Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

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Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Christine »

Sorrow is Knowledge and that in turn is Wisdom.
http://www.thesacredscience.com/wisdom- ... ding-rock/
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I was sitting in a coffee shop in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, the night it hit me: I had to go to Standing Rock to document all sides of the ongoing #NoDAPL fight. This has happened before, a film choosing me, rather than my choosing it. Also familiar was what happened just four days later, when I realized that the story I had set out to investigate wasn’t the one that needed to be told.

The first person I contacted was Pearl Daniel-Means, whose Lakota name is Iyoyanbya Izanzan Win, or “Bright Light”. That’s what Pearl has been in my life since 2012, when I had the honor of interviewing her and her husband, the American Indian activist Russell Means, shortly before his death. During the interview, Pearl was visibly grieving, and yet seemed to possess incredible strength.

When we reconnected at Standing Rock earlier this month, I was in the midst of my own grief. Lately, I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about what it means to be a strong woman.

By the end of my first shoot day, I had captured several compelling interviews. Only one was with a man. This is because, as it turns out, women are the backbone of the movement. The women of Standing Rock are willing to risk their lives to stop the pipeline construction that desecrated their ancient burial and prayer sites and threatens their land, water, and very existence. They exemplify what it means to be an authentically empowered woman in the matrilineal way of being. Here is what I’ve learned from them so far:

A woman’s strength is motivated by a desire to serve the greater good.

Mitákuye Oyás’iŋ means “all are my relatives” in the Lakota language. More than a phrase, it is a guiding principle for living that extends to all beings. This includes the land and waters, both of which are feminine in nature.

“Unci Maka is Mother Earth,” explained a 37-year-old mother of four. “The land is not a resource. It is an entity that you have a relationship with and you respect, like your grandmother, mother, and aunts. We have to be good stewards. We have to take care of the land. We have to feed her and offer her prayers. In return, we are blessed with good health. Everything comes full circle.”

Our enemies are also our relatives. One afternoon, I witnessed an exchange between an elder and a young cook who had cursed the pipeline executives. “We must be peaceful in action, thought, and word,” the elder chided. “You have lowered your vibration with your words. You dishonored Mother Earth and the bounty that came from her. You lowered the vibration of the opposition. Standing in peace is standing strong.”

I asked one of the organizers how, after nearly 525 years of oppression, the 300 tribal nations represented at the camp could believe that peace will prevail. “For better or worse, we are optimistic people,” she replied matter-of-factly. “Hatred serves no one. Peace serves everyone.”

At Standing Rock, service can be literal, as is the case for the women who prepare and serve food to thousands at the camp each day. Washing dishes, caring for the children, or readying the warriors for their marches may be seen through Westernized eyes as subservient. Here, these acts are performed with honor. As one of the women explained, “We have been gifted with the innate ability to care for those around us. Men must be taught how to nurture.”

A woman’s strength is executed with a balance of gentleness and fierceness.

“Women are the protectors of the water and of all life. Men are our defenders,” explained Pearl.

“We are taught to walk with gentleness,” added a young Lakota woman. “We are spiritually grounded people. We believe our ultimate weapon is prayer. And we’re peaceful, prayerful people. But it has come to a point where enough is enough.”

This, I was told, does not mean that women should emulate men.

In interview after interview, the women of Standing Rock said that we are at the end of the patriarchal era of competition, aggression, and force. As Pearl explained, we are now in a new era called the Fifth World by the indigenous peoples of North America. “It’s a refined, heightened energy. That energy resonates with the highest frequency, which is love. Compassion. Nurturing.”

One morning, a 14-year-old girl asked those sitting before the sacred fire to reflect upon the trauma that may have occurred in the lives of the pipeline security guards who attacked members of the camp with dogs and pepper spray. “Something painful must have happened to them as children. Maybe they didn’t have loving parents,” she said. “Maybe they were abused. They need kindness. I ask you to forgive them.”

