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April 11, 2013

Winter Events at SOARRING Cultural Center

It has been a busy and productive winter for Midwest SOARRING Foundation. The organization has hosted a variety of cultural events to build community and cultivate interest in Native American culture.

MSF Women’s Group

The newly formed Women’s Group has met monthly and enjoyed the companionship and sharing in community. The purpose of the group is to empower one another and to discover ways to care about the earth. The group was active in attending a prayer vigil on April 1st, 2013 outside a special meeting of the Ottawa Plan Commission. The commission met to hear concerns and make recommendations to the Ottawa City Council regarding the rezoning of rural land to agricultural to make silica sand mining transloading possible on land adjacent to Starved Rock State Park. Read more about this at the end of this article.

Native American Beading Classes

Native American beading project

Native American beading project

Several beginning and intermediate Native American beading workshops have engaged eager participants of different skill levels. Each class focuses on a different beading project and there is a small charge for materials provided.

Check our calendar page for upcoming beading and rattle making classes.

Sacred Healing Plants Used Around the World

On March 3, 2013 Cindy Bloom of Cherokee descent gave a talk to a large and attentive audience at the MSF Cultural Center. She spoke on the practice of “offering smoke” in many ancient cultures around the world. Bloom shared wisdom gleaned from her childhood learning about plants from a family member. Her knowledge has resulted in the restoration of native flora and fauna at numerous sites, the production of educational films and articles, and the completion of two books. As a service to the community at large, she teaches elementary through college level classes that focus on American Indian culture, social justice, human rights, ethnobotany and natural medicine for animals.

Throughout the indigenous world, sacred scents have been viewed as gifts from Mother Earth to purify, unify, and inspire participants through prayer, said Bloom. Holy people, priests, and medicine men throughout the ages have made sacred offerings using smoke, incense, or aromatic herbs, knowing these herbs are a pathway through which prayer reached the Creator. Frankincense and myrrh are burned in Catholic Churches, Copal is a favorite of the Mayans in Central America, and Palo Santo is used in South America, while cedar, sage, and sweet grass are integral to ceremony for all American Indians.

Cindy Bloom with sacred healing plants

Cindy Bloom with sacred healing plants

Each time we celebrate the cyclical patterns of the natural world, Bloom said, we bring ancient traditions into the present time. Our intentions, words, and prayers have the power to call forth beauty to the world with great consequences. Bloom told the audience that plants possess Gaia intelligence. They influence their environment, and in turn, are responsive to their surroundings. She believes each person has the ability to “perceive” with their heart and exchange “soul” essence with plants. Bloom mentioned aromatherapy — long associated with spiritual beliefs and rituals for healing—as an example of this responsive interplay. The plant’s essential oils are considered the “soul” of the plant.

Like animals and people, plants are tribal by nature, said Bloom. They thrive in “clans,” aid other sick plants to heal, and bring homeostasis to the soil. Bloom described how visitors to her garden will select a plant that is just right for their individual needs as they connect with the plant on a spiritual level. She believes plants see, hear, smell, remember, and have the ability to care.

Spring Equinox Ceremony – March 22, 2013

A gathering of over 25 MSF members participated in a spring equinox ceremony lead by Joseph Standing Bear Schranz on the spring solstice. The bright, yet chilly first day of spring was welcomed by prayer to the seven directions with sacred sage. A talking circle followed where everyone shared their hopes, joys and concerns for Mother Earth. The warmth from the fire burning in the fireplace added to the community spirit.

Prayer Vigil To Save Starved Rock State Park From Silica Sand Mining

On Monday, April 1st, 2013 thirteen members from Midwest SOARRING Foundation held a prayer vigil with other concerned citizens before a special meeting of the Ottawa Plan Commission. Joseph Standing Bear Schranz was happy to see so many people attend on a work day at such a great distance. The goal of the vigil was to pray that the commission would make an enlightened decision that would ultimately stop the influx of Silica Sand Mines in the region.

