Monday, November 5, 2012

Navajo Chaplain to General Convention



Tzo’diziin. Prayer.


My mornings in Indianapolis always began with prayerful words of gratitude whispered to God. My prayers were simple. I prayed that God be present in work of the Church and that God’s way be done in my first language, Navajo.

As chaplain in the House of Deputies at the 77th General Convention was God’s call. I embraced God’s call as my primary role to share the Gospel within the concept of Navajo Spirituality—my identity, as I know Jesus, incarnated too, among the Navajo culture, tradition and faith.
General Convention for me was fast paced. I found myself, at times, overwhelmed! I’d receive text messages that read, “Where are you? Be here. Be there. Hurry, the meeting is about to begin!” etc., you get the picture. However, among the busyness, I also found time to talk and get to meet wonderful people along the way. New friendships were formed, tears shared and laughter to balance—blessed opportunities, I call them. I listened to folks who came from all walks of life tell me their stories, their lives. I was called to listen and pray.

Each day in the House of Deputies, before I offered my Navajo prayers, I began with the words of my medicine elders, “It is by prayer, we walk in the balance. Let us pray”… When and where did I find my balance amid the life of the General Convention?
Navajo medicine elders have told me that whenever I leave my homeland, the Four Sacred Mountains of Navajoland, I must remember to take along my holy sacraments—corn pollen, four sacred mountain stones, tobacco—offerings to the Creator. They told me that the sacraments will keep me connected to the sacred where my umbilical cord is buried—my roots.

Every morning I offered the holy sacraments with gratitude in my hotel room. My environment was not like home. Whereas at home, when I walk out of my front door the open space greets me—Sky, mountains, mesas, trees, all surround me—privileged to breathe in the great wide open.

I have learned and experienced differently in Indianapolis:
Communication and relationship with God happens anywhere. Anywhere. They happen even in unfamiliar places. Places that become our home for a certain amount of time. The Creator meets us there, in the midst of the busyness, among the people of God—the Church, even in the midst of politics. My balance met me at the podium in the House of Deputies as I offered the Navajo prayers to the Church. In that sacred space and time, prayers with the Church, with Jesus among us; welcomed the Four Sacred Mountains, Corn Pollen, Sacred Stones, Tobacco all uttered in forms of meditations and prayers of the Holy People. God balances us anywhere as long as we call on his Holy Presence. With my experience, even in a hand shake, in a smile, in words of gratitude, in tears, in the unknowing, in happiness, in sadness, in hope, God met us in those holy places and the spaces in between. Gratitude.


Hozho’— In Beauty, Deputy Cornelia Eaton, Navajoland Area Mission

http://episcopal-navajoland.org/

The Great Hope for St. James Cannonball

A Story of a Church that Caught on Fire



On the 25th of July, Feast of St. James, our church building in Cannon Ball burned to the ground - everything - to ashes. Canon John was called by Robert Fool Bear at about 10:00 pm saying that he believed the building was on fire. Leaving home within minutes with his oldest son, Isaiah, they raced to the scene. By the time he arrived the parish hall was all but gone with just a few partial wall standing up. The church itself was fully involved with the roof line still visible in the dark billowing smoke and flames.

Members of the congregation and community were there watching as their remembered all of the people that they had known who had worshiped there. Some said their memories burned up in the fire that night. We have since come to know that it was not our memories, but things about that building reminded us of those special people and times. These memories have been used by the Spirit to renew our faith and commitment.

While the fire itself became a criminal investigation by ATF, FBI and the Bureau of Indian Affairs Law Enforcement, the attention of the congregation turned to its next steps. On the Sunday following the fire Bishop Michael Smith came to lead worship with the Standing Rock Clergy and People. Renewal of our Baptismal Covenant and the promise of pastoral care through this time of crisis were pledged by St. James' members and clergy.

Following the service that was held under a makeshift tent in the parking lot of St. James' the grill was lit and food was set out for a picnic lunch the included some important business. The congregation that day included about sixty members. Sitting in the shade provided a large group gathered to begin the work of rebuilding. Because St. James' had been around for so long we knew her strengths and weaknesses as a building. We needed to develop some perimeters for a building committee to use in creating a plan for the new building.

Canon John asked how a new building could be used. Many things from Christmases, youth ministry, weddings and baptisms were remembered as things that we were able to do in the one that was in ashes just behind where we were seated. It seemed to be unanimous that we attempt to rebuild with the ability to hold our community's funerals in this building. St. James' was able to seat up to 90 people (tightly) in the old church. To hold a community member's funeral we would need to stretch that space out to seat 250 people.

Other discussion involved where to rebuild. Getting a lot in the community is being thought about - but the likelihood is that we'll rebuild where we have been for more than a hundred years. But to build to accommodate large community gatherings would require imagination in creating a multipurpose space as well as affordable heating and cooling system. A Building Committee has been named and has met four times. The insurance claim has been completed and the congregation is developing plans to do some significant fundraising to put this building into the shape that it needs to have to meet the needs of generations yet to come.

The following has been adopted by the Vestry/Building Committee:

Principles of the New Design
1. The new St. James’ is being designed to be a multipurpose building. That simply means that as much of the space as possible can be used for various purposes (i.e., worship, fellowship, youth, etc.) and that most all of the space can be used for a single purpose (wakes, funeral, feeds, etc.)
The proposed plan is just over 3500 sq. ft. The old St. James’ was about 3000 sq. ft. The difference is that the old church was not multipurpose. The areas of the church building were separate from one another.
2. The Episcopal Church has been in Cannon Ball since about 1890. We have an opportunity to construct a building that looks and feels like it belongs within this community. We are working to develop a building that expresses our faith through Dakota Culture as well as symbolically telling the story of the people living here.
3. The building needs to be useful and not overwhelming or burdensome. This basically means two things: If we build something that is so large smaller congregations will feel lost in it during worship, and it needs to be economical to heat and cool.
4. The building needs to have widespread approval by members of St. James’ congregation. This building will be used by Cannon Ball families for several generations. Our imaginations need to help us see their needs as well as ours.
5. The fire shouldn’t define us in a negative way, but refine us as God’s people in a good and positive way.
The insurance will cover a substantial part of the budget to rebuild, but a significant gap is likely to remain between that and the actual cost of replacing and furnishing the building. A building fund has been established in the Diocese of North Dakota to receive donations. They may be sent to:
The Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota
attn: St. James'
3600 25th St S
Fargo, ND 58104



At the time this article is being written the Vestry/Building Committee is meeting with a Post and Beam/Log Home Contractor. He did the Post and Beam work on the new building at St. Sylvan’s and the design that he has brought forward from the congregation’s and committees meetings has captured our imagination.

In October 2008 a group of two native young adults from Cannon Ball, one from Selfridge and two from South Dakota attended a conference at the National Cathedral on Church Design and Culture. Dn. Terry Star and Cn. John Floberg put on the conference.

Jordan Shelltrack, whose family are long time members at St. James' came up with one floor plan.
Another floor plan by Brittany Flying Horse, Cannon Ball, in the shape of the Jerusalem Cross has several similar features.

In August 2012 we are considering a plan that has Jordan’s as its basis:


These are ideas that will give way to a project that is likely to begin soon. It will be a building that tells the Christian story as if that Story had begun here - not ended here.

Fall Update from DIW in Minnesota

From The Department of Indian Work in The Episcopal Church in Minnesota

by The Rev. Canon Robert Two Bulls (Lakota)

Bishop Whipple Mission on the Lower Sioux Reservation is hosted our annual Convention at their Casino and Convention Center, Jackpot Junction in September. We decided that it was right for our convention to be held there for two reasons. The first one being is that this year is notable in both First Nations and Minnesota history in that it marks the 150th Anniversary of when the Dakota rose up to fight the Euro-American settlers and soldiers of Minnesota. It began not far from Bishop Whipple Mission. The second reason is that the first Bishop of the Episcopal Church in Minnesota, Henry Whipple played a part in lobbying President Lincoln to grant clemency to those warriors who fought only in battles and execute only those who raped and killed women and children. Lincoln pared down the list of those to be executed from 303 to 38.

The fighting came about after years of the United States not meeting the obligations and annuities as stated in the 1851 Treaties of Traverse Des Sioux and Mendota. It has many names that have been attached to it by historian throughout the years. It has been called the Dakota Conflict, The Dakota War of 1862, the Sioux Uprising, the Dakota Uprising, the Sioux Outbreak of 1862, the Dakota Conflict, the U.S.–Dakota War of 1862 and Little Crow's War. The fighting lasted about a month after which the Dakota were rounded up. Many of the warriors faced quick trials. By December 26th, 1862 the fighting with many names came to end with the largest mass execution in American History, the hanging of 38 Dakota Warriors.



