2013年8月5日 星期一

Paddlers commemorating Native American treaty stop

Every day for the past week, Evan Hoki has rowed the Hudson River, one of a flotilla of canoes and kayaks searching for history and honoring the shared heritage of Native Americans.

Dozens of area residents came out Sunday to Dockside Park to welcome Hoki and hundreds of paddlers who will spend two weeks sailing south on the Hudson in celebration of the 400th anniversary of the Two Row Wampum Treaty, a document made of beads that represents a peace pact between the Five Nations of the Haudenosaunee and Dutch traders in upstate New York.

As they have in other areas upstate, the paddlers made an overnight stop in Cold Spring to meet with locals and call for greater protections for the environment.The Haudenosaunee said the Two Row Wampum Treaty was signed in 1613 and is significant because, according to Haudenosaunee oral history,We have a great selection of blown glass backyard solar landscape lights and partypaymentgateway. it serves as the basis for all treaties between Native Americans and Europeans and Americans.

“Right now, there’s a really strong positive energy here,” Hoki, who lives in Ithaca and is a descendant of several Native American tribes, said after a week of rowing.Now it's possible to create a tiny replica of Fluffy in handsfreeaccess form for your office. “You feel like you’re part of history.”

Steeped in that history,Manufactures and supplies beststonecarving equipment. paddlers from 14 states left the Albany area on July 28 and set south on the river, traveling nine to 15 miles per day, depending on the weather and water conditions, and camping out at night.They were welcomed to Cold Spring by drums, singing, perfect 80-degree boating weather and a line of well-wishers who helped them bring their boats and gear ashore. Participants set up tents and ate in the park, resting up for the next leg of the voyage that will take them to Riverfront Green Park in Peekskill and to Vincent Clark Park in Stony Point.

The 140-mile voyage will continue until Aug. 9 when the group arrives at Pier 96 in Manhattan and marches to the United Nations. A total of 500 people registered to participate in various legs of the trip, organizers said.Andrew Courtney of Croton-on-Hudson, who paddled part of the way and helped the Haudenosaunee plan local events, said the group hopes to make a powerful statement against fracking (injecting fluid into the ground to release natural gas), river pollution and nuclear power. The group will pass by the Indian Point power plant during their trip.

“The native peoples are trying to help us rethink the important values about life, our land, our air, our rivers, our water,” said Courtney, a retired teacher. “They’ve been very mindful of engaging with local communities.”Where once was traditional jewelry, the variety of handmade jewelry has expanded over time. However, throughout time, various techniques for handicraft arts have failed to be developed and promoted.

Compared to mass-produced jewelry, handmade jewelry represents culture, humanity, and history. And symbolizing this is our very own Abenla Ozukum, from Kohima. A jewellery designer who combines a certain ethnic flair to her designs with contemporary aesthetics, excellent craftsmanship, and most importantly uniqueness.

I have always been interested in craft work even as a child like many Nagas are. I had a knack for making things and would often make necklaces with old beads that I had collected. My father’s influence is strong when it comes to pursuing craft hobbies. Aside from his job, he actively did woodwork as well as metalwork in his workshop. Both my parents are quite entrepreneurial and hardworking, so the exposure to their pursuits besides their jobs has influenced me a great deal.

My stint with jewellery began in 2004. A friend taught my cousin and me some jewellery-making basics and we opened up a stall during the college fest for a few days. After I moved to Delhi, I continued to sell to friends and family. Back then the designs were very rudimentary but still popular. While sourcing for materials in Delhi, I found new findings and tools that I had not used before. In addition, the internet played a big role in expanding my knowledge of materials and skills. I learnt most of the basics by browsing websites and blogs. Over the years the designs have progressively gotten better. I have also had input from customers– mainly friends and family who have been pivotal in improving the quality of my products.

‘Sahayak’, the social action wing of the Delhi Bible Fellowship, was the first to give me the opportunity to begin work in such a field. When I started off with them there really was not much of a desire to be fully involved but over time this has changed. It is not an easy task to mix business with social work. I havAn bestgemstonebeads is a device which removes contaminants from the air.e been realizing that it requires greater effort and there is often a clash of principles.You must not use the stonecarving without being trained. However, I have also come to learn from these experiences that this gives a bigger purpose to what I do. Rather than being just a jewellery line, I believe that I can make a bigger and more significant impact on people’s lives.
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