Somos las Hijas de la Madre Tierra, la Yuka y el Zemi Bendecida por el abuelo Guei (Sol) nazidas del vientre de Atabeira Itibakahubaba nuestra madre Tierra.Explore nuestro mundo. Bienvenidas/dos a nuestro ciberespacio disfruten del viaje. Antes de salir, visite nuestras páginas, consulte nuestros enlaces e inicie sesión para seguirnos. Por último, nos encantaría saber de ti. Que tengas un momento maravilloso.
Showing posts with label Carib People. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carib People. Show all posts

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Full Moon of the Spectral Serpent




We are now within Moon 11 on the Spiral of the 13-Moon Year: The Moon of the Spectral Serpent.
Bibi Maroya at this time invites you to crawl out of your skin and use snake wisdom to release and let go of old and useless thoughts, habits and ways. Leave behind the old and release yourself as well from an allegiance to formats that diminish your ability to grow spiritually.
In the wisdom of our ancestors passed on from generation to generation the Serpent the Boa symbolizes death and rebirth.
Bibi Maroya in this her number 11th cycle  with her spectral serpent dress  once again helps us with her lite to seek the Light within ourselves .

Seneko kakona Many Blessing to all of you
Bibi Inaru 


Source for image

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Our Nani Taino contestant at Miss Indian World, Gathering of Nations Pow Wow



I watched the entire Gathering of Nations Pow Wow live on the web. When it started, I looked for Nani our Taino Miss Indian World contestant during the Grand Entry. I got excited when I saw her. I called out to my neighbor, my dog, and even my Mom who at 97 sometimes tunes in.” There she is I said as if I was talking to a crowd…J  there is our Nani :) Gee, it felt so good to see her.There she was a young Taino woman representing her small community, and her cultural heritage with pride. Joanne Nani Morales dressed from head to toe in total Taino regalia and a spectacler smile gracing her face.

So with a bag of popcorn in my hand, I silenced the ringer on my phone and I joined the Pow Wow…via my desktop and am I ever so glad I did for there were so many moments that were enjoyable in spite of the distance...it was after all a live webcast …and there is a huge difference between that and being actually present in the pit.

During the Honoring of native veterans, the sound of native drums embraced the Pow wow floor
There were many Honoring songs of respect,echoing the sentiment of pride we all feel for our native Military
In history natives have valiantly served or have served in the defense of our Homelands and nations.
As the mother of a young soldier who has served in Iraq and the Aunty of a nephew who recently returned 
from Afghanistan, I know how meaningful these tributes can be for native families. 
Gathering of nations Pow Wow never forgets our military. It was good to see and to feel the spirit of this
event even via the web. This was indeed an awesome moment.

Then there were the little ones, watching these tiny tots dance filled my heart with smiles. Moreover, it is ever so sweet to see the future of native nations dancing before your eyes,to boot they are just adorable to see. All of them are just darn cuteJ.Lots of grandma’s and grandpa's were soaking up the joy of watching the little ones dance.

I also enjoyed tremendously the elders dancing competition.These beautiful elders are the backbone of native communities. They reminded me of the courage love and respect it takes to live our native cultures in today’s world. When we give thought to the fact that native communities  are still subject  to the violation of our rights as a people…these elders some well into their 70’s  make us all  feel  nothing but absolute respect for them and the strength of their native  spirits. I can only hope that some of us as elders today guided by spirit can  pass on to the younger generations the teachings, morals and principles of our native ways with the same love our ancestors had for each other..

The entertainment, the dancing feet of native people along with the wacky jokes by the MCS made for several days of Pow wow fun via the web minus the food :) but one can always munch on Popcorn.

On Saturday I looked forward to the Miss Indian World pageant...
Unlike the frivolous nature of the more commercial cutthroat type of pageants, Miss Indian world is an honoring of the diversity and beauty of our native cultures. Each one of the contestants represents the heart and the spirit of her people and Indian country as a whole…it does not get better than that.
I love this pageant as it gives our young women the opportunity to express their pride in being native women. 

In the short time these young women spend as contestants together new and lasting friendships are created. Alien from the non-native colonial mindset of commercial competition these young women bond together with love and respect for each other.You can see the genuine smiles between these young women towards each other. As a grandmother in a circle of native women, it warms the heart to see this.
I love it when native women come together in events that embrace a sisterhood among our various nations. Many thanks to the committee and the creators of the Miss Indian World contest …Love that it is native run and very native in thought and content.May it never ever fall into the templates of any of the non-native commercial run pageants we so often see in society today.

With these thoughts in my head, I reached for my second bag of popcorn on this the last night of the Pow wow.
When the MC announced that the Miss Indian World program was about to take place I felt the Goosebumps starting up. I knew Nani was number 28 and as such the closer, they got to her number the closer I found myself moving towards my computer screen...I knew for so many of our people Nani  was already a winner.:)

Led by last year’s Miss Indian World Majorie Tahbone  all the contestants  waved as they entered the Pitt.They looked so beautiful .each one a winner already and all would make an excellent representative of Indian country.
With each contestant's name and nation announced, I could not help but remember these words of native wisdom. “A nation is not conquered until the hearts of its women are on the ground.”
I was happy for all the girls and I cheered for each one of them…but I have to admit when they called out number 28 Joanne Nani Morales Taino from Puerto Rico first runner up I screamed and jumped out of my seat.

