This is the personal chronicling of Chris "Wintercount" Teves
WELCOME TO THE LONGEST WALK 2008 WEBSITE
This site is several week in the making so I would like to welcome you & thank you for visiting. This is the personal chronicling of the Longest Walk 2008 Northern Route by Chris Wintercount Teves. It has been hard to find the time to get this blog up and going but I hope that you will enjoy it. Many photographes and stories will be added in the coming weeks going as far back as Pueblo, Colorado. Please also visit the Offical Longest Walk Website and Brenda Norrell's Blogspot site for more information on the walk.
History is very important to us all. History serves many purposes, from informing individual history, community history, national history, to global history. As progress is made, history lays a lesson plan people of the world can learn from.
History has been recorded in stone, paper scrolls, weaving and on animal hides. From ancient times to present day, man has recorded history as a way of immortalizing their way of life.
Lakota, Dakota & Nakota Nations, historians had a very important role. The historian was a very important person, with good character, and in good standing with the people. Because of the tremendous value our people set upon memories and preserving our history. That individual dared not stray from the truth.
The historian/teacher was honored next to the leader. The factual knowledge was recorded, painted on animal hides and because our Ancestors counted the years by the winters, our calendars were called, "Wintercounts."
The Longest Walk 2 is a grassroots effort on a national level to bring attention to issues of environmental injustice, protection of sacred sites, cultural survival, youth empowerment, and eroding Native American rights. It is a 3,400 mile spiritual walk for cultural survival in commemoration of the 1978 Longest Walk which successfully defeated 11 anti-Indian legislative bills as well as helped bring about the 1978 American Indian Religious Freedom Act.
We began our trans-continental journey on February 11th in San Francisco and are stopping in communities all across Turtle Island to listen to Native peoples concerns, document them and deliver them to US officials upon our arrival in Washington DC on July 11th, 2008. This walk consists of Indigenous peoples from North, South, and Central America, as well as people from New Zealand and Asia. It is a spiritual and historic walk and Native Americans and our allies walk behind the banner, "All Life is Sacred; Save Mother Earth!"
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