"We did not think of the great open plains, the beautiful rolling hills, and winding streams with tangled growth as "wild". To us it was tame. Earth was bountiful and we were surrounded with the blessings of the Great Mystery."

Luther Standing Bear - Rosebud Sioux

Guardian of the Water Medicine

Guardian of the Water Medicine
Dale Auger

Dale Auger

Dale Auger: On Art, Blood and Kindred Spirits
by Terri Mason

Defining Dale Auger in one sentence is akin to releasing the colours of a diamond in one cut. It can’t be done. It’s the many facets that release a diamond’s true brilliance, as it is the many facets of Auger’s life, education, ancestry, experiences and beliefs that have shaped and polished his work into the internationally acclaimed and collected artist that he is today.

Born a Sakaw Cree from the Bigstone Cree Nation in northern Alberta, Auger’s education began as a young boy when his mother would take him to be with the elders. “I used to say to myself, ‘Why is she leaving me with these old people?’ – but today I see the reason; I was being taught in the old way.”

Auger’s respect for traditional teachings led him on a journey to study art, opening the door to a doctorate in education. He is a talented playwright, speaker and visual artist whose vividly coloured acrylics have captured the attention of collectors that reads like an international ‘Who’s Who’ spanning English to Hollywood royalty. The essence of his work is communication, and now Dr. Auger has come full circle, interpreting the life of his culture – from the everyday to the sacred - through the cross-cultural medium of art.

Read the rest here:

http://www.daleauger.com/printversionbio.cfm

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Identity of Sovereignty

Idenitity of Sovereignty
by: Pamela Waterbird Davison
Copyright 2008

It’s 2008 and I hear a lot of talk about sovereignty. I can understand what all the fuss is about. We live in a complicated world, a world of our own making, and history is demanding we study past mistakes or we’re doomed to repeat them.

Sovereignty is quite astonishing. It means we have dominion or power over our own destiny. We own our independence and demand it be respected, just as people before us have. Yet, sovereignty denied leaves a people without control of their very existence and threatens to extinguish us. If you don’t believe autonomy is powerful enough to dictate historical events just take a closer look at the Trail of Tears or The Long Walk. If you have an open mind, I think you’ll find there’s much more to be learned from history than “just the facts”.

Let me see if I can lay it down straight.

When my ancestors first came into contact with Europeans, they were curious, but polite. Just like many of us today, they welcomed immigrants, showed the strangers what they knew, accepted their unusual ways, and learned. It didn’t take long, though, before they realized the danger posed to their way of life as they knew it. They found themselves bound by force to fight for home and family, and when they refused to give up their language, religion, and family, they knew they were on the verge of nothing left to sovereignty.

When I look back upon the stories my family has passed down regarding those times when all we had was tradition and the only thing offered to us was worthless pieces of paper and eradication of everything we held dear, I recognize the truth in today’s society. The only difference is what is considered to be sacred.

So we can either choose to abide the sovereignty of all Nations, including our own, or we will repeat the same wars of our ancestors. If we choose to be conquered and relinquish those things which define us as a culture, we have no one to blame but ourselves. If we become so assimilated that we no longer remember where we came from we are sure to find our borders beyond reach.

To me sovereignty is not just a word. It’s an ongoing battle that has lasted for more than five hundred years. For those who’ve never measured the worth of self-government outside of political issues I implore you to take notice.

There is nothing as sad as a people who don’t know their identity.