The Popcorn I had  flew out of the bag into the air like confetti…My dog was barking for joyJsensing whatever it is it is a happy moment. My Mom tuned in from her personal space station and clapped for what she figured was surly a party. :) I danced I cried I cheered and I said Bomatum to the ancestors who I knew where in there cheering as well.

So it is I say .Bomatum Joanne Nani Morales hija de Atabei for giving your people this shining moment of hope. Bomatum Joanne Nani Morales for standing up with pride and respect for our people and our culture.
I knew from day one of this competition you would make us make us all feel proud.

I am happy for you and all the young native women who took part in Miss Indian world. I am happy for the community of Yukayeke Guainía .I am happy for the UCTP as it once again writes another positive chapter in the UCTP history of our people.
One thing is sure  It will forever be written for our future generations to know that Joanne Nani Morales of Yukayeke Guainía a  small Boriken tribal  community and member affiliate of UCTP was first runner up in Miss Indian World Gathering of Nations Pow Wow 2012.

It was not long ago when we saw another young woman  in the Circle win Miss Indian World 2007  of Cree and Taino  decent her name is Violet John….Today we add the name of Joanne Nani Morales Taino  to that list of honorable young women among our people . 

The Circle of Grandmothers and women of  Bohio Atabei, are very proud of you..Like many of our young women You are a gift of joy and we were happy to give you our unwavering blessings and support for this event.
In you Joanne Nani Morales, we see the purity of spirit only a sincere and loving heart has. In you we see the ray of hope many of our young people bring to the future of our people.

With respect we also wish to  acknowledge your parents  as the apple does not fall far from the tree.Congradulations to your parents for gifting to the world such a beautiful human soul.
To your parents and family congradulations  from the Council of Grandmothers Bohio Atabei.


We are as well  happy for the young woman who won Jessa Rae Growing Thunder

Fort Peck Assiniboine/Sioux Poplar, Montana Congradulations to her and her community.
Indian country we know will have an excellent ambassador in her.Congrdulations to 2nd runner up
Nikki Santos and her community... love her beautiful smile..
As well much love to each one of the contestants, all of them are winners in our hearts.ALL OF THEM
Lastly, I am happy for all of the people who believed in Nani and sent her their blessings,Bomatum 

I know that nothing but good things await Nani and all the young woman who took part in the Miss Indian world competition.All of you along with so many of our young people will do great things.
All of you bring honor to your people .
On behalf of the Council of Grandmothers Bohio Atabei .the Peace and Dignity Route of the Red Tail Hawk organizers and runners Much Love.Seneko Kakona ,Thank you for being present in our lives.

In conclusion Thank you to all the people  past, present and future  responsible for  the Gathering of Nations and for the live Web cast…Way to go gathering way to goJ


All photos 
©Gatheringofnations LTD.
www.gatheringofnations.com

Friday, April 6, 2012

Dance Mujeres


Mujeres dance, dance for earth mother, for life for the family for our people, for each other 
Dance Mujeres dance.:) 
Dance my sisters, dance for peace dance for healing, dance for the tears and dance with joy.

Dance for the grandmothers who live on the moon, dance for the rivers the oceans, and all of the waterfalls inside your soul.
Dance Mujeres dance In the Bohios of your mind looking thru windows of ancestral time. 
Walking in hallways filled with the memories, of a zillion stars.
Dance daughters of earth mother daughters of wisdom.
Daughters of lite.
   
Dance in the circles of your twirling skirts and let them form rainbows inside your heart.

Dance hermanas dance for you are the rhythm of the universe, the cosmic mother of all life 
Dance Mujeres dance for you are Creation, 
Yokahu was born of you.
Born of you , Born of you. Born of you is Yokahu.

© VIPWHW.

Full Moon April 6,2012









This Friday April 6th,during Bibi Maroyas fullness let the distance between us be a geographical one…and not a spiritual one. Walk into the lite mi gente and think about each other in a good way.Be at peace and wrap your hearts in love,compassion and respect for all life...Inaru:)


Mujeres este viernes abril 6,2012 en la plenitud de Bibi Maroyas (Abuelita Luna) que la distancia entre nosotras sea solo geográfica y no de espíritu. Entremos a la luz con pensamientos buenos unas hacia las otras.Esten en paz y envuelvan sus corazones en el amor, la compasión y el respeto hacia todo lo que vive. . ..Inaru:)

Strong Woman Song by Raven Hart-Bellecourt and Lisa Muswagon

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Full Moon Gathering Jan 8,2012 Ritual Dance Set Your Spirit Free



Mujeres and sisters of kindred spirit
Bohio Atabe Indigenous Women’s Circle
 Invites you to our  Sunday Jan 8,2012
Full Moon Gathering .

The Female Energy in  Sacred Music, Ritual Dance, and Spoken word.
SET YOUR SPIRIT FREE  bring your drums, maracas, shells
Flutes, Songs, stories, poetry.
Join in the spirit of the circle
Celebrate your female energy.
 Sunday Jan 8, 2012.
5-8pm
2805 University Avenue Suite B corner 197 street.
For more info 347-242-0516
Healing with Water  Ceremony…
So please RSVP and  be on time,,,,Bomatum.
You are asked to please bring a meatless dish if you can.
There is No Charge for gathering  but
Donatiosn are  accepted….with all proceeds to benefit
Peace and Dignity  Route of the Red Tail Hawk  2012
More important then that is your presenceJ
Hope to see you soon...Bibi InaruJ  




Monday, December 26, 2011

CRONICAS SANJUANERAS: ANACAONA *REINA TAINA*



CRONICAS SANJUANERAS: ANACAONA *REINA TAINA*: ANACAONA "FLOR DE ORO" " MUJER DE GRAN BELLEZA, INTELIGENCIA Y GRACIA " ____________________________-Por: Julissa Corporan -______ A...