When is the last time you saw the tough guy or girl in a movie depicted as kind or forgiving? In today’s world, these traits are all too often deemed “weak”. The women of Standing Rock remind us that strength can be subtle or forceful, and that both are necessary. “We act not only from the intellect, but also from the heart,” said Pearl. “This is true power.”

A woman’s strength is sustained by a sense of responsibility.

The women of Standing Rock believe that humankind’s right to existence comes with responsibilities to everything else in creation. Their vow to protect Mother Earth and all her inhabitants is their responsibility to the ancestors, and to the seven generations to come.

Many of us in the non-indigenous world don’t know the names of our great-grandparents, much less the sacrifices they made for us. Many decisions are made without any consideration for the future. How different would the world be if this were not the case?

“There are prophecies about how our generation is going to revitalize our culture and our people, and carry our people’s struggles on our backs. Not in a hard way, but in a beautiful way,” shared a 26-year-old graduate student and activist. “We have a responsibility to keep fighting. This struggle is very real. And if we don’t keep struggling, we’re going to suffer as a human race. Not just as indigenous people. All human beings are going to suffer if we don’t change the way we view the world and the way we have relationships with all life.”

Something Pearl said during our 2012 interview has stayed with me: “The hope lies with the women.” The more time I spend with the women of Standing Rock, the more I see that Pearl was right. I admire the strength of these women, who even in the face of adversity and devastation, care for themselves, their families, their communities, their nations, and the earth on which we all depend. Because of them, I have greater hope for the future.

I’m calling this forthcoming documentary END OF THE LINE: THE WOMEN OF STANDING ROCK. Theirs is the story that the world must see. I look forward to sharing more of it with you as it unfolds. For now, you can watch the trailer, keep up with our progress, and support the mission by going to:

https://igg.me/at/endoftheline

To Protecting Our Future,

Shannon

Shannon Kring is an Emmy-winning producer, UN liaison, and Honduras’ Goodwill Ambassador. She works with the US Department of State, USAID, UNEP, and many other global bodies on issues concerning women’s and indigenous issues, environmental sustainability, animal welfare, and cultural preservation. http://www.endofthelinefilm.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Christine »

Friends, my voice is my passionate outpouring, we all must reach the deaf, dumb and blind right now. EVERY word, thought and action counts.... Love you all so much, for this place and for the kindred spirits who visit here.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8aT5fDisEzM[/youtube]

christine of Earth Emapths is joined by Radagast of Global Mission of Peace in an impromptu recording. Mary Beth, a Grandmother from GMOP who has joined the Earth keepers at Standing Rock, North Dakota is reporting to Radagast with a boots on the ground perspective.

Her message is clear and we would like to add our voices to the rising chorus as humanity slumbers under in the numbed down existence of slavery being spoon fed information, It us women who have been endowed with the transformative power, a force that we derive from deep within our soul body temple, men have a vital role in supporting this power. Together we manifest in Love and it is our time to demonstrate that the power of love is real.

Unfortunately as we (the awakened) know, the few that have controls over humanity own all the mass media outlets, newspapers, magazines, foundations, non-profits, hospitals, factories, drug companies, shopping malls, and farms... and they are looking how to control the internet, so lets use this medium before it is gone. They can censor one person, take over groups of people but not millions of individuals around the world giving voice, making videos and passing our perspectives on.

In this short video you will hear passion, do not be afraid of your passion, it can rise in moments when it is most needed, it is energy and it moves mountains. As humans we are both passionate and silent, full of sorrow and overflowing with joy, we are inner and outer... discover your self and express love unbound, fierce and free. ~ christine

"She's mad but she's magic, there is no lie in her fire." ~ Charles Bukowski

Christine of Earth Empaths:
http://earthempaths.net" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
christine at earthempaths.net

Radagast | Global Mission of Peace and You Tube channel.
http://www.globalmissionofpeace.com/#home" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiZbWg ... 9Mohpf4l-g" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Illegal search and seizure: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fd2DWnCqY_k" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Arrest of Shailene Woodley:
Standing Rock Live Footage Oct 10: From Shailene Woodley
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Spiritwind »