It is hoped that by remembering this painful and tragic chapter in American History with holding our Annual Convention near where it all began can be the time to begin the process of reconciliation not only within our faith communities in Minnesota but throughout the land.


http://episcopalmn.org/ministries/department-of-indian-work/

St. James Cannonball



A July 25 nighttime fire has destroyed St. James’ Episcopal Church in Cannon Ball, North Dakota.

“At 10 p.m. Central Time a parishioner who lives across the road from St. James’ saw that there was smoke and fire coming from the church,” said the Rev. Canon John Floberg, who has served as St. James’ rector for 21 years and is canon missioner for native ministry in the Diocese of North Dakota. “Flames spread quickly through the parish hall to the church itself, and by quarter of eleven the whole structure was engulfed in flames. It’s all ash today.”

July 25 is a major feast day on the Episcopal Church calendar; it is the day it commemorates St. James the Apostle.

The cause of the fire is under investigation, said Floberg, adding that the church was a wooden structure and at least the second church built on that site.
“I feel like I lost a family member. Very sad,” the Rev. Terry Star, a deacon who serves the Standing Rock Episcopal Community and is a member of the Episcopal Church’s Executive Council, said on his Facebook wall early July 26.
Starr grew up at St. James’ and has served the congregation in the past.

St. James’ congregation was established in 1890 in Cannon Ball, which is part of the Standing Rock Sioux Indian Reservation, and has been home to generations of Episcopalians, Floberg said.
Cannon Ball, in the south central part of the state, was the first place the Episcopal Church was established on the North Dakota reservation. Three other congregations trace their roots to St. James, according to the diocesan website. Services there include hymns in the Dakota language.
“It’s a family church,” Floberg said, adding that there are about 250 members in a community of 800 people where half the population is under the age of 20. “So last night and today we’ve been dealing with the grief that people have over losing the building that has always been the building that they have called their church.”
North Dakota Bishop Michael Smith gathered with the St. James community at noon on Sunday, July 29, for Holy Eucharist at the site of the destroyed church.
Meanwhile, St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Fargo, in eastern North Dakota, echoed the diocese’s call for prayers for St. James and announced that it would take up a collection for the congregation on July 29.



Sioux County, where Cannon Ball is located, is one of the poorest counties in North Dakota and among the top ten poorest in the nation, Floberg said. The county has a population of about 4,200 people spread over about 1,100 square miles, all of it reservation land. Just more than 47 percent of those people lived below the poverty line during the period from 2006 to 2010, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Floberg said that when the church was built, the bishop at the time wanted the congregation to build a stone structure that could withstand the harsh winds, but the people of St. James’ didn’t have the money.
“Our congregation serves in one of North Dakota’s toughest towns,” St. James says in its listing on the diocesan website. “Addiction to alcohol and unemployment are both very high. But we aren’t going to give up. The church has been with us for almost 115 years and is important to us and our community.”

— Lynette Wilson and the Rev. Mary Frances Schjonberg are editors/reporters for the Episcopal News Service.

Friday, June 29, 2012

The Bishop's Native Collaborative

Bishop’s Native Collaborative



The Bishops’ Native Collaborative is a consortium begun in response to the overwhelming need for Native clergy, Native leaders and culturally appropriate for them. It was established by the Bishops of Alaska, North Dakota, South Dakota and the Navajoland Area Mission. The goal of the Bishops’ Native Collaborative is to provide training for lay and ordained leaders by sharing resources for theological education based on, but not limited to, the seven subject areas listed in Canon III.5(g) of The Episcopal Church. Our work is a sharing of resources and based in a cooperative education model and encompasses the Niobrara School for Ministry, Hooghan Learning Circle, North Dakota School for Ministry, David Salmon School for Ministry, Father Paul Mather School for Ministry of the four dioceses. The education and preparation we provide will be available to the wider church, will be adaptable for local needs and cultures, and will be offered in a variety of formats as well being made available through advance technologies and platforms.

The four bishops have invited Bishop Carol Gallagher, PhD, Cherokee, to design a culturally appropriate, theologically strong curriculum as a three year ministry training program. Bishop Gallagher will serve as Bishop Missioner providing oversight, curriculum development, leadership training, class scheduling and coordination, supplying qualified instructors, as well as delivering instruction. The Bishops’ Native Collaborative will deliver education in poor social economic areas and where needed to meet local demands. The consortium will encompass an innovative sustainable training program within the varied cultural settings of Episcopal Native peoples for both clergy and lay leadership. They believe that this ministry is desperately needed for the church’s often underserved native peoples, as well as being an essential and unique instructional tool for the whole church.

The training developed by the Bishops’ Native Collaborative will be available to dioceses and can be adapted to your local needs as your ever widening diverse population grows. The Collaborative will be looking for seminary and other partners as well as seeking funding across the Episcopal Church.




Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Niobrara Convocation 2012

‘Winter Count’ brings indigenous storytelling method to the Gospel
Niobrara Convocation combines Episcopal, Sioux traditions
By Mary Frances Schjonberg


The Rev. Terry Star, with an eagle feather tied in his hair, reads the gospel during the June 17 Eucharist that closed the 140 Niobrara Convocation at Fort Yates, North Dakota. Another deacon, the Rev. Brandon Mauai, holds the microphone for Star. ENS photo/Mary Frances Schjonberg

[Episcopal News Service -- Fort Yates, N.D.] The story is told that nearly 100 years ago an Episcopal bishop came to a gathering of Sioux Episcopalians to tell them they had to put away all things Indian in order to be good Christians.

To make his point, North Dakota Bishop John Poyntz Tyler had a barrel set in the middle of the gathering and told the Indians to put their Indian possessions in the barrel. When the men asked if the archdeacon had to give up the beaded moccasins he was wearing, Tyler replied, “Yes, those too.”

The barrel was sealed and taken out of the community, its contents never seen again.

Bill Little Bird, who was born in the early 1900s, was at that gathering and told the story to the Rev. Canon John Floberg, canon missioner for Episcopal community on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Floberg and others used the events of that story to offer an extraordinary reversal of the requirements of Tyler and others to the recent Niobrara Convocation.

The convocation is a nearly annual gathering of mainly Sioux Indians. This 140th meeting was held June 14-17 at the Standing Rock Community Middle School outside of Fort Yates on the portion of the reservation that is in North Dakota – the first time it has met in that state.

From the conference’s beginning the evening of June 14 until about noon on June 15, another barrel sat near the altar in the school cafeteria — a barrel that Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori later described as a “barrel of shame and confinement.”

The Rev. Canon John Floberg, left, and the Rev. Terry Star set the Winter Count upright for the members of the 140 Niobrara Convocation to see during a June 15 service at Fort Yates, North Dakota, June 15. ENS photo/Mary Frances Schjonberg

As noonday prayers began on the 15th, some clergy on the reservation’s North Dakota side and North Dakota Bishop Michael Smith processed to the altar; Smith vested in rochet, chimere and Indian feather headdress. As they assembled, Cedric Goodhouse Jr. began to beat his drum and sing a “calling song” in Lakota: “I am coming from above, grandfather told me to come.”

The congregation then turned in the four directions as they sang the hymn “Chant to the Four Winds,” written by North Dakota Assisting Bishop Carol Gallagher, and prayed as a litany of massacres, relocations, a smallpox epidemic and broken treaties was recited. Next, the clergy surrounded the barrel and, with sage burning, opened it to remove a rolled-up buffalo robe. The robe was stretched carefully on a large frame and set upright in front of the convocation.

The inner side of the buffalo skin was painted with a counter-clockwise spiral of 72 black ink pictographs of the life of Jesus as told in the Gospel of Luke, thus making what the Sioux call a “Winter Count.”

Typically, a Winter Count contains one pictograph representing a memorable event in each year of a community’s life. Winter Counts were used in conjunction with oral history to tell the community’s story to its members and others.

Because the Bible does not contain a year-by-year account of Jesus’ life, this Winter Count’s 72 drawings were based on Jesus’ commissioning of 72 evangelists in pairs (Luke 10:1). The count begins at the center of the robe with a symbol that its creator Dakota Goodhouse, cousin of the drummer, said represented the time when in a “long time ago winter something holy came this way.”

The pictographs spiral from that event counter-clockwise, the direction a human’s hair grows from the spot on the crown of the head where Sioux believe the Spirit entered their bodies and left its mark of life spiraling outward, Goodhouse said during the service.