Friday, December 9, 2011

Full Moon Dec 10,2011




This Full Moon of Dec 10,2011 I thought I would share with all of you this short article taken from The Womens Moon Hut.-Women who Bleed with The Moon
I hope some of you are able to gather together and share as sisters your hopes your dreams and even your tears.
The Full Moon is a time to release the intention we set during the darkness of the New Moon and the careful nurturing of that intention during the 2 weeks that followed. Whatever we have not manifested, we offer it up to the hands of the Divine, trusting that if our intention is for our Highest good, the time will come when we experience it.
During our full moon ritual, we also celebrate what has come to fruition and give thanks to life and all the goodness in it. Through sharing food and drinks, chanting, dancing, and loving-kindness meditation we generate an abundance of energy to fully charge ourselves, then shower this energy as love and blessings to all.
Inaru:)




Women Who bleed with the moon
The moon has always been the primary symbol for female energy; its cycle around the earth takes approximately twenty-nine days, the same amount of time as the average woman's menstrual cycle. It is often felt that as the pull of the moon affects the waters of the world, so does its motion affect the body of woman.
A women's blood and hormonal cycle follows the ebb and flow of the moon; from new moon to full moon, estrogen increases leading to ovulation, or maximum fertility, at full moon. From full moon to new moon, the waning half of the cycle, progesterone predominates. Traditionally, women used to start bleeding right before the new moon, in the dark of the moon.
In modern times, women begin their menstruation during different phases of the moon. Their bodies are out of sync with the moon and their spirits have forgotten the meaning of Grandmother Moon. One way to get back in harmony with the moon is by performing ceremonies and rituals at different times during the moon cycle and also by honoring the time of menstruation.
When a woman begins her monthly bleeding, she has a very special vibration. The blood flow is cleansing as the old uterine lining is sloughed off, one monthly reproductive cycle is ended. At menstruation, women have the chance to rid themselves of all old thoughts, habits, desires, and be receptive to new visions and inspirations for the next cycle. This is the dark moon phase.
If a woman continues her normal routine at menstruation, then she loses a uniquely female opportunity for introspection. She also finds she gets more tired, irritable, and upset because her physical rhythm has slowed down. She needs rest, more time for meditation, and less time doing housework, cooking, working in the outside world, and taking care of children.
In many Native American tribes and other tribal cultures, there is a separate moon lodge to which all women go. Since most women menstruated at the same time (have you noticed women who live together bleed together) during the dark of the moon, the grandmothers and fathers took care of the children. Food was left outside the lodge several times a day. Women during menstruation were/are considered to hold a certain power and not allowed to mingle with the rest of the tribe. Many tribes have taboos against these women, believing that their power would interfere with the hunt or take away the power of the medicine bundles.
This is also why women are not allowed in sweat lodges and must stand outside the circles in other ceremonies when they are in their moon time. We know now that women were also segregated because of fear of the immense power which enabled them to bleed each month and never die -the greatest of all the Mysteries- while a male warrior might succumb quickly after losing so much. –
Women's Medicine Ways' Cross-cultural rites of passage Marcia Starck
Source 
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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Prayer circle from Nov 8-12,2011




Mujeres in a few days a celestial body passes very close to earth mother, now this in of itself is part of the natural universal cycle of nature... however we also have a Full Moon on November 10th...keep to mind all of this is movement of energy and we are affected by the flow of energy for spirit is energy...some humans react in a good way to these exchanges and others lose control as they are not grounded to earth mother...I suggest we pray that the minds of those in power react in a good way for the sake of all. Let us not forget that there are humans who use the element of fire to destroy. In the next few days lets help by using the energy of our prayers to help balance the madness that can easily bring about horrible results due to the crazy and out of control actions of some.
Please join Bohio Atabei in a circle of sisterhood in prayers from Nov 8-12.Let us unify our spirits in silent prayers as the daughters of earth mother. Starting at sunrise Nov 8-till sundown Nov 12...four days of prayer four days of sending our good thoughts into the cycle of universal energy that surrounds our earth mother...Do it in your own way in the way of your people but do it focus on sending prayers out all four days. Unity of mind at sunrise, 12 noon, and sundown are especially powerful times during the day.
Those of you who can gather in circles that is Awesome especially since many of our people are also preparing to confront the system in defense of earth mother across Turtle Island Abya Yala and its Island regions. The countdown for change is in progress as spoken of in our prophecies and we are all a part of it....Prayer is powerful when done by many with same focus....
I thank you all for reading this message and with much respect I urge all the medicine women and elders on this site who are having circles,all female Temesacals,Sweats,Guanaras and or gatherings to share them here so anyone who can attend your circles and wish to go can join you. As well with much respect if you can and wish share those teachings you can, as we all  learn from each other as sisters and daughters of earth mother
 Many Blessings to all of you Abrazos Ata Inaru Bohio Atabei