I haven't watched all of this yet, I'm at 20 minutes in so far. But, before I forget my train of thought, just wanted to say what comes to mind. And that is that water itself is alive, when it is part of the natural underground waterways. It has a spirit, a spirit that identifies where the water reservoir is physically located, a spirit of place, and one that connects it in with ALL water. Let me repeat, IT IS ALIVE! To me, it is part of the actual consciousness of the planet herself, as a living being. To me, what they, in a very literal sense, at Standing Rock, are standing up for, is indeed life itself. They are not doing this for notoriety or any financial gain. In fact, they are doing this at a literal cost to themselves, financial, and the threat to their physical freedom. Real freedom, which comes from within, cannot ever be fully taken. If you fear for your physical container, then they got you. They have tricked us all in to various levels of submission. Reacting in fear, and a desire to maintain some imagined sense of security, in my mind, has led us straight to where we are now, and it isn't good. Unless we learn how to grow legs and stand the heck up. The time to do that, in case you were wondering, would be now, and even more so in view of what is surely coming our way, whether we like it or not. And, whether we are paying attention or not. But, as always, no fear, and so much love for us all. The waters within, and the waters without. All is connected.

As far as I Know, Leonard Peltier is still in prison, 29 years now, I believe. A great book on what happened there is In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, by Peter Matthiessen.
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Naga_Fireball »

This is a very good video. I just saw Spiritwind's drum :)

The guy in video is really great, smart and good at knowing how to add to the discussion. Christine thank you for doing this video..

Not to bang Frank Herbert's coffin too hard, but going back to the situation of our aquifers being poisoned. He warned us about what he saw as the ultimate tyranny, "Hydraulic Despotism".

A few years back some of the activists pointed out that the Bush family was hoarding land in South America because it has a huge aquifer.
wiki

A hydraulic empire (also known as a hydraulic despotism, or water monopoly empire) is a social or government structure which maintains power and control through exclusive control over access to water.

It arises through the need for flood control and irrigation, which requires central coordination and a specialized bureaucracy.[1]

Often associated with these terms and concepts is the notion of a water dynasty. This body is a political structure which is commonly characterized by a system of hierarchy and control often based on class or caste. Power, both over resources (food, water, energy) and a means of enforcement such as the military are vital for the maintenance of control.
The same bastards who are so entrenched in oil money are hoarding the only untouched water. Not to mention Russia and Antarctica. We'll probably end up having to fight them over something we didn't realize we'd need, because our own presidents betrayed us.

Seriously, if the people who are elected to care about such things werent parading around in top hats and horse carriages like the 'elite' of 100 years ago, it is possible that more people would be at Standing Rock.

I'm about 35 min in. Lol. I might need to go outside but will finish this.

Very timely video! !
Brotherhood falls asunder at the touch of fire!
He finds his fellow guilty of a skin
Not coloured like his own, and having power
To enforce the wrong, for such a worthy cause
Dooms and devotes him as his lawful prey.
~William Cowper
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Christine »

And today is Christopher Columbus day, OMG, just remembered.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JusBAxa40Bc[/youtube]

Red Cry is an original, feature-length documentary film chronicling the lives of Lakota Elders and Oyate (people) in the face of ongoing genocide against the Lakota by government and corporate interests.

The incendiary film is the result of a historic collaboration between traditional Tetuwan Lakota Elders and Warriors from Pine Ridge Reservation and a growing group of native and non-native solidarity activists. In togetherness they are working to bring Lakota Elders -- particularly Grandmothers -- to the world stage to speak with their own voices to the International community.

The Lakota Solidarity Project with the Lakota Cante Tenza Okolakiciye (Strong Heart Warriors) are issuing an International Call To Action for both Native and non-native Warriors, Activists, Artists, Culture-Jammers, Organizers, Community Builders, Freedom Fighters, Idle-No-More Supporters, Occupy Groups, Indignados, Organizations, Coalitions, Networks, Spiritual Communities, Elders and Youth to join us at this critical moment to help end the genocide of the traditional and grassroots Lakota Oyate (people) and support the renewal of traditional matriarchal -- Grandmother led-leadership.