Starved Rock State Park Waterfall

Starved Rock State Park Waterfall

The plan commission met to hear concerns and make recommendations to the Ottawa City Council about the rezoning of rural land to agricultural along the Illinois River. The rezoning of the property would make a silica sand mining transloading terminal possible on land adjacent to Starved Rock State Park. Over 100 trucks per day could haul sand to the terminal also located near the city of Ottawa on the Illinois River where it will be shipped on barges to national and international locations to assist in hydraulic fracking process. Arthur Daniels Midland and American River Transportation are seeking the inclusion of “silica” sand in the zoning amendment language so it will be possible to ship industrial silica sand mined from a pit near Starved Rock State Park.

Many audience members expressed their concerns about the environmental impact of this industrial activity so close to pristine beauty and tranquility of Starved Rock State Park. The Ottawa Plan Commission voted 5-1 to recommend to the Ottawa City Council the approval of the zoning ordinance change. To read more about this visit The Times.

 

January 10, 2013

Renewing Community – SOARRING Holiday Dinner

Over one hundred members of Midwest SOARRING Foundation welcomed the holidays by attending the Volunteer Appreciation Dinner and Annual Member’s Holiday party on Saturday, December 8, 2012. As in previous years, the festivities were held at the Pilcher Park Nature Center, a large log cabin structure situated deep in the woods, and perfect for the occasion.

Spirit Christmas Tree

MSF Member placing ornament on Spirit Christmas Tree

Everyone enjoyed a delicious potluck feast with holiday treats to savor. A candlelit walk through the woods ended with a prayer circle held under the starry winter sky. Members brought warm winter items to share with families in need on the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation in northern Wisconsin.

The highlight of the evening was the heartfelt sharing that occurred as each member placed a special hand made ornament on the Spirit Christmas tree. Each in turn, related a personal story or experience thus renewing community spirit at the gathering.

Joseph Standing Bear Schranz thanked everyone for their dedicated hard work this past year and years past, and shared project highlights for 2013.

November 2, 2012

Peace & Dignity Runners Ceremony at MSF Cultural Center

Every four years the Peace and Dignity Runners (who are either Native American or non-native runners appreciative of Native American culture) begin a run at opposite ends of the hemisphere and travel to a their final destination in Central America. The People of the Condor (Argentina), and The People of the Eagle (Alaska). travel these far distances for the purpose of uniting and healing indigenous people. The runners bring sacred staffs to as many Native American communities throughout North America as possible. They share prayers and blessings, spiritual traditions, and hold conversations about peace. Their final destination is Guatemala where the runners should meet in mid-November, and enjoy a huge celebration at one of the ancient Mayan cities.

On two separate weekends in August Midwest SOARRING Foundation was privileged to provide a venue for a group of these Peace & Dignity Journey runners.  A group of twenty runners from Canada, Puerto Rico, California, and New York arrived and participated in a ceremony with the sacred staffs they carried, offering prayers for peace while they were here. Afterwards all enjoyed a cookout with Midwest SOARRING Foundation members. The runners left heading west and south, eventually ending up in Texas by the end of September, before reaching their final destination in Central America, mid-November.

Midwest SOARRING member, Nina Gilhang who was present that evening said,

” I can’t remember all of their names, yet their spirits were so bright, and this memory will stay with me for life.”

Peace and Dignity Journeys have been organized every four years since 1992.  The 2012 event is dedicated to water, how it is used and misused, and the power it carries.

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Aanii Boozhoo

Midwest SOARRING Foundation invites all people to gather into an ever-increasing wider circle that preserves Mother Earth, and the rich traditions of the ancestors. We invite you to learn about the many intertribal Native American lifeways that provide wisdom and direction in our contemporary world. In keeping with this path, Midwest SOARRING Foundation works to maintain the traditions of the ancestors and to conserve and restore to health the natural environment.

We invite you to join our circle. Dance at our pow wows. Attend our cultural events and support the bison herd-our nation's greatest herbivore and symbol of hope and survival for all people. As you listen, you will learn. Together we become the Spirit of the ancestors.

Joseph Standing Bear Schranz


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