Mujeres en unos días Nov. 8th un cuerpo celestial pasa muy cercano a la madre tierra, ahora esto en forma es parte de un el ciclo universal natural…pero también tenemos una Luna Llena en noviembre 10...Todo esto es movimiento de energía y nosotros somos realizados por el flujo de energía pues el espíritu es energía. Haci es que algunos vamos a reaccionar de una manera buena a estos cambios y otros van a perder el control en especial si no están en sintonía con la madre tierra. ..Por lo tanto dado a que va haber un grande movimiento de energía universal pues con amor y respecto sugiero que oramos que las mentes de ésos en el poder reaccionen en una manera buena por el bien de toda vida sobre la madre tierra...Pues nosotros no podemos  olvidarnos que hay humanos que utilizan el elemento del fuego para destruir y los resultados de sus acciones siempre son devastador.En los próximos días vamos utilizando la energía de nuestras oraciones para ayudar el equilibrio espiritual de las posible  locuras  que se pueden producir fácilmente en una forma horible como  resultado de las mentes fuera de control de personas en posiciones de poder mundial.
Les pido hermanas con respecto que se unan al Bohio Atabei en un círculo de hermandad en oraciones por cuatro días de noviembre 8-12.unificando nuestros espíritus en oraciones silenciosas como las hijas de la madre tierra. Comenzando al amanecer con el saludo a Padrecito Abuelito Sol Noviembre 8  hasta la  puesta del sol y la luz de Abuelita Luna cada día hasta  noviembre 12...En oración cuatro días para enviar nuestros pensamientos buenos a el ciclo de energía universal que va rodear a nuestra madre tierra. ..Oren en su propia manera en la manera de sus pueblos pero oren.
Si pueden centren sus oraciones en unidad de mente espiritualmente al amanecer, 12 mediodía y la puesta del sol pues son tiempos especialmente poderosos.
También es importante pensar en que muchos de nuestros pueblos y gente se preparan para confrontar el sistema en la defensa de nuestra madre tierra a través de la Isla de Tortuga AbyaYala y sus regiones Isleñas...Pues los cambios dichos en nuestras profecías están en pie y nosotros somos todo una parte de ello. ...La oración es poderosa cuando hecho por muchos con un mismo enfoco. ...
Finalmente gracias a todo por leer este mensaje y con mucho respeto yo ánimo a todas las mujeres de medicina y ya mayores que si tienen círculos de mujeres,Temescals,Guanara’ Sudaderos o reuniones compartan aquí para que las que pueden asistir a sus círculos o actividades y desear ir pueden unirse a ustedes. También con mucho respeto si pueden y desean compartir de sus enseñanzas ya que podemos aprender de una a otra como hermanas e hijas de madre tierra compartan por favor.;
 Muchas Bendiciones a todas ustedes Abrazos Ata Inaru Bohío Atabei

Friday, October 14, 2011

Intergenerational Conference



“We Are Not Extinct!”

Meet the decedents of the first Indigenous people Columbus encountered in 1492
 The birth of the Wall Street philosophy in the new world and the involvement of the Vatican.
Learn of the prophecy of Aura Surey, the Mayan-Taino link & the 2012 prophesies
Saturday, October 22nd from 10 am – 5 pm
Sunday, October 23rd from 10 am – 5 pm

This 2-Day event will feature presentations by
Taino Elders, Youth Historians, Spiritual Leaders,
Indigenous Artisans & performances.
Native Taino Opening closing ceremony on both days.

Location
Yippie Cafe and Museum
9 Bleecker Street @ Bowery
New York, NY 10012
Phone:  (212) 677-5918 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting            (212) 677-5918      end_of_the_skype_highlighting     

Directions
6 Train to Bleecker
B, D, F Trains to Broadway - Lafayette St             

For More Information
Call (347) 242-0516 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting            (347) 242-0516      end_of_the_skype_highlighting  or  Email bohioatabei@aol.com

Conference Cost
$35 per person for a Two-Day Conference Pass
$25 for students and seniors
Or
$20 per person for a One-Day Conference Pass
$ 15 for students and seniors

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

New Moon Karayabe Bematimanli 30,2011




Takaji Beautiful Daughters of Atabei!
The time is near for the New Moon and it is the first Cycle of Bibi Maroyas journey of 13.  J  In essence, it is the beginning of a new lunar year.  How beautiful is that?
And what is this New Moon called?  It is known as the Bat Moon and it will be a Bat Moon in each of its phases until the next new Moon.  Then Bibi Maroya will change her halo of light to put on another one of her 13 headdresses; all, so we may never forget the teachings she brings us with each new cycle.
It is fitting that her first cycle is that of the Bat for like the Bat we need to use our ears to listen more.  Note the Bat’s extra sensory hearing, guides it out of the darkness.  A bat does not see with her eyes.  She hears, she listens and thus she sees.  So listen and hear beyond your soul.  Dig deep and let your female INTUITION help you to become who you want to be.  Bats hang upside down in the dark and quiet stillness of their caves waiting for their time to emerge out into the world, taking in a new journey every night.  Be like the Bat and guide yourself always out of the darkness using your female energy, wisdom and INTUITION.
Recall when you were in your mother’s womb…in that quiet stillness.  While there, in preparation for your birth, you turned and suspended yourself upside down waiting to emerge and begin your journey!
So step out of whatever darkness you find yourself in and know that you can be reborn with each new journey you take in life.  Emerge like our ancestors did out of the cave of Cacibajaguar remember their journeys and remember to listen.  Listen well as you move along the way. Hear the voice of earth mother in every living thing and you will find the wisdom each sound you hear will bring.Listen and you will see clearly the road ahead.