The Winter Count begins at the center of the robe with a symbol that its creator Dakota Goodhouse said represented the time when in a “long time ago winter something holy came this way.” ENS photo/Mary Frances Schjonberg

This Winter Count, destined to have a place near the baptismal font at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Fort Yates, is “a symbol for the community to decide what it takes out” to use to tell about the Christian faith, said Floberg, who has worked on the Standing Rock reservation for 20 years. He said that the robe was given in “respect and humility,” adding that he was speaking only of the North Dakota Sioux’s experience of being forced to put away their Indian things.

“I declare this buffalo robe, as a sacred expression of this culture, be restored as it was used in former generations to give honor, that it may honor Jesus and make his story known in and through his people,” Smith said during the service, which was a variation of the Book of Occasional Services’ liturgies for restoring things that had been made profane (page 317) and dedicating items for use in church (page 196).

Smith, with the congregation’s help, set apart the Winter Count and prayed to God that “through prayer and worship we may know you as you speak to us today.”

Floberg noted that Episcopalians use the service for restoring things that had become profane after, for example, a break-in had been committed in a church. “This is us saying we broke into their culture and we profaned their things that were sacred,” he told Episcopal News Service.

Winter Count’s presence is unusual
The appearance of a Winter Count to the tune of an Indian drumming and singing and, later during the convocation, the sight of Indian clergy wearing moccasins and eagle feathers and smudging the altar using sage and an eagle feather fan during the closing Eucharist, were highly unusual at Niobrara.

Also unusual, Floberg said, was Cedric Goodhouse’s decision to sing a pipe song in the noonday service. He sang in Lakota, “Look at the pipe, it is sacred. Look at the altar, it is sacred,” as the Winter Count was being unrolled and tied to its frame.

The Sioux traditionally consider the pipe a mediator between humans and the gods, Floberg said. Because Christians understand Christ to be a mediator between themselves and God, early evangelists treated the pipe as one of the Indians’ sacred items that had to be eliminated from their lives.



Attitudes towards restoring such things as the Winter Count to Native-American communities and their churches are complicated by the fact that, for most Sioux living today, “restoring” is not exactly what is happening. Most have never lived with those artifacts in their churches, according to Floberg and the Rev. Craig Wirth, vice itancan, or president, of the Niobrara Council. For instance, only recently have the beautiful and seemingly benign-appearing Sioux star quilts been allowed in Episcopal churches in the Dakotas, they each noted. (More information about such quilts is here).

Jefferts Schori, who attended this year’s convocation and preached at the June 18 Eucharist, praised the Winter Count project in her sermon. She called the painted buffalo robe “something to be blessed and proudly shared,” saying it was a “remarkable example” of efforts at “reworking what God planted here a very long time ago, partnering with the Creator, and continuing to expect more abundant fruit.”

“I can’t imagine a more powerful way to tell the Jesus story to those who don’t know it than in this gift offered by one who has listened well and met the creative power of the Great Spirit,” she said, referring to Dakota Goodhouse, who created the pictograph robe.

Jefferts Schori based her sermon on the day’s Gospel reading, which included the parable of the mustard seed. She told the congregation that everyone was meant to plant a seed and expect “a surprising and abundant harvest.”

“We don’t know what the mature plant will look like, but we can hope that this tiny seed will produce a tree of life for all the birds – Eagles, Red Birds, Two Hawks, Noisy Hawks and Driving Hawks, and maybe even some Fox, Elk, Bear and Horse people,” she said, invoking the family names of many of the Sioux present.

Anderson receives Lakota name
Both the presiding bishop and House of Deputies President Bonnie Anderson attended the four-day convocation. On June 15, a group of Cheyenne River Sioux and others gave Anderson a new name.

Linda Thompson, who lives on the Lower Brule Sioux Indian Reservation, made these beaded elk-hide moccasins for House of Deputies President Bonnie Anderson to wear June 15 for the ceremony during which she received the Lakota name Cante Tinza Win or Strong Heart Woman.

ENS photo/Mary Frances Schjonberg

While the rest of the convocation participated in “sunset prayers” in the cafeteria, a group of about 25, including Diocese of South Dakota Bishop John Tarrant and Sioux Elder Wilbur Conquering Bear, gathered in a corner of the middle school gymnasium for the naming ceremony led by Don Metcalf, council sergeant-at-arms.

Anderson put on beaded elk-hide moccasins and stood on a patchwork quilt with her kola, or friend, the Very Rev. Ward Simpson, dean of Calvary Cathedral in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The gathering turned in the four directions as it sang the doxology in Lakota. Then Metcalf announced that Anderson would now be called Cante Tinza Win, or Strong Heart Woman.

Metcalf told ENS that he chose the name because Anderson’s position as president of the House of Deputies called for a strong heart. “And she has a strong heart for Native American people,” he added.

The ceremony, however, was incomplete due to Sioux tradition. Metcalf explained that he could not tie an eagle feather in Anderson’s hair or give her a star quilt because his uncle’s daughter had died within the year. His elder, Ed Widow, on the Cheyenne River Reservation told him that to do so within a year of the woman’s death could mean that Anderson “might get a spirit of death,” he said.

Anderson will come to the 141st Niobrara Convocation on the Lower Brule reservation in South Dakota next June to complete the ceremony.

Jefferts Schori received the Lakota name Ni-ce Olewin, Looks for the Needy, during Niobrara in 2008.

Niobrara has long history
The Niobrara Convocation, first held in 1870, is the regular gathering of Native-American Episcopalians of what was the Niobrara Missionary District. It is said that although traditionally it included no Indian ceremonials, Niobrara has served the same social function as the sacred Sun Dance, when friends and relatives came together in the summer, and was not unlike the traditional affairs held in the camp circle each summer by the various tribes.

Emma Goodhouse, of the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, beaded an Anglican Compass Rose medallion for Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori. The 16 dentalia at the bottom are scaphopod mollusk shells.

ENS photo/Mary Frances Schjonberg

Some Sioux have revived the Sun Dance, and some Niobrara participants brought Jefferts Schori to visit a nearby Sun Dance on July 15. In her sermon, she called its revival part of “a search for healing from the pain of old destruction.”

Episcopal Church involvement with the Sioux began in the mid- to late-1800s after the 1862 Dakota uprising in neighboring Minnesota that resulted in the U.S. government deporting them to reservations in South Dakota. Just after the Civil War, the federal government offered land to various Christian denominations in exchange for their complicity in its effort to force Indians to assimilate into the white settlers’ culture through the federal government’s reservations system.

The Episcopal Church helped to carry out that plan mainly east of the Missouri River. The 1871 General Convention created the Niobrara Missionary District, which included parts or all of what are now North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming and Nebraska.

Today, life on the reservations in North and South Dakota, and large off-reservation portions of both states, can be partially described in a series of grim statistics. The three counties with the nation’s highest poverty rate, and four of the top 10, are in western South Dakota, according to U.S. Census Bureau statistics reported here. Ziebach County in the Cheyenne Reservation is first at 50.1 percent. Todd County in the Rosebud Reservation and Shannon County in the Pine Ridge Reservation are ranked second and third.

Eighty percent of the people living on the Pine Ridge reservation are unemployed, according to statistics here. Life expectancy is among the lowest in the Western Hemisphere: 48 years for men and 52 for women. The infant mortality rate is five times higher than the United States national average. The rate of amputations among diabetics there is two to four times higher than the national average.

The context of the Episcopal Church’s current mission and ministry in the Dakotas was made clear during the convocation’s “ingathering” on June 16.

Very small mission churches are spread over vast expanses of land. For instance, the Cheyenne River Mission in South Dakota has 11 churches serving an area the size of Connecticut. Two have indoor plumbing. All 11 are served by one priest, the Rev. Margaret Watson, along with a deacon and licensed lay ministers.



The Niobrara Circle is a traditional ending to the convocation in which all of the participants greet each other. The 140th circle was more of a line that looped through a parking lot of the Standing Rock Community Middle School in Fort Yates, North Dakota. As part of the greeting, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori shakes hands with the Rev. Hazel Red Bird, a deacon who serves on the Cheyenne River Mission in South Dakota. ENS photo/Mary Frances Schjonberg

The ingathering is when congregation members and clergy report on their activities and challenges since the last convocation. They spoke about concerns over paying off a propane bill from last winter and thanksgivings for new church windows that latch and eliminate the wind chill associated with standing at the altar. They reported on vandalism of their buildings; congregations revitalized and others closed; young people learning Lakota by learning to sing from the Dakota hymnal; skunks taking up residence under a church and forcing out the congregation; 66 baptisms and 41 burials conducted on one mission in the last year, of the frequency of funerals (one priest buried three babies in a row and then a 14-year-old girl in the past few days); and yet another suicide.