Wagunpi Woashake Ikickupi (Lakota Elders Take Back Their Strength) is a grassroots movement to end the genocide of the Lakota people and support the full renewal of matriarchal leadership by Lakota Grandmothers on Pine Ridge and across the Lakota Nation.

The movement also works to educate non-Natives about the situation of the Lakota, mobilize long-term solidarity networks to benefit Lakota Elders, and build solidarity with other indigenous resistance movements worldwide.

The Lakota Solidarity Project is an all-volunteer group of people and organizations who work in togetherness with traditional Tetuwan Lakota Elders, warriors, grassroots activists, and Oyate (people)- led by the Grandmothers.

STAND BEHIND THE LAKOTA GRANDMOTHERS!
10 WAYS TO TAKE ACTION
http://www.lakotagrandmothers.org/act.." onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;.

Advocate for the Lakota Grandmothers NOW!
http://www.lakotagrandmothers.org/org.." onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;.

Visit http://www.lakotagrandmothers.org" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; for more information
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Spiritwind »

I'm not sure what is going on there Christine, but I clicked on all three of the above links. Two of them said page not found, and the other one was info about breast enhancement. So, something not quite right there. If it's just my iPad being super duper weird, and no one else has trouble, please let me know.
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Phil »

I was a "peak oil" freak before I ever found the Project and "spirituality", and I had the opportunity to meet the CEO of the US Chamber of Commerce (who is a best friend's uncle)...I asked him about the oil problem, the economic collapse, and resource scarcity and he said straight up..."there's plenty of liquidity, the economy is fine...and I'm not real worried about oil, its WATER that you need pay attention to, that's what we'll war over"

Ten years later the economy plugs on, oil is cheaper now than it was then...and the water wars have started ramping up
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by Christine »

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I am in deep sorrow today ... in my gnowing, we must pour forth the eternal waters of love, above all else.
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by maggie »

Christine wrote:Sorrow is Knowledge and that in turn is Wisdom.

"In interview after interview, the women of Standing Rock said that we are at the end of the patriarchal era of competition, aggression, and force. As Pearl explained, we are now in a new era called the Fifth World by the indigenous peoples of North America. “It’s a refined, heightened energy. That energy resonates with the highest frequency, which is love. Compassion. Nurturing.

One morning, a 14-year-old girl asked those sitting before the sacred fire to reflect upon the trauma that may have occurred in the lives of the pipeline security guards who attacked members of the camp with dogs and pepper spray. “Something painful must have happened to them as children. Maybe they didn’t have loving parents,” she said. “Maybe they were abused. They need kindness. I ask you to forgive them.”
strength can be subtle or forceful, and that both are necessary. “We act not only from the intellect, but also from the heart,” said Pearl. “This is true power.”

A woman’s strength is sustained by a sense of responsibility.

“There are prophecies about how our generation is going to revitalize our culture and our people, and carry our people’s struggles on our backs. Not in a hard way, but in a beautiful way,” shared a 26-year-old graduate student and activist.
These thoughts are speaking to me. I know that more than what we see is stirring and I feel optimistic.
In the really really really ancient past, as seen all over the globe, including the American Southwest, PEOPLE UNDERSTOOD WATER USE.
Hydrology is the ancient science that is apparent in amazing technologic structures all over the globe and still being used.
In every single location where people thrived in the ancient past, they understood water.
I think that a focus on water as the life blood of the planet is a magnificent point of agreement.