So Ladies, wherever you are, whether near or far away, for a few minutes let’s all connect spiritually on Saturday July 30th, 2011 at 13:39 EST (1:39 PM).  Wherever you are, listen just listen.  Hear the heartbeats of all your sisters.  Smile.  Pray.  Sing.  Dance.  And cry if you have to, embrace the sounds of life. 

Let us all emerge like Bats to spread the seeds of our good thoughts and use them to pollinate the circles of our lives.  Let what emerges from our hearts and souls be the wisdom of right action as well as the needed love and understanding we should have towards each other as sisters and for others as the daughters of Atabei.  Our people’s survival depends on us and the strength and courage of a nation is fueled by the strength and courage of its women.  So let’s fertilize the soil of our environment and use our female intuition well. 
May the wisdom of Bibi Maroya’s Bat Moon help you always find your way.  Abrazotes! 
Love you one and all:) Thank you for being in my life:)

Ina J

P.S.  If any of you care to join me physically on July 30th, you will find me in Inwood Park playing my drum at 1:39 PM I will celebrate the energy of Bibi Maroyas hoping,and singing my prayers.May all of you feel like you are starting anew again, a fresh start, a new beginning....LETS ROCK THE PLANET LADIES:)


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Karayabe Karey Bematimanli 15,2011

Bibi Maroya’s Cosmic Turtle Full Moon:

Beautiful daughters of Atabei There are two messages in this post, one from Abuela Karaira and one from meJ ….


Full Moon: NEW YORK = Friday * 15th July 2011 * 02:39:36 am (EDT)
LOS ANGELES = Thursday * 14th July 2011 * 11:39:36 pm (PDT)

Turtle is one of the oldest sacred symbols for our people. She represents the eternal Mother from which our lives evolve. In this the 13th cycle of Bibi Maroya she reminds us in her Turtle full moon to be mindful of the cycle of give and take, to give back to the Mother as she has given to us. For Earth Mother understands the grateful Heart

Turtle Moon teaches us, how to protect ourselves our people and our homes as well. If you are bothered by the actions or words of others, it may be time to go inside yourself and honor your feelings. If you feel you are being attacked, it may be time to give a warning snap and to proceed slowly using wisdom with our actions.


We also learn from Turtle to honor with respect the creative force within ourselves as daughters of earth mother, to be grounded, and to observe all situations with motherly compassion. Both Bibi Maroya and Bibi Atabei represent the energy of Turtle’s two homes earth and water, both work harmoniously to help us in the circles of our lives.


So ladies where ever you are. For just a few minutes lets connect spiritually as sisters for the survival of our people depends on us and we must be grounded so we can walk and work in harmony with each other ! …Let us as well seek the unobstructed view and look ahead so we know what we are doing with greater vision both physically and spiritually for ourselves and our communities.


Let us not forget that the strength and courage of a nation is fueled by the strength and courage of its women…May the lite of Bibi Maroya’s Full Moon help us always to find our way.
Abrazotes Ina…Love you one and all


***Now on to Abeula Karaira's message
Ta'kahi our strong noble
Guaribo women:
it is my hope as always
that all are well and in good spirit.
 
My thoughts to share
with all of you for our Full Moon this year 2011 month of July.

I often speak of respect
and honor, for our Creator, our ancestors and all things?
So it is when we honor
our way of living, we must respect and honor our ways, it is not only while we
are in ceremony, in a gathering circle or before guatu (sacred fire), but always.
 
We should respect our elders, grandmothers and leaders even
when we may at times not agree with them, we should always honor them, for what
they have lived, and for what they have
contributed thru the years for the people.
We must not forget what many of them have done for our
communities, had it not been for our elders,
grandmothers, grandfathers and leaders, many of us if not all, would not be
able to come forth now and stand strong to say "I am Taino"
It is because of them we are able to go forth today and be known as a people. It is because of
heir unselfish and tireless work, that we stand today with
respect and honor before all as proud Tainos
 
Some of our elders
continue to be active some in a more quiet manner as time also calls upon them
to rest So I say how is it that because they now must rest, but continue in a
more quite manner, and some seem to never stop working …In any case we just don’t forget them
 Do we forget

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

New Moon June 1,2011

This Moon is the 12th Moon of the 13 cycles of Bibi Maroya.

Abuela Karaira has sent us a New Moon
June 1, 2011 message for this 12th cycle of Bibi Maroya.
May we all reflect upon it not only for this new moon but for every life cycle of Bibi Maroya for we are as women along with her  Co-Creators of this magnificent universe
Mujeres May Your Hearts Hold Good Dreams.
Seneko Kakona Inaru:)



Abuela Karaira's Message:) La Mujer y Su Conecion Espiritual

Ta'kahi Guaitiao,

It is my hope that all are well and in the best of spirit.

Our Mexica guaitiaos have a saying that I wish to share with all of you.

"La fundacion del hogar no es sobre la tierra, si no sobre la espalda de la mujer"

"The foundation of a home is not upon the ground, but on the back of a woman"

The translation is as close as "I" could get it.

We should always remember these things:

We should respect all for who they are, we should respect all things, for without respect, and there will be no beginnings.