It is uncommon for Niobrara’s mission churches to have electricity, water and indoor toilets. Many reports included information about the introduction of those three so-called “luxuries” or the continuing lack of them. For instance, representatives of the Cheyenne River Mission announced a brand new “double-seater,” and those on the Pine Ridge Mission declared it “amazing” that two of their church buildings now have indoor plumbing.



With their reports came financial contributions. Most congregations in the council are aided by the two dioceses, which are, in turn, two of the four Indian Country dioceses aided by the Episcopal Church’s triennial budget (Alaska and the Navajoland Area Mission are the other two). Yet congregation members gather money via fundraising and individual contributions to help support the activities of the men, women and youth of the Niobrara Council.

Total pledges were typically in the $100-$200 range, but some were much smaller. For instance, a newly reopened church on the Lower Brule reservation in South Dakota that was described as “sit[ing] in the middle of nowhere on a hill overlooking the Missouri River” with an average Sunday attendance of 15 pledged $20.

During a break from the in-gathering, some congregations offered handmade star quilts for auction to raise money for causes ranging from that propane bill from last winter to an effort to defray the costs of a kidney transplant needed by one of the council’s members.

The Rev. Mary Frances Schjonberg is an editor and reporter for the Episcopal News Service.

Presiding bishop’s sermon at the Niobrara Convocation
| June 18, 2012

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori preached June 17 in Ft. Yates, North Dakota, during the Niobrara Convocation, an annual meeting of the Episcopal Diocese of South Dakota.

I’ve been reading a remarkable book about the state of things in the Americas before the first Europeans arrived. It’s by Charles Mann and it’s called 1491. In one place he writes about the development of corn – south of here, in what is now Mexico. Something that looks a lot like modern corn developed very quickly about 6000 years ago[1], probably from an ancestor that looks almost nothing like it. That ancestor (teosinte) had very small hard kernels, and they didn’t stay on the stalk when they got ripe – they fell to the ground and got lost. Somebody did a bit of very focused gardening with that ancestor to produce a plant with bigger, softer seeds that stayed together on the stalk, and it seems to have happened in a very short space of time – maybe as little as ten years. In the same way that the first peoples of North America burned the plains to make better grazing, a people in Mesoamerica husbanded a new kind of grain that eventually transformed this part of the world. And not just this part of the world, for corn or maize also became a basic foodstuff in parts of Europe and Africa.

People in the highlands of Mexico put seed in the ground, went to bed and got up for several months, expecting those seeds to grow – first the stalk, then the head, then the grain – and then they went in and harvested. They kept at their selective gardening until they had a crop that was far more fruitful and looked nothing like what they started with. That’s what Jesus is talking about in this gospel. Thousands of years later, in another part of the world, Jesus told a story of transformation that is recognizable in places that didn’t hear about him for another millennium after that. The sacred hoop does include us all!

Where does the kind of trust that encourages productive gardening or breeding better horseflesh come from? Why do people keep looking or working for a result they haven’t seen yet? Samuel didn’t really seem to expect to find a king in the youngest of Jesse’s brood, particularly not a mere shepherd boy. Yet David turned out to be the high point of Israel’s earthly rulers, in spite of his yearning for Bathsheba. God continues to work remarkable results out of surprising starting material.

That is what Paul means by the confidence in new life that keeps us on the Jesus road. We keep on because we have a glimmer of what is possible. That promise gives us confidence, because we’ve already had a taste. Why do the Lakota and Dakota stay in Christian community, and keep on expecting more of it? Some of the answers to that question have to do with this very gathering – reworking what God planted here a very long time ago, partnering with the Creator, and continuing to expect more abundant fruit.

Opportunities for that reworking or re-creating come all the time – like responding to an insult with grace, or finding humor in the midst of confrontation. Sometimes those opportunities produce big changes in the culture. The winter count[2] we first saw on Friday, emerging from a barrel of shame and confinement as something to be blessed and proudly shared, is a remarkable example. I can’t imagine a more powerful way to tell the Jesus story to those who don’t know it, than in this gift offered by one who has listened well and met the creative power of the Great Spirit.

There are other surprising crops, like the sun dance that has re-emerged on the rez in a search for healing from the pain of old destruction. Don Metcalf told us about how it gave shape to the early life of the Niobrara Convocation. And as Fr. John Floberg said, there is far more congruence between the Jesus story and the story of the Lakota/Dakota/Nakota than most people have looked for. God has been drawing all of his children into deeper and more sacred relationship for a very long time. Episcopalians say that our part in God’s mission is about reconciling the world to God in Christ – and that has a great deal to do with bringing together parts of the earthly community that seem to be in conflict. We may not know exactly what the result will be, but our road, our dance, is toward that kind of healing.

Healing and more abundant life always involve some kind of death or sacrifice. Corn came from the ability to bind the seeds together on a stalk, rather than letting them scatter before harvest. New life in Christ is born of daily sacrifices. Sometimes those little deaths are as simple as thinking of another’s need before our own. They can also be dying to our own over-confidence in the face of another person’s, and inviting dialogue between us. Out of that comes a new community, a godly fellowship, and a holy people.

The friends of Jesus among the Sioux are working toward the same end as their sisters and brothers who walk a more ancient spiritual path. God can use the faithful wherever they are found, and if we’re faithful to what Jesus has given us, we will find partners to share in creating a healed world. We’re invited to have confidence that God will help greater abundance emerge, if we will plant the seeds and expect a surprising harvest.

The people at Pine Ridge are clearly hoping for something surprising when Taizé brothers and young adult Christians gather there in 2014. The Spirit is working something in that new monastic community beginning to spring up on the Rosebud reservation. God is doing a new thing in the youth work on the Standing Rock.

God calls us beloved, and makes us a new creation, each morning, in every gathering and act of prayer acknowledging the creator’s active presence. We are given seed to plant, and then meant to rise and sleep, expecting a surprising and abundant harvest. This soil has enormous promise, for those who have the confidence to expect greater fruit. We don’t know what the mature plant will look like, but we can hope that this tiny seed will produce a tree of life for all the birds – Eagles, Red Birds, Two Hawks, Noisy Hawks, and Driving Hawks[3], and maybe even some Fox, Elk, Bear, and Horse people.

The kingdom of God is coming all around us, all the time, yet it takes the patient confidence of a corn farmer to find it. Expect the children here to grow into vital contributors to the life of this community as adults. At dawn and sunset, pray that each will be given what is needed to grow and be fruitful. If we insist that the community support the lives of all its members, and realize that the hoop includes us all, there will indeed be an abundant harvest. The hoop still needs mending, for we don’t always recognize that all our relations are essential to the health of the whole, yet the Spirit is at work, in the youngest children and wisest elders. There is promise in each one, even the least likely. The web of God’s abundance binds us together like kernels on the stalk.

140 years of Niobrara gatherings are built on that kind of expectation. This convocation will continue to be transformed for centuries of healing service if the gardeners are faithful and confident, planting and partnering with the Creator of plenty. Small seeds and acts of faithfulness will mend the hoop.

Wakan tankan, bind us together in fruitfulness, to be peace in abundance for all our relations.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Ordinations and Milestones


You are invited to the ‘Aha‘aina lu‘au for Malcolm Nāea Chun on June 10th (Sunday) 2012 at St. Andrew’s Cathedral


Beginning with an ordination service at 3PM. The service will be conducted by the Rt. Rev. Robert Fitzpatrick, Bishop of Hawaii and the Rt. Rev. Dr. Mark MacDonald, the Indigenous Bishop of Canada will be preaching. There will be Eucharist (Holy Communion).


The ‘aha‘aina lu‘au follows to celebrate his ordination and doctorate in Indigenous Studies from Te Whare nui ā Awanuiarangi, New Zealand, at the Von Holt Room.

Parking is on the grounds of St. Andrew’s and in the immediate area. There is limited number of handicapped spaces.

Please no leis, instead several of Malcolm’s books (The History of Kanalu, Hawaiian Medicine Vol. III, The History of the Licensing of Kahuna, Kuni Ola, & No Na Mamo), will be for sale at special prices. Buy a book for yourself; for a gift, or donate it to a library. Cash or check.


