardees and celebrate our diversity. Join us as we celebrate these Dream Keepers!

Congratulations to all the 2017 Dream Keepers!
• Kenneth Anquoe Lifetime Achievement Award – Walter Echo-Hawk
• Lewis B. Ketchum Excellence in Business Award – Kugee Supernaw
• Charles Chibitty Family Community Contributor Award – World Changers Organization
• Will Anquoe Humanitarian Award – JoKay Dowell
• Rennard Strickland Education Leadership Award – Harry Roy Red Eagle
• Perry Aunko Indigenous Language Preservation Award – Mvskoke Language Program, Muscogee (Creek) Nation
• Moscelyne Larkin Cultural Achievement Award – Minisa Crumbo
• Dr. Ralph Dru Career & Professional Award – Dr. Jim Halsey
• Jim Thorpe Sports Excellence Award – Joey Grayson
• Red Eagle Sacred Circle of Spirituality Award – Pastor Ray Samuel
• Roberta Gardipe American Indian Veterans Award – Don G. Tiger

Thursday, October 12, 2017

Feeding Curiosity (CPN)


This summer, the Consortium for North American Higher Education Collaboration organized the first North American Center for Collaborative Development conference June 12-13 in Saskatchewan, Canada. During “Connecting Indigenous Peoples in North America: Crafting a Community of Shared Knowledge,” attendees heard from a variety of presenters from Canada, Mexico and the United States, including Citizen Potawatomi Nation member Minisa Crumbo Halsey.

Crumbo Halsey said the conference was designed to connect indigenous communities culturally so that they will know one another better and work together toward shared resources.

Crumbo Halsey was part of the panel discussion “Ethics, Morals and Respect for Diverse Cultures and Worldviews.”

Because she is an elder and has led presentations on the traditional Potawatomi medicine wheel in the past, she was asked to speak at the conference. Her discourse focused on food sovereignty and Native people’s access to indigenous foods. Food sovereignty is an individual’s right to healthy, culturally appropriate and sustainable nutrients, as well as their own agricultural system.

“People are very interested in food sovereignty issues all over,” she said. “We’ve all got to get a grip on the food story for the health of everyone on the globe.”

The importance of food sovereignty

Since the early 1800s contact with Europeans, many Native American tribes across the United States were denied their customary ways of growing, harvesting and making culturally significant food. Many of those traditions were lost through forced assimilation, which included an adaptation to a more European diet and a removal from ancestral lands, where ingredients for long-established recipes grew heartily.

“It’s so important to know where our food grows, who’s growing it and then take it from food preparation to feeding,” Crumbo Halsey said. “The tribal situation and complex allow us to work within an understood framework of people with common values that can work together and can have proximity to one another.”

The conference and Crumbo Halsey’s presentation allows Native Americans in North America to connect and share their resources and history to reclaim the agriculture of their ancestors. In a time when processed and ready-to-eat foods are often the easiest options, food sovereignty also facilitates a reconnection with the land and a healthier diet.

Agriculture, tribal culture

Crumbo Halsey believes healthy globalization of Native American — and specifically Potawatomi — food traditions begin as individuals connect to their culture and the earth.
“Everyone is in a better position to communicate and do the give-and-take of information sharing,” she said.

As far as Potawatomi culture, that begins through a relationship with the Creator grounded with Mother Earth and Father Sky-Sun.

Some essential Potawatomi crops grown together are the three sisters: corn, beans and squash. Agriculturally, Potawatomi farmed these together in a mutually beneficial relationship, as each plant thrived off the assets of the others. Eaten together frequently, they also round out a diet and include nutrients like amino acids, vitamins and proteins.

“Food is our medicine,” she said.

Crops Crumbo Halsey referenced in her conference presentation included not only edibles like the “three sisters” but also ceremonial necessities.

Many Native American tribes use a medicine wheel. Potawatomi group sage, tobacco, cedar and sweetgrass each with a season and cardinal direction to form a complete wheel. The wheel is then used for blessing and cleansing in tribal rituals.

The future of Potawatomi crops

Crumbo Halsey also has contributed to an ongoing Citizen Potawatomi Nation project — the community garden. She said the sacred berries are represented, as well as the three sisters and elements from the medicine wheel: “The sweetgrass and different sages are coming in.”
She has been raising and acclimating various crops to Oklahoma that more easily grow in the northern United States. The goal is to be able to have a supply around the Citizen Potawatomi Nation headquarters in Shawnee, Oklahoma. Crumbo Halsey said the community garden is a “vast and wonderful experiment.”

“One of the things that I brought forward was sweetgrass,” one-quarter of the medicine wheel, Crumbo Halsey said. “That was sweetgrass that came from Canada originally. It stopped in Kansas for 40 years and was acclimated. And then I was gifted with some, and it happened to be in my gardens for four years.”

She is also acclimating the Potawatomi pea and white sage, or buffalo grass.
As for her next food sovereignty presentation, Crumbo Halsey joins an exhibition in Kansas City, Missouri, this fall themed around the idea of the vanishing prairie. Her installation centers on sweetgrass, which will hopefully include some acclimated strands of the crop to prove her point about the non-vanishing prairie.

For more information, visit minisacrumbo.com.