Respect, honor, tolerance, love and the flexibility to be able to deal with all things.

Respect our spirituality as Taino, as indigenous women, for since the time of our conception, we are spiritual.  It is a blessing 
That has been bestowed upon us by our ancestors for the survival of our peoples. Without this respect of our spirituality we are 
Lost, roaming without the connections that make us who we are.  For this connection with all things and our self's is the unity of
Of all our peoples.  It is these connections that bring us closer to our ancestors and being connected to our ancestors makes
Us stronger.

I send my love and blessings to all.

Oma'bahari (With Respect)

Tio Bo Guatukan (Ancestral Blessings)

Abuela Karaira:)

Friday, March 13, 2009

Our Relatives




Aspects of Carib/Kalinago Culture
Carib was a name used by Europeans to describe those people who inhabited the islands of the Lesser Antilles at the time of Columbus' second voyage in 1493. This was not what the people called themselves. The repeated use of the name for over five centuries however, has made it widely adopted even by the descendants of the people themselves. The French missionary Raymond Breton, visiting Dominica in 1642, recorded that the "Caribs'" name for themselves wasCallinago in the "men's language" andCalliponam in the "women's language", while Callínemeti was "a good peaceful man". This has now led to the adoption of the word Kalinago and Karifuna by cultural groups, anthropologists and historians to describe the Caribs. The "Black Caribs" of Belize, who are descended from ancestors in St. Vincent, call themselves the "Garifuna".
Kalinago: The Carib word for the Carib people. As Father Breton, who lived among the Kalinago in Dominica off and on between 1642 and 1653 says in his dictionary: "This is the real name of the Caribs of the islands." He wrote it as "Callinago", but the usual phonetic writing today is "Kalinago". "Kalinemeti" means "A good, peaceful man

Carib Reserve: A district on the north east coast now more popularly called the Carib Territory. It is an area of some 3,785 acres bordered roughly on the north by a ravine called Big River, to the west by the centre of the Pagua Valley, to the south by a line leading inland from the Aratouri Ravine and on the east by the Atlantic Ocean. This was the rugged unoccupied part of the island to which the majority of Caribs retreated after the colonisation of the rest of Dominica by the French and British. However many other Caribs remained in their previously occupied zones and mixed with the newcomers. For years during the 19th century the district was known as the Carib Quarter. In 1902 the British Administrator Henry Hesketh Bell, influenced by Victorian anthropology and a personal desire to preserve "the last of the tribe", persuaded the British government to give him permission to declare the area as reserved for the Caribs. This was done on 4 July 1903. The plan of the Reserve was based on a tracing of the Byres map of 1776 but no actual survey was ever carried out and there has been continuous controversy over the boundary lines. Bell officially recognised a Chief of the Caribs. In 1952 local government introduced a council system and in 1978 a Carib Reserve Act was passed to further formalise the affairs of the Territory

Carib:
As a place name, there are some areas outside of the Carib Territory that are called Carib as a result of being places which were occupied by Caribs during the colonial period. Pointe Carib between Bagatelle and Stowe was one such place, known to the Caribs themselves as Ouycala. Others were Carib at Pennville and Carib at Delices and Point Carib at Boetica. The Indian River near Portsmouth is so named because of a well-documented settlement of Caribs that existed on the upper banks of the river.

Kaire, (Acaera):
For many years this was mistaken to be the indigenous name of Dominica. It is also claimed by Trinidad. It is the Arawakan word for "an island". The mistake arose during the second voyage of Columbus when the Spanish first sighted and named Dominica. When they reached neighbouring Guadeloupe (Karouacaera), a writer on the voyage, pointing across to Dominica, asked one of the women what was the name of the first place that they had sighted. She apparently replied in Carib, "acaera", which, like kaire in Arawakan, simply means "an island". In his journal the writer noted down "Ceyre…is the first [island] we saw but did not visit". This report, based on a mistake, led to the belief that the island, Dominica, was called Kaire. Some one hundred and fifty years later Father Breton found out that the Carib name for the island was actually Ouaitoucoubouli, now writtenWai'tukubuli.

Ouaitoucoubouli
: The original spelling of the Carib name for Dominica used by Father Raymond Breton in 1665, but now more popularly spelt: Wai'tukubuli. It means, "Tall is her body", alluding to the mountainous nature of the island. The construction of the word is as follows: ouaitumti = it is tall. nocoubou = my body. li = her, (Tall-body-her). If you were an inhabitant of Dominica, you were a Ouaitoucoubouliri.

Karifuna
:The Carib word for Carib women. Father Breton says: "The women are called Calliponam". Some linguists say that this is the name of the Caribs "in the women's language". There is also confusion over the pronunciation of the letters "L" and "P" in the Carib language. In many cases these letters were actually pronounced as "R" and "F" respectively, so Breton's Calliponam may actually be Carifunam, which became Karifuna. The Black Caribs of St. Vincent who were expelled by the British in 1797 to Rautan Island off Belize, and who now live in southern Belize, call themselves the "Garifuna". The main Carib cultural group in Dominica, established in 1978, call themselves The Karifuna Cultural Group.
The main indigenous art forms of the Carib people in Dominica were:
Architecture

All materials used by the Carib/Kalinago people came from the land around them. Their houses were of several types.