The ‘Aha‘aina lu‘au



Although someone has noticed that the rubrics in the Book of Common Prayer and the Church canons do not prescribe a meal after the service, we believe in the word of Jesus in the Gospels of Matthew and Mark:

“But Jesus wasn’t finished with them. He called his disciples and said, ‘I hurt for these people. For three days now they've been with me, and now they have nothing to eat. I can’t send them away without a meal—they'd probably collapse on the road.’ ” Matthew 15:32

“At about this same time he again found himself with a hungry crowd on his hands. He called his disciples together and said, “This crowd is breaking my heart. They have stuck with me for three days, and now they have nothing to eat. If I send them home hungry, they’ll faint along the way—some of them have come a long distance.’ ” Mark 8:1-3

Hawaiian and local culture is attuned to the Gospels so that we offer hospitality. So, please come and join to celebrate these life achievements. The offering collected during the service will be used to help defer the cost of the ‘aha‘aina lu‘au.








Historic Ordinations at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church, Fairbanks, Alaska



This Sunday, May 27, 2012, The Rt. Rev. Mark Lattime, Episcopal Bishop of Alaska, will ordain to the Priesthood Bella Jean Savino and Shirley Lee. The Ordination Service, part of an all-day Pentecost celebration marks a historic occasion, celebrating and continuing the tradition of Native ministry within the church. It is believed that Lee will become the first Inupiaq female and Savino will be the second Gwitch’in female to be ordained to the Priesthood within the worldwide Anglican Communion. Both have ancestral family ties to earlier ordained Alaskan Native leadership. Both are currently associated with St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church.

52 year old Lee, whose traditional name is “Bunnikjoruk”, was born in Fairbanks, raised in Fairbanks and Bettles Field/Evansville. In addition to the Interior of Alaska her family roots also trace back to Noorvik and the Arctic Coast. Lee is a wife, mother of 6, grandmother of 7 and has studied at the University of Alaska the Antioch School of Law and the Vancouver Anglican School of Theology. A former Executive Director of the Fairbanks Native Association and Vice President of the Tanana Chiefs Conference, she is currently Director of the Tanana Chiefs Conference innovative “Housing First” program. Shirley was ordained a deacon in 2010.

Savino, who is 66 years old, was born on the banks of the Porcupine River in Northeastern Alaska, raised in Arctic Village and Fort Yukon. She is a wife, mother of 2 and grandmother of 6. Savino is retired from the Chief Andrew Isaac Alaska Native Health Center in Fairbanks and also has lived and worked on the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming with the Shoshoni and Arapaho tribes. Currently Savino provides ministry for those who are homebound and also for Denali Center Nursing Home, Fairbanks, Alaska. Bella Jean was ordained a deacon in 2002.

The ordination service begins at 3:00pm with overflow seating and closed circuit television viewing in the Parish Hall. A Covered Dish, with traditional foods, music and dancing will follow the service and be held on the Church Lawn.


General Convention Events

Join us for Worship at General Convention -

On Monday, July 9th at 9:30 AM a gathering of Native people will lead worship. Come and experience the many voices, tongues and songs of our many people as we worship in this great gathering.

Join us for Worship at General Convention



Monday, July 9, 7-10pm New Community Festival

Hosted by the Diversity, Social and Environmental Ministries Team
Monument Circle









Tuesday, July 10, 7–10pm Doctrine of Discovery Lament
JW Marriott Ballroom


Featuring the Red Leaf drum from the Rosebud Sioux Tribe
Sponsored by the Office of Indigenous Ministry, the Office of Lifelong Christian Formation,
and the Office of Social and Economic Justice

In 2009, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church made an unprecedented decision to repudiate the Doctrine of Discovery. In passing general convention resolution D035, the church has made a public commitment to all Indigenous Peoples for all Episcopalians to seek a greater understanding of Indigenous Peoples.

The doctrine is a painful example of where the church has been in error, and amiss, and how these errors contribute to contemporary social and economic issues. The lament is an invitation to enter into a process of communal spiritual and behavioral transformational conversions. Healing and hope are incarnate in the relationships among all people who live out God’s call to action; to be communities of transformation seeking to heal a broken and wounded world.



O Great Spirit, God of every people and every tribe, we come to you as your many children,
to ask for your forgiveness and guidance.
Forgive us for the colonialism that stains our past, the ignorance that allowed us to think
that we could claim another’s home for our own.
Heal us of this history. Remind us that none of us were discovered since none of us were
lost, but that we are all gathered within the sacred circle of your community.
Guide us through your wisdom to restore the truth of our heritage.
Help us to confront the racism that divides us as we confess the pain it has
caused to the human family.
Call us to kinship. Mend the hoop of our hearts and let us live in justice and peace,
through Jesus Christ, the One who came that all people might live in dignity. Amen

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

We Mourn the Loss of a Great Maori Leader and Friend

Tears and laughter for Hone Kaa
From the Anglican Communion News Service April 4, 2012



Prayers, waiata, whaikorero, tears, and occasional laughter filled Holy Sepulchre Church on the first evening of the tangi for the Ven Dr Hone Kaa.

He died in Auckland Hospital on Thursday night following a short battle with cancer. He was 70.

At the foot of the sanctuary steps family gathered round Hone as his ministry, and the man, were remembered in the church to which he introduced experimental liturgy and new waiata.

The Rt Rev Kito Pikaahu, Bishop of Tai Tokerau, acknowledged the contribution the Kaa family has made to the Anglican Church with a long lineage of priests. He also spoke of the skills Hone brought as a liturgist to worship in the place he now lay to be farewelled.

Gathered in the church to support the Kaa whanau were past and present colleagues in ministry with Hone.

Students he had mentored led the service of Evening Prayer. They recalled a shepherd who had left a legacy for others to follow with the starting premise that all are made in the image of God.

Earlier that day, a contingent of Auckland priests had been welcomed to Holy Sepulchre as they recognised Hone's contribution to the diocese.

A Requiem Mass will be held at Holy Sepulchre at 5pm on Saturday evening. On Sunday morning his body will be taken to Hinepare Marae at Rangitukia, East Cape.

Hone will be buried at Okaroro urupa following his funeral on Tuesday.

Church leaders' tributes

The Most Rev Brown Turei says there is a great deal to give thanks for in terms of the ministry that Hone offered to church and society.

Archbishop Brown also acknowledges the skills in liturgy that Hone brought to the church, and describes Hone as a radical who raised the issues and challenged the church and Maoridom.

He has asked for the Province to remember the Kaa whanau in prayer and to give thanks for Hone’s ministry.

The Rt. Rev John Bluck, former Bishop of Waiapu, was an ordinand with Hone in 1961 for the Waiapu Diocese. Bishop John says Hone lived in turbulence as fish live in water.

The last book he helped John Bluck to name is entitled ‘Wai Karekare, Turbulent Waters’, and tells the story of the Anglican struggle to be a bicultural church.

Bishop John says: ”Hone lived his life as a lightning rod and a shock absorber for the tensions and contradictions of our bicultural society. He saw his vocation as a priest to live in the middle of this energy that is chaotic as often as it is creative.”

Over 50 years Hone Kaa had an extensive career including parish ministry, broadcasting, local and international activism, teaching and child advocacy. Bishop John says this career wove around his life as a priest nurturing the faith of local congregations around Auckland and further north.

“Hone responded to every challenge and gave of himself, often to the point of exhaustion. He was often outraged and angry with the injustice he saw. But just as often he was gracious and very funny,” says Bishop John.

In spite of deteriorating health, Hone attended the recent High Court trial of the 'Urewera Four' to show his on-going commitment to social justice.

Article from AnglicanTaonga by Jayson Rhodes

Lavan Martin passes away

Lavan Martin passes away



Lavan Martin would have liked the American flags flying. He would have liked the Patriot Guard escort, and he would have appreciated the full military honors.

Martin, known to some as Lavan and to others as Lee, was a patriot, a veteran, a family man, a proud Poarch Creek Indian, and devout member of St. Anna’s Episcopal Church. He passed away Friday, April 13. His funeral was held at Petty Funeral Home. He was escorted to Steadham Cemetery by Patriot Guard Riders with flags flying. The front of the hearse bore an American flag and a U.S. Army flag. He served 22 years in the Army.

Martin, was commander of VFW Post 7016 in Atmore for a number of years. He worked tirelessly for the cause of veterans and was especially instrumental in making sure veterans were in the schools. His desire was that students not forget where their freedom came from – and at what cost. Martin gave the word veteran a face for kids to see.



The following was written by him family:

“He served as Chapter commander of the Disabled American Veterans (DAV) and a post member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) in Charleston, SC. He was instrumental in establishing the VFW Post in Atmore where he was Commander for 16 years. He was a proud member of the American Legion and the DAV.