In the mean time, the news is spreading about Standing Rock.
it is touching that 26 year old's cohorts.
Here is an article in Teen Vogue: Why the Dakota Access Pipeline Is So Controversialhttp://www.teenvogue.com/story/dakota-a ... ontroversy.
It includes the whole of Shailene Woodley's livestream.
At one point she says:
"How do we get out of here. I can't get arrested"
https://www.facebook.com/ShaileneWoodle ... main_video

She was arrested and I think she contributed by being identified.
On her facebook page, there are 4.4 million views and 60 thousand comments.
I feel so enthusiastic that our 5th world is a world of water knowers, seed sowers and love growers
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Re: Wisdom From The Women Of Standing Rock

Post by maggie »

Phil wrote:I was a "peak oil" freak before I ever found the Project and "spirituality", and I had the opportunity to meet the CEO of the US Chamber of Commerce (who is a best friend's uncle)...I asked him about the oil problem, the economic collapse, and resource scarcity and he said straight up..."there's plenty of liquidity, the economy is fine...and I'm not real worried about oil, its WATER that you need pay attention to, that's what we'll war over"

Ten years later the economy plugs on, oil is cheaper now than it was then...and the water wars have started ramping up
By the way, I found this ska punk video on my inbox on youtube....

[youtube]https://youtu.be/YLrlfFZek6A[/youtube]

I wonder how we can stop using 'war" as a descriptor and what might replace war? I am suspicious of the utility of "warrioring" as a defining idea.
Maybe Water Innovations/ Water InnovaTORS not water wars? Also, maybe all of who care might dedicate themselves to study the Ancient systems and revitalize them and reproduce them where possible...things like permaculture swales, reforesting the deserts and spreading really impressive new inventions?

I am intrigued by structures like this one...to be talked up, to be built. Warka Towers NOT WAR
Off Topic
Italian architect Arturo Vittori and his colleague Andreas Vogler designed a low-tech machine, based on passive design, that can produce between 50 and 100 liters of clean drinking water daily, without electrical equipment and independent of land-based water sources.http://www.greenprophet.com/2014/12/war ... -thin-air/
Image

Emphasizing the prime significance of water does not mean we have to have war over water.
We can grab water from thin air and reforest the deserts with what we know already.
I think we are oming to be the Rainbow, knowing we are all part of the human tribe and educated by our forebeares mistakes and knowledge
Off Topic
An origin story of the Oceti Sakowin, the Seven Council Fires, which make up the Lakota, Nakoda, and Dakota people, tells us that the blood of First Creation, Inyan, covers Unci Maka, our grandmother earth, and this blood, which is blue is mni, water, and mahpiya, the sky. Mni Wiconi, water is life. Our education helps us understand the meaning of this from the place of our identity and the place of our knowledge about water and our other resources. We understand the impact we have when we do not treat the water as a resource for life. We educate scientists, environmental resource management specialists, and fisheries and wildlife managers. We educate science teachers, environmental lawyers, and economists who study ways to sustainably manage natural resources on our homelands. We educate the next generation of political leaders in tribal leadership, government studies, and law so that they may work on behalf of their communities. A tribal college education gives our students the tools they need to indeed manage all aspects of their lands, which is our lifeblood, and the source of our lives.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.c ... ife-165861" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
A prayer
Let us no longer revere airy minds and firey wills and warriors.
Warriors who feel courage and significance but destroy, please know we need construction to balance.
Air/Fire has burned and burned.
That has been reflected in many ways.
War is hot and burns everything up.

Competition, the power over is not just imposed but is willfully embraced and war is embraced.
There is air/water...earth /water
There is the practical of mothers from every time to be worshipped like a book and reverenced by practice.

Air/Water is the sky rainfall source for Water falling and cooling.
Earth soaking up the element of Water.
Water/Earth to take life in and blooms of thriving abundance.

These balances of Air/Fire and soothed scorched earth.
The flames of the hot fires dimmed.
I feel the cool moist healing!

Let us revere the patience of the seeds and the ground and the art of nurture.
"In gentleness is real strength" is more than cliche.
Build the towers, pile up the swales, plant the forests.
It is time to say a different state-meant and walk that talk.
Something like we heard at Standing Rock
"'In Water We Trust - Mni Wiconi"

[youtube]https://youtu.be/HKMIDGnMHZ8[/youtube]
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