Ajoupa: The basic ajoupa, which was a shed-like or "lean-to" structure made for sheltering a cooking or cassava making area of a shelter easily put up in the forest as a camp for hunting and canoe construction. This was made of about four stout posts anchored in the ground and held up by two other posts and a cross-beam. Thin laths of wood were placed across this frame which then was covered with balizier leaves or various types of forest palm leaves. The buildings were tied together with maho bark rope.

Maho: The Caribs grouped plants according to their uses and any plant with a bark capable of making rope was described as a "maho". The French took the word and wrote it in their own way: "mahaut". Since there were no nails or wire or bolts, everything was tied together with maho. House posts, roofing thatch, hammocks, head straps for carrying load, for attaching things to canoes, anchor ropes, net ropes and for hauling, all depended on maho. As Father Breton writes in his Carib Dictionary, "In short, I do not think that they could exist without maho". In Western scientific botany the Mahaut is found in divers plant families: Cordia (Boraginaceae), Pavonia and Hibiscus(Malvaceae), Triumfetat (Tiliaceae) and Sterculia (Sterculiaceae)

Karbay: Also written in French as "Carbet". A term used by the French to describe the main meetinghouse and settlements of the Caribs. The Caribs themselves called this house "Taboui", but the French settlers had picked up the name "Karbay" when they had lived among the Tupi-guarani tribe of Amerindians in Brazil. The French had also brought many Tupi-guarani people from Brazil to work for them in Martinique, Dominica and Guadeloupe. These people used their own language to describe familiar things that they saw in Dominica. Several words that today are passed off as Carib have their origins in the Tupi-guarani language. This word "Karbay" is one of them. It was used so often in the new French/Carib/Tupi-guarani/Creole language that was emerging, that succeeding generations of Caribs abandoned their own word "Taboui" and adopted "Karbay". It has been used for so long by the Caribs, that today it is considered by them to be a Carib word.
The Karbay was a large building, in most cases about 60 feet long and thirty feet wide. It was made of tall round wood posts and was of an oval shape with a tall steep roof. The posts which supported the roof were also used to tie hammocks for sleeping. The roof was thatched with palm leaves or the leaves of "roseaux" reeds.The young shoots of unopened leaves were used for shampoo. The light, straight, mature upper stems on which the flowers grew were used for the shafts of arrows. The young main stem was stripped and used in certain parts of basket making. The midrib of the leaf is also peeled, bleached and sun-dried to be plaited and sown for the making of hats. Recently, some people have returned to using the main stem of the roseaux reeds as decorative work in hotels, bars and guesthouses. Much could still be made of this product today.
The Karbay was divided into different zones for family hammocks, visitor hammocks and a central place for gatherings and for eating and feasts.

Music:

The Carib/Kalinago music was based on percussion instruments made of wood and gourds or calabashes. There were no animals such as goats and cattle with which to make drums and so the main instruments were in the form of wooden gongs made of hollowed out logs of wood, which were beaten with sticks. The shack-shack of small calabashes filled with stones or seeds and with a long wooden handle was also an important instrument. This rhythmic music was accompanied by chants in the same way that tribes in the Amazon region of South America still perform

Painting:

The pottery of the Carib/Kalinago people was painted with earth-based colours that were grinded from red, ochre, white and other earth-toned rocks. Finely ground charcoal was used to make black paint and to darken other colours. All painting represented mythical symbols associated with their beliefs

Roucou:
(C) (Bixa orellana) Annatto, a shrub native to South America and widespread on the islands. It is used mostly as a vegetable dye for food. In the past, annatto was used by the indigenous people of Dominica mainly as a protective ornamental paint and as warpaint on the body. As a body paint it was sometimes mixed with powdered charcoal to darken its colour. Mixed with oil it also served as a sun and insect lotion

Baskets:
Oualloman: (C) The reeds used for making the Carib baskets, tables, cassava squeezers and other utensils woven by the Caribs. By the time that the French settlers had Creolized the word, it became l'arouman, the word that even Caribs use today. The scientific name is Ischosiphon arouma. The plant is found from the Amazon River, north to Guadeloupe and was brought to the Antilles by the indigenous people some two thousand years ago. The stems are cut after having grown to a height of 12-15 feet. They are then stripped into four segments during which most of the pith is removed. They are spread in the sun to dry and during this time acquire a reddish brown colour. A black colour is obtained by putting the strands into mud holes for a few days. Creamy white strands are obtained by using the underside of the brown strips. Thus three colours are available for weaving the various traditional basket designs: brown, white and black.

Kaklin:
(C) (Clusia venosa). This is the dominant tree of the Elfin Woodland, found on the highest peaks of Dominica's mountains. It is also sometimes found in the Littoral Forest along the east and north east coast clinging to cliffs and to the sides of ravines. It has thick rubbery leaves, which can withstand the wind and almost constant rain or sea spray. It bears a glossy deep purple coloured fruit. Its hanging aerial roots are used to make the frames of certain types of baskets.

Pottery:
Pottery was made out of clay from different parts of Dominica. Different pots were given different names according to their use.
Canari: A large earthenware bowl made by the Caribs to ferment and store their cassava beer called ouicou. The original word was Canalli, which was adapted by the French and Africans to Canari. In Creole it means any large earthenware pot, but the Caribs had many different names for each type of pot according to its use. It is also the name of a stream, Layvyè Canari, at Castle Comfort.


Sculpture:

Carvings were made in stone, wood and bone. Bas-relief carvings were done on the side of big rocks. These are called petroglyphs and are found on many Caribbean islands.