“It mattered not to which veteran organization he belonged, he was always ready, willing and able to assist veterans and citizens. He spearheaded in bringing to Escambia County High School a Junior Navy ROTC unit, and the resurrection of veteran activities in Atmore.

“When he came back to Atmore, he resumed his commitment to St Anna’s where he was Senior Warden for many years. St Anna’s flourished under his care, guidance and generosity. He absolutely loved his church. He also dearly loved the place he was born and raised, his family and friends. As a Creek Indian he loved the Poarch Creek Indians who have struggled so long and hard to be first class citizens in what was once a segregated society. He was equally dedicated to his family, community citizens and to his church parishioners.” by Sherry Digmon April 18th, 2012

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Pastoral Letter from the Presiding Bishop concerning the Doctrine of Discovery

Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori issues pastoral letter on the Doctrine of Discovery and Indigenous Peoples


The Episcopal Church
Office of Public Affairs
“Our Christian heritage has taught us that a healed community of peace is only possible in the presence of justice for all peoples.”
May 16, 2012 (All day)

“We seek to address the need for healing in all parts of society, and we stand in solidarity with indigenous peoples globally to acknowledge and address the legacy of colonial occupation and policies of domination,” Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori states in her Pastoral Letter on the Doctrine of Discovery and Indigenous Peoples.

She continues, “Our Christian heritage has taught us that a healed community of peace is only possible in the presence of justice for all peoples. We seek to build such a beloved community that can be a sacred household for all creation, a society of right relationships.”

On May 7, Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori joined other religious voices in repudiating the Doctrine of Discovery at the 11th session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII). The theme for the UNPFII meeting is “The Doctrine of Discovery: its enduring impact on indigenous peoples and the right to redress for past conquests (articles 28 and 37 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples).” In 2009, General Convention repudiated the Doctrine of Discovery.



The Presiding Bishop’s letter, issued on May 16, is presented here:



Pastoral Letter on the Doctrine of Discovery and Indigenous Peoples



Then God said, “Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the wild animals of the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth.”


The first biblical creation story tells of the creation of earth, sky, waters, creatures, and gives human beings dominion over the rest. God pronounces what has been created good. At the end of the original week of creation, with the advent of human beings, God blesses all of it, and pronounces the work very good.

The second creation story tells of what goes wrong – the first two earth creatures eat what they have been forbidden to eat, and are then expelled from the garden. They have misunderstood what it means to exercise dominion toward life in the garden. Through the millennia, many of their offspring have continued to misunderstand dominion, or to willfully twist the divine intent of dominion toward the conceit of domination. Through the ages, human beings have too often insisted that what exists has been made for their individual use, and that force may be used against anyone who seems to compete for a particular created resource. The result has been enormous destruction, death, despair, and downright evil – what is more commonly called “sin.”

The blessings of creation are meant to be stewarded, in the way of husbanding and housekeeping, for the true meaning of dominion is tied to the constellation of meanings around house and household. There have been strands of the biblical tradition which have kept this sacred understanding alive, but the unholy quest for domination has sought to quench it, in favor of wanton accumulation and exclusive possession of the goods of creation for an individual or a small part of the blessed family of God.

After that eviction from the primordial garden, the biblical stories are mostly about how human communities strive to return to a homeland that will be a source of blessing for the community. Through the long centuries, the prophetic understanding of that community broadens to include all the nations of the earth. Even so, the seemingly eternal struggle between dominators and stewards has continued to the present day.

Most of the passages in the Bible that talk about land are yearning for a fertile place, where people are able to grow crops, tend flocks, and live in peace. The offspring of those first human beings gave rise to peoples who hungered for land, and many of them did a great deal of violence through the ages in order to occupy and possess it. They weren’t alone, for the empires of Alexander, Rome, and Genghis Khan were also the result of amassing conquered territory. The Christian empires of Europe were consumed with battles over land for centuries, and eventually sent military expeditions across the Mediterranean in a quest to re-establish a Christian claim on what they called the Holy Land.

The explorers who set out from Christian Europe in the 15th century went with even broader motivations, in search of riches and abundantly fertile lands. They also went with religious warrants, papal bulls which permitted and even encouraged the subjugation and permanent enslavement of any non-Christian peoples they encountered, as well as the expropriation of any territories not governed by Christians. Western Christian religious authorities settled competitions over these conquests by dividing up the geography that could be claimed among the various European nations.

These religious warrants led to the wholesale slaughter, rape, and enslavement of indigenous peoples in the Americas, as well as in Africa, Asia, and the islands of the Pacific, and the African slave trade was based on these same principles. Death, dispossession, and enslavement were followed by rapid depopulation as a result of introduced and epidemic disease. Yet death and dispossession of lands and resources were not a singular occurrence that can be laid up to the depredations of benighted medieval warriors. They are not akin to Viking raids in the British Isles, or ancient struggles between neighboring tribes in Europe or Africa. These acts of “Discovery” have had persistent effects on marginalized, transported, and disenfranchised peoples.

The ongoing dispossession of indigenous peoples is the result of legal systems throughout the “developed” world that continue to base land ownership on these religious warrants for colonial occupation from half a millennium ago. These legal bases collectively known as the Doctrine of Discovery underlie U.S. decisions about who owns these lands. The dispossession of First Peoples continues to wreak havoc on basic human dignity. These principles give the lie to biblical understandings that all human beings reflect the image of God, for those who have been thrown out of their homeland, had their cultures largely erased, and sent into exile, are still grieving their loss of identity, lifeways, and territory. All humanity should be grieving, for our sisters and brothers are suffering the injustice of generations. The sins of our forebears are being visited on the children of indigenous peoples, even to the seventh generation.

There will be no peace or healing until we attend to that injustice. The prophets of ancient Israel cried out for justice when their ability to live in the land they saw as home was threatened. A day laborer named Amos challenged those around him with the word of God, “Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an everflowing stream”. Where there is no justice, there can be no peace for anyone.

In the North American context, the poorest of the poor live on Native reservations. The depth of poverty there is closely followed by the poverty among ghettoized descendants of the indigenous peoples of Africa who were transported to these shores as slaves. That kind of poverty is also frequent in other parts of the world where indigenous people have been dispossessed and displaced. Healing is not possible, it is not even imaginable, until the truth is told and current reality confronted. The basic dignity and human rights of first peoples have been repeatedly transgressed, and the outcome is grievous – poverty, cultural destruction, and multi-generational consequences. The legacy of grief that continues unresolved is visible in skyrocketing suicide rates, rampant hopelessness, and deep anger. In many contexts it amounts to pathological or impacted grief – for when hope is absent, healing is impossible.

The legacy of domination includes frightful evil – the intentional destruction of food sources and cultural centers like the herds of North American bison, the intentional introduction of disease and poisoning of water sources, wanton disregard of starvation and illness, the abuse and enslavement of women and children, the murder of those with the courage to protest inhumane treatment, the repeated dispossession of natural resources, land, and water, as well as chronically inadequate Federal management and defense of Native rights and resources.

There have been some glimmers of justice in decisions that have returned Native fishing and hunting rights, and some improvements in tribal rights to self-determination. There is a very small and slow return of bison to the prairie, and wolves have begun to return in places where they are not immediately hunted down. Yet many of these recoveries continue to be strenuously resisted by powerful non-Native commercial interests.

There are signs of hope in returning cultural treasures to their communities of origin, and the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act is returning remains for dignified burial. The legacy of cultural genocide is slowly being addressed as indigenous traditions, languages, and cultural skills are taught to new generations.

The Episcopal Church has been present and ministering with Native peoples in North America for several centuries. That history of accompaniment and solidarity has hardly been perfect, yet we continue to seek greater justice and deeper healing.

The Episcopal Church’s relationship with Native peoples in the Americas begins with the first English colonists. We remember the story of Manteo, a Croatan of what is now North Carolina. He traveled to England in 1584 and helped a colleague of Sir Walter Raleigh learn to speak Algonquin. He returned here the next year, became something of an ambassador between the two peoples, was baptized, and is counted a saint of this church.

Episcopal missionaries have served in a variety of indigenous communities and contexts. Henry Benjamin Whipple was Bishop of Minnesota in 1862, and his powerful petition to Abraham Lincoln saved the lives of some 265 of the Dakota men sentenced to hang the day after Christmas in Mankato. The Dakota people called him “Straight Tongue.” Today many Dakota and Lakota people are part of this Episcopal tradition.