Friday, October 6, 2017

"Friday" is "naano giizhigad" in Ojibwe


Ehe, all you Shnabs (NISHNABEKS) Friday IS coming up with a smile.....keep, and replay as needed....
BAMA MINE,
Dawn Woman

Thursday, June 8, 2017

Community Garden Project, Citizen Potawatomi Nation, Shawnee, OK, June 7, 2017


BOZHO NIKAN, ni je na ... hello, my relatives, how are you all?
 
FOOD SOVEREIGNTY and HERITAGE SEED BANK issues are at the core of our newly reorganized and placed Community Garden at the Citizen Potawatomi Tribal Complex in Shawnee, Oklahoma.
 
This year's plantings include a newly planted orchard, sacred berry plots, a three sisters field, a state sponsored butterfly research project and propagation greenhouse, herbs, wild flowers, a Medicine Wheel planting and many other plantings.
 
The newest arrival to the Citizen Potawatomi Community Garden has been the long traveling and awaited sweet grass plants. These plants have undergone a lengthy acclimation process from their northern homelands by spending at least 4 years in the care of various members of the Flint Hills Wisdom Keepers group of Manhattan, Kansas, and most recently by living and growing for four years in the Oklahoma gardens of Minisa Crumbo Halsey.
 
During these years their grass relations have given generously to sweet grass braids and new plantings.
 
They are been joyously received and will be planted in the northern Citizen Potawatomi gardens for all of us: the elders, young people, those yet to come, and those who went before as well as those in mid life who are as yet, shouldered with the responsibilities of life.
 
We welcome the ezeshkemewegyek, the blessing herb, to its new home.
 
Kiche migwech to all those who fostered and lovingly tended these skebyak, green beings, as they continue to make their earth walk with us two leggeds as we progress together, along the ancient Potawatomi migration prophesy trail.
 
And, kiche migwech to the ezeshkemewegyek ... and many thanks to all of the skebjak, may we continue to walk together ... in balance and harmony ... all the days of our lives ... now and forever more.
 
AHO! Bama Pi..
Wabaksekwe
Minisa Crumbo Halsey

On Wed. June 7, 2017, the traveling sweet grass, ezeshkemegwek, is formally gifted from Minisa to Heath at the Community Garden Project, Citizen Potawatomi Nation, Shawnee, OK.

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Standing Rock Solid Exhibition, Mt. Pleasant, MI, April 29, 2017

Standing Rock Solid Exhibition
April 29. 2017, opening of the
6650 E. Broadway
Mt. Pleasant, MI 44858
Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe
Artist: Minisa Crumbo
Tribe: Citizen Band Potawatomi
Shawnee, OK, agency
Title: Wabaksekwe
Image size: 12x16"
Medium: oil on canvas

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Red Bud and Wild Onion Time

Minisa Crumbo, Artist of the Year, and Mona 'Koko' Lowe, Elder of the Year
Mvskoke Women's Leadership (MWL) is pleased to announce that you have been selected as the 2017 recipient of the MWL Artist of the Year Award. This award is given to an outstanding Mvskoke woman who preserves Mvskoke culture with significant impact made on the Muscogee (Creek) Nation and has had personal, professional, and leadership achievements and exceptional community involvement.  Your work exemplifies this and we are proud to honor you with this award.
Minisa Crumbo and Yonne Tiger, Professional of the Year
Group of Honorees, MWL 2017

 Ella Barnett, Woman of the Year, and Minisa Crumbo

Friday, February 10, 2017

Greater Tulsa Indian Art Festival, Feb. 10 - 12, 2017

2017 Greater Tulsa Indian Art Festival's 30th Anniversary
February 10-12, 2017
Glenpool Conference Center at Hwy. 75 and 121st Street 
(12205 S. Yukon Ave. Glenpool, OK 74033), 
Phone: (918) 298-2300 | Fax: (918) 688-5734 (toll free): 1-866-442-1846)
Schedule
"Bringing Spirit forth through art..."
Minisa Crumbo is an artist and craftsperson of several disciplines: painting, silversmithing, basketry, potting, as well as quilting and writing. Born in Tulsa, OK in the Year of the Earth Horse, to Lillian Hogue Crumbo and Woodrow Wilson Crumbo, Minisa is Muscogee Creek and Citizen Band Potawatomi.

Visit her booth at the Festival and get a copy of her new book: "Spirit Talk - A Book of Days."

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Minisa Crumbo: Keeper of Legends Artist, Feb. 10-12, Tulsa Indian Art Festival

2017 Greater Tulsa Indian Art Festival's 30th Anniversary
February 10-12, 2017
Glenpool Conference Center at Hwy. 75 and 121st Street 
(12205 S. Yukon Ave. Glenpool, OK 74033), 
Phone: (918) 298-2300 | Fax: (918) 688-5734 (toll free): 1-866-442-1846)
Schedule
"Bringing Spirit forth through art..."
Minisa Crumbo is an artist and craftsperson of several disciplines: painting, silversmithing, basketry, potting, as well as quilting and writing. Born in Tulsa, OK in the Year of the Earth Horse, to Lillian Hogue Crumbo and Woodrow Wilson Crumbo, Minisa is Muscogee Creek and Citizen Band Potawatomi.

Visit her booth at the Festival and get a copy of her new book: "Spirit Talk - A Book of Days."