Stone tools:

The types of stone best suited for making particular tools such as mortars and axe-heads, hoücoue, were categorised by uses (Breton,1665:239). Flakes of jasper were necessary for making graters, takia kani, for shredding cassava tubers. The identification of jasper deposits was crucial for this process as were types of rock best suited for making into particular tools and other objects. Some of these are recorded by Breton with their Carib names and are identified in some cases to have been common to particular islands (Breton 1665:195):
tebou - stone
couléhueyou - firestone, for lighting fire
coyébali itágueli - smooth stone
taoüa - white stone
coyláya - black stone
ouroúali - pumice stone, with which they polish their 'auirons'
cherouli - pumice stone from Marie Galante
méoulou - pumice stone from Martinique
teukê oúbao - precious stones
tlimáparacola balou balou - green stone for the men
tácaoüa, tacoúlaoüa - green stones which serve as jewels for the women
macónabou - counterfeit green stones (Breton,1666:291,292).

Dance:

The dances were representative of the spirit world of ancestors and nature. Some dances represented hunting and fishing or the stories of the creation of the Kalinago universe, the constellations of stars and the changes in the seasons. The dances were choreographed in circles and lines of dancers similar to those still danced among the indigenous people of South America today. As they danced they chanted in time with the music and many dancers carried and played shack-shacks as they danced.

Some Kalinago History

The people of Ouhayo
Prince Rupert's Bay at Portsmouth in the north of Dominica was an ideal setting for the pre-Columbian people of Dominica. It possessed all the requirements of the island-bases tribes who roamed the Caribbean from 5 000 BC: the sheltered bay, fresh water, reefs and fishing banks, land for cultivation and abundant forests bearing all the wood, thatch, bark, fruit and herbs which they needed for their self-sufficient existence. They called the bay Ouhayo and the island Wai'tukubuli.

Hardly any archeological study has made of the area, but through the years visiting experts and enthusiasts have picked up clues which indicate that settlements existing here following the pattern of other Amerindian habitation in the Lesser Antilles. When the Spaniards first reached Prince Rupert's Bay, first without landing in 1493 and then more effectively in 1502, they found the area inhabited by Indians who spoke Cariban, a language, which like Arawakan, is widespread in eastern South America. The material culture of these people belonged to the final pre-Columbian age, or period of development, in the Caribbean area; that age is know as the Neo-Indian. This means that the Caribs, like the Arawaks on other islands, made pottery. They also knew the art of farming and were skilled mariners.
It is probable that bays such as Prince Rupert's were populated by man early as 5 000 BC. We know about the Arawake from their finely decorated pottery chards and also from artifacts on other islands, but about the Caribs of Prince Rupert's Bay we have the more definite reports of Spanish, French and British visitors who called here after 1493.
The Carib villages along the Bay were each made up of a small number of house with the carbet or communal longhouse in the midst of the dwellings. Reports indicate that these dwellings were on firm ground out of the reach of the swamps. Missionaries and other visitors in the 17th century described the giant carbet of the chief of Ouhayo on the bank of the Indian River.
This was a splendid site for a major village. The canoes entered the river from the sea, paddling up to the firm ground some 300 metres upstream. Here, surrounded by smaller dwellings was the longhouse of Ouhayo, the big meeting place where the men assembled. It was 40 to 50 metres long and could hold some 150 hammocks slung from the several stout posts supporting the roof. This vaguely oval building was thatched with cachibou leaves tied down with mahoe bark cord.
The men were the fishermen, hunters, warriors, boatbuilders and basket makers. The women's work was plant, prepare and cook food. They also spun thread, wove hammocks and made clay vessels for holding food and liquid.
This pattern did not change as soon as a single Spanish caravel rounded the Cabrits point November 3, 1493, circled the bay and then sailed out again. Dominica, through the Caribs and its terrain, resisted colonization for a longer period than any other island of the Caribbean. Although many visitors called at Ouhayo during the next 250 years, the Caribs still held sway over the area until about the 1740's
Carib Warner: c1635-1674. The name that was given to the half-Carib son of Sir Thomas Warner, the English coloniser of St. Kitts. Carib Warner's name was also Thomas. His mother was a Carib woman from Dominica who was living in St.Kitts at the time of the English settlement. The boy grew up among his father's family, but at about the age of thirteen, his father died and his English stepmother wanted him out of the house. Along with other Caribs he retreated to Dominica where he rose to be a chief along the west coast in the vicinity of the present day village of Massacre. He used his knowledge of European ways and his Carib ancestry to the fullest, playing the French against the English in an effort to retain Dominica for the Caribs. The English in Barbados favoured him as an ally and the Governor Willoughby made him a colonel and Lieutenant Governor of Dominica. In 1666, Carib Warner was captured by the French and imprisoned. On 9 December the following year, Willoughby procured his release and reinstated him as governor of Dominica. In February 1668 a peace was agreed between the English and the Caribs through the medium of Carib Warner. But the English in Antigua did not see the Caribs in the same light as those in Barbados, and were angry at continued Carib raids on the Leeward Islands. Carib Warner's English half-brother, Phillip, led a force against him from Antigua, murdered him and massacred his village. The French gave the name Massacre to the site.


Dr. Lennox Honeychurch,

Source www.lennoxhonychurch.com/article.cfm?id=389