This Church has stood in solidarity with native peoples in Alaska, Hawai’i, and the American southwest, especially the Diné (Navajo), as well as in urban Indian communities. The Poarch Band of Creek Indians (in Alabama) achieved federal recognition in the 1980s with the aid of baptismal records maintained by this Church, which also assisted in returning a piece of land to the Poarch Band. A large group of indigenous people in Ecuador is seeking recognition as worshiping communities in the Episcopal tradition, and we have other indigenous members and communities in Colombia, Venezuela, Honduras, and Micronesia. Our historical presence in the Philippines began with the indigenous Igorot peoples of the mountains and highlands.

Healing work continues across The Episcopal Church. In 1997 Presiding Bishop Edmond Browning apologized for the enormities that began with the colony in Jamestown. Today our understanding of mission has changed. We believe that God’s mission is about healing brokenness in the world around us – broken relationships between human beings and the Creator, broken relationships between peoples, and damaged relationships between human beings and the rest of creation. We seek to partner in God’s mission through proclaiming a vision of a healed world; forming Christians as partners in that mission; responding to human suffering around us; reversing structural and systemic injustice; and caring for this earthly garden. We partner with any and all who share a common vision for healing, whether Episcopalian or Christian or not.

Work with indigenous peoples in recent years has been intensely focused on issues of poverty and the generational consequences of cultural destruction, the reality of food deserts and diabetes rates on reservations, unemployment and inadequate educational resources, as well as the ongoing reality of racism and exclusion in the larger society. Mission and development work in Native communities is locally directed, honoring the gifts and assets already present, and moves toward a vision of healed community. We partner with White Bison in community organizing that develops training programs for community healing. This is a historic development, the first such partnership between a traditional Native American non-profit and The Episcopal Church.

This Church has worked to alleviate systemic and structural injustice in many ways, and our repudiation of the Doctrine of Discovery in 2009 is a recent example. Since at least 1976, our advocacy work has included support for First Nations land claims in Canada, advocacy with the U.S. government for improved health care, religious freedom, preservation of burial sites and repatriation of remains and cultural resources, increased Federal tribal recognition, and critical Federal Government self-examination around Native American rights. We have affirmed and reaffirmed our desire to strengthen relationships with Native peoples by remembering the past, recognizing the deficits and gifts in our historic and current relationships, and continued work toward healing. We are currently advocating for the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act, with provisions directly affecting Native women.

The Doctrine of Discovery work of this Church is focused on education, dismantling the structures and policies based on that ancient evil, support for the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and challenging governments around the world to support self-determination for indigenous peoples.

We seek to address the need for healing in all parts of society, and we stand in solidarity with indigenous peoples globally to acknowledge and address the legacy of colonial occupation and policies of domination. Our Christian heritage has taught us that a healed community of peace is only possible in the presence of justice for all peoples. We seek to build such a beloved community that can be a sacred household for all creation, a society of right relationships.

But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For he is our peace; in his flesh he has made both groups into one and has broken down the dividing wall, that is, the hostility between us… and might reconcile both groups to God in one body through the cross, thus putting to death that hostility through it. So he came and proclaimed peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near… So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God.

We pray that God will give us the strength and courage to do this work together for the good of all our relations, in the belief that Christ Jesus ends hostility and brings together those who were once divided.



The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori

Presiding Bishop and Primate

The Episcopal Church



The Doctrine of Discovery: The International Law of Colonialism
Conference Room Paper
11th Session of the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
7-18 May 2012
Presented by: Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon, Oren Lyons Faithkeeper Turtle Clan Onondaga Nation Haudenosaunee, Dr. Wilton Littlechild, Suzan Shown Harjo, Chief Glenna Wallace, Chair Cheryle Kennedy, Arizona Sen. Jack Jackson, Jr., Arizona Rep. Albert "Ahbihay" Hale, Prof. Philip Arnold (Syracuse Univ.), Larissa Behrendt, Walter Echo-Hawk, Joe Finkbonner MHA, The Grail, Indigenous World Association, International Movement for Fraternal Union Among Races and Peoples, Lisa Lesage ABA Legal Education Advisor Turkey, Prof. Mary MacDonald (LeMoyne College), Nichole Maher MPH, Prof. Robert Miller (Lewis & Clark Law School), The Morning Star Institute, Native American Youth and Family Center, Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board, Prof. Jacinta Ruru (Univ. of Otago), Tony Simpson, Suriname Indigenous Health Fund, Tonatierra, Tribal Leadership Forum, United Confederation of Taino People.

On January 8, 1455, Pope Nicholas V issued the bull Romanus Pontifex to King Alfonso of Portugal and ordered him in regards Africa:

“to invade, search out, capture, vanquish, and subdue all Saracens [Muslims] and pagans whatsoever, and other enemies of Christ wheresoever placed, and the kingdoms, dukedoms, principalities, dominions, possessions, and all movable and immovable goods whatsoever held and possessed by them and to reduce their persons to perpetual slavery, and to apply and appropriate to himself and his successors the kingdoms, dukedoms, counties, principalities, dominions, possessions, and goods, and to convert them to his … use and profit . . . [and to] possess, these islands, lands, harbors, and seas, and they do of right belong and pertain to the said King Alfonso and his successors ….”1
The international law that authorized and regulated six hundred years of European colonization of much of the world is known today as the Doctrine of Discovery. Beginning with the Crusades to the Holy Lands in 1096-1271, European countries and the Christian church began developing law to justify their alleged rights to dominate and colonize non-Christian nations.2 Specifically, Portugal and Spain contributed to the development of this law in the early-1400s in their disputes over islands off the Iberian peninsula and the coast of Africa.

The Church got involved and issued papal bulls that claimed to grant Portugal sovereignty and jurisdiction over Indigenous Peoples, and ownership of the islands and the lands in Africa that Portugal claimed to have “discovered.” Additional papal bulls in 1493 purported to grant Spain and Portugal legal rights to colonize and exploit the entire world. Thereafter, Spain and Portugal applied the Doctrine of Discovery in Africa and the Americas, and later England, France, Holland, Russia, and Spain used this international law to claim rights in North America. Spain, Portugal, England, Holland, and France also used the Doctrine to claim rights over Indigenous Peoples and their lands and assets in Asia, the Pacific, and Oceania. The colonial, settler societies that resulted from the European colonization of much of the world continue to apply the Doctrine of Discovery against Indigenous Nations today.

In 1885, thirteen European countries signed a treaty in which they agreed to partition enormous areas of Africa based on several of the elements of the Doctrine.10 The seven European countries that primarily colonized Africa justified their colonial systems and the theft of lands, assets, and human rights on the elements of the international law of Discovery.11 For example, European countries signed countless treaties with African nations that, while recognizing African sovereignty and governments to some extent, actually limited African self-determination and self-

governance and exploited the peoples, lands, and resources.12 European countries enacted numerous laws and created colonial administrations to govern and exploit Africa, and European and colonial judicial systems had to resolve many issues about the ownership of Indigenous rights, lands, and resources in Africa.

Scandinavian countries also applied the elements of Discovery against the Sami peoples to attempt to limit Sami rights of self-determination and ownership of their traditional lands and property rights. Preliminary research establishes that court cases from Sweden,and Norway, and historical materials show that the governments of Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Russia have infringed on Sami human rights and land and property rights. The Sami continue to struggle to assert their rights today.

Clearly, all Indigenous Peoples need to understand how the international law of colonialism was developed; how it was used to denigrate them as human beings and then was used to steal their lands, assets, and rights; and how it has impacted them from the onset of colonization right up to 2012.

A study of the Doctrine of Discovery and its application around the world is facilitated by defining the constituent elements that make up the Doctrine. These elements are well defined in the leading court case on Discovery; the U.S. Supreme Court case of Johnson v. M’Intosh, U.S. (8 Wheat.) 543 (1823). The Johnson case has been very influential in defining Discovery and in deciding issues regarding colonization and the rights of Indigenous Nations. The case has been cited hundreds of times by courts in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United States, and by the English Privy Council in cases about colonization in Africa and Canada.

These elements are reflected, to varying degrees, in the laws, treaties, court cases, policies, and histories of all the European colonial countries and in the settler societies they established around the world. The ten elements that constitute the Doctrine are very useful in analyzing and comparing how settler societies used this international law against Indigenous Nations and Peoples.

1. First discovery.
The first European country that discovered lands unknown to other Europeans claimed property and sovereign rights over the lands and Indigenous Peoples. A first discovery, however, was usually considered to create only an incomplete title to those lands.

2.Actual occupancy and possession.
To turn a “first discovery” into a full title recognized by other Europeans, a European country had to actually occupy and possess the lands it claimed to have discovered. Occupancy was usually proved by building forts or settlements. Physical possession had to be accomplished within a reasonable amount of time after a “first discovery” to create a complete title.

3. Preemption/European title.
European countries that claimed a “first discovery” also purported to have acquired the power of preemption, that is, the sole right to buy the lands of Indigenous Peoples. This is a valuable property right analogous to an exclusive option to purchase land. The European government that claimed the preemption right could prevent or preempt any other European government or individual from buying land from native peoples. Most settler societies still claim this property right over Indigenous Nations and Peoples today.

4. Indigenous/Native title.
After a “first discovery,” European legal systems claimed that Indigenous Peoples and Nations had automatically lost the full ownership of their lands. Europeans claimed that Indigenous Nations only retained the rights to occupy and use their lands. These rights could last indefinitely, however, if the Indigenous Peoples never consented to sell land to the European country that claimed the preemption right. But if Indigenous Nations did choose to sell, they were expected to sell only to the European government that purported to hold the preemption right.

5. Limited Indigenous sovereign and commercial rights.
After a “first discovery,” Europeans claimed that Indigenous Nations and Peoples lost various aspects of their inherent sovereignty and their rights to international trade and diplomacy. Europeans claimed that Indigenous Nations could only interact with the European government that “discovered” them.

6. Contiguity. Europeans claimed a significant amount of land contiguous to and surrounding their actual discoveries and colonial settlements. Contiguity provided, for example, that the discovery of the mouth of a river allegedly granted the European country a claim over all the lands drained by that river.

7. Terra nullius.
This phrase means a land or earth that is null, void, or empty. Under Discovery, if lands were not occupied by any person or nation, or even if they were occupied but were not being used in a manner that European legal systems approved, then the lands were purported to be “empty” and available for Discovery claims. Europeans often considered lands that were actually owned, occupied, and being used by Indigenous Nations to be “vacant” and “empty” and available to claim.

8. Christianity.
Religion was a very significant aspect of the Doctrine. Christians claimed that non-Christian peoples did not have the same rights to land, sovereignty, and self-determination as Christians.Furthermore, Europeans claimed they had a right and duty to convert non-Christians.

9. Civilization.
The European “model” of “civilization” included the idea that Europeans were superior to Indigenous Peoples and their civilizations. European countries claimed that the Christian God had directed them to bring “civilization” to Indigenous Peoples and to exercise paternalism and guardianship powers over them.

10. Conquest.
Europeans claimed they could acquire, through military victories, the absolute title and ownership of the lands of Indigenous Nations. By analogy, “conquest” was also used as a term of art to describe the property and sovereignty rights Europeans purported to acquire automatically over Indigenous Nations and Peoples just by claiming to make a “first discovery.”

Various forms and permutations of the above elements are present in the histories and modern-day laws and policies of all colonizing countries and the colonial, settler societies they established. These elements were used, and are still being used, to try to justify claims to limit the sovereignty, property, and human rights of Indigenous Nations and Peoples. We support the continuing efforts of Indigenous Peoples to oppose the very existence of the Doctrine of Discovery and to repeal its pernicious effects.

Suggested actions to begin eliminating the Doctrine of

We ask the Permanent Forum to adopt these initial steps to begin the process of repudiating and reversing the six hundred year old Doctrine of Discovery.

1. To adopt the Haudenosaunee, American Indian Law Alliance, and the Indigenous Law Institute conference room paper request for the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues to convene an Expert Group Meeting to create an international study of the Doctrine of Discovery and its effects on Indigenous Peoples, and to submit that study, along with recommendations, to the Permanent Forum in 2014.

2. To advocate that all states of the world adopt the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as binding national law.

3. To advocate that all states review their laws, regulations, and policies impacting Indigenous Peoples and to repeal laws, regulations, and policies which reflect the ethnocentric, feudal, and religious prejudices of the Doctrine of Discovery. Furthermore, states should undertake these reviews in full consultation with Indigenous Nations and Peoples and with their free, prior, and informed consent.

4. To call on all states to educate their citizens in school curricula and by other means about the true and complete history of colonization and the application of the international law Doctrine of Discovery.

5. To call on all churches to join with Indigenous Peoples in repudiating the Doctrine of Discovery and any role churches may have played in creating the Doctrine and in applying it against Indigenous Nations and Peoples. We recognize that several churches and church organizations have already done so: the Episcopal Church in 2009, the Anglican Church of Canada in 2010, and the World Council of Churches in 2012. We ask other churches to follow their lead.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

140th Niobrara Convocation

140th Niobrara Convocation
Standing Rock - North Dakota
June 14-17, 2012




The 140th Niobrara Convocation will be coming to Standing Rock-North Dakota! This years event will be hosted by both Standing Rock-ND and the North Dakota Council on Indian Ministrie(NDCIM). This Convocation some of the vistors include: Katherine Jefferts-Schori (Presiding Bishop), Bonnie Anderson (President of the House of Deputies), The Episcopal Church Archives, and many more! We hope that you can join us in this great event as we look forward to having you here on Standing Rock!



The following link provides great information and the following history -http://www.fusion4-standingrock.com/#!__140-niobrara-convocation

History of Niobrara



The first Niobrara Convocation was held in 1870 and except for few interruptions, this summer gathering has been held annually at different venues on the nine South Dakota Indian Reservations. The character of Niobrara Convocation is described by Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve, an award winning author, daughter of a Lakota priest and mother of another:

The Niobrara Convocation, although it has no Indian ceremonials with it, has served the same social function as the old Sun Dance, when friends and relatives came together in the summer from all directions. The convocation custom of the Indians from the different reservations camping together was not unlike the traditional affairs held in the camp circle each summer by the various tribes.

Several presiding bishops and one president of the United States – Calvin Coolidge in 1927 – have attended Niobrara Convocations. Twenty-one hundred were present in 1987 at Rosebud Reservation when Edmond Browning was a guest. As many as 4,000 came by buckboard and model-T in 1920. An old priest told of a thousand tents dotting the hillside at the Church of Our Most Merciful Savior on the Santee Reservation near the hamlet of Santee, Nebraska.

Niobrara is the name of a small river in northeast Nebraska. Niobrara was also once the name of an Episcopal diocese which had no geo-graphical boundaries but had jurisdictional oversight of the Great Sioux Nation and thereby oversight of all Lakota/Dakota peoples of the high plains. And, Niobrara is the name of one of the Reservations of the Diocese of South Dakota, although, in fact, it’s located in Nebraska.

It was to the valley of the Niobrara River that the Santee Sioux were banished following the “Minnesota uprising” of 1862. After years of government treachery and deceit, the Santee people rose up and broke free of the Minnesota Valley reservation. Many lives were lost, and despite the fact that Santee Christians saved the lives of missionaries and some settlers, all of the surviving Indians were imprisoned and later expelled to the Dakota Territory. Thirty eight were hanged, virtually without trial and no interpreters, at Mankato, Minnesota.

A stalwart Episcopal missionary, the Rev. Samuel D. Hinman, accompanied the Santee on the wretched exodus, and within a few years almost all of the Dakotas had become Episcopalian, and today approximately half of the 12,000 baptized Episcopalians in South Dakota are either Dakota or Lakota Sioux.

In the late 1800s—when the buffalo was gone, the Indian wars over and Reservation scheme in place—the U.S. government assigned various churches oversight of Indian tribes. The Episcopal Church was assigned the “the Great Sioux Nation.” At one time 28 Episcopal chapels dotted the Pine Ridge, the largest of the South Dakota reservations and home of the Oglala Lakota. The Black Hills, sacred to several tribes, were within the boundaries of Pine Ridge Reservation. The boundary was short lived. In violation of the Fort Laramie Treaty that forbade Anglo presence, George Armstrong Custer led an expedition into the Black Hills in 1874 and discovered gold. A hundred-plus years later the U.S. Supreme Court ruled seizure of the Black Hills to have been illegal and in uncommonly terse language the Court stressed:
. . . a more ripe and rank case of dishonorable dealing will never, in all probability, be found in our history.

The Court recommended compensation for the land; the Congress appropriated $17-million which is sitting somewhere, drawing interest. The tribes emphatically stated that they wanted the land back not the money. To this day, the issue is unresolved.

The Episcopal Church is on record in support of returning the land to the tribes. However, the Diocese of South Dakota owns a camp in the Black Hills, and it is there that the 139th Niobrara Convocation took place. This year the 140th Niobrara Convocation will take place on Standing Rock - North Dakota, where it will be the first time being held hel in ND. from the Fusion Standing Rock Website