NAF-DAYSPRING is a United Methodist Church.
Offices at: Seven Circles Heritage Center
8817 W. Southport Rd. Edwards, IL, 61528 Phone: 309-637-1046 Fax: 309-637-6017
Rev. Carol Lakota Eastin, pastor; Linda Lane, pastor’s assistant
NAFCAROL@MTCO.COM new email addresses NAFLANE@MTCO.COM JUNE 2006
PENTECOST SUNDAY JUNE 4
Celebrate the Holy Spirit……..
Celebrate the One Year Anniversary of our church
1:30 Worship at Daypspring! Back to worshipping in the great outdoors, at the land site of our future church building.
Baptism, Church Membership, The Lords Supper. If interested in
Baptism or church membership, contact Pastor Carol 397-5957.
3:00 Celebrate our Church’s Birthday:
Cake, games, gifts. Potluck.
Bring a gift for NAF:
Needed: paper plates, bowls, coffee, sugar, creamer, paper towels, plastic forks, reams of paper for copier, cold drink mixes, hot chocolate mix,
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GREETINGS FROM ARIZONA
Written by Barb Smith
Greetings from the Navajo /Hopi reservation in Northern Arizona. I have been living on this reservation for almost two years, working as a nurse in the local hospital.
Tuba City rests on a high plateau, which is divided between the Navajo and the Hopi reservation, 1 and half-hours from the Grand Canyon. It is a desert region The nearest (cont p. 2)
Sun June 11
10:30 POW WOW worship gathering: Join us at the Return to Pimiteoui Pow Wow for worship! Special Guest: Cimeron, Hopi Teacher will be speaking. (see related article: Greetings from Arizona)
RETURN TO PIMITEOUI
15th Annual POW-WOW
SATURDAY
Grounds Open at 8:00 AM for Pancake Breakfast - or 10:00 am otherwise.
Gourd Dancing at 12:30 pm and 6:00 pm
Grand Entry at 1:30 pm and 7:00 pm
SUNDAY
Grounds Open at 8:00 AM for Pancake Breakfast - or 10:00 am otherwise
10:30 WORSHIP GATHERING
Gourd Dancing at 12:30 pm
Grand Entry at 1:30 pm
WH Sommer Park, Peoria
www.peoriapowwow.org Sun June 18
130 Worship at Dayspring
3:00 Father’s Day Games
Bring out your dads and uncles for games and competitions
Prayer Chain Contacts:
Rose Staley 309- 274-3561 or rosalie.hagaman@insightbb.com
Sun June 25 DICKSON MOUNDS GATHERING
near Lewistown Illinois
1:00 Lecture by Dr. Wyant on Sacred Sites.
2:00: Native Gathering
Ceremonial for gathering of soil: Sacred Sites Runners
Spirit of the Rainbow Drum
Dancers Needed
Lightwalker: Native American Flute & Song
Made possible by a grant from The United Methodist Committees on Native American Ministries of Illinois.
Cimeron, Hopi teacher
Potluck Meal at 5pm for our Native American Family. Bring Food.
Bring Lawnchairs.
Dickson Mounds Museum, a National Historic Site, is one of the major on-site archaeological museums in the United States. Explore the world of the American Indian in an awe inspiring journey through 12,000 years of human experience in the Illinois River Valley. The museum is open daily from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. There is no admission charge.
The Native American Fellowship enjoys our relationship with Dickson Mounds! We hope you will ALL JOIN us at the Mounds. We recommend you come in the morning, and spend some time in the exhibits! For directions go to
http://www.museum.state.il.us/ismsites/dicksonSMALL GROUPS Central to our Spiritual Growth is being connected with other Christians.
Women’s Group:
Mon June 26 at Dayspring, East Peoria for a potluck picnic at 12 noon. Option: join us at Water Park afterward; enjoy a lazy river with friends!
Film Fellowship a Movie & Discussion. Times vary. Leader: Jessica Johnson. Call to be put on contact list.
The Woodcarvers
Tuesdays at 5:30 at 7 Circles
Woodcarving group works on individual and group projects.
Leon Gass, Leader
The Artistic Spirit
Thursdays at 6:30 at 7 Circles. Participation open to the artistic spirit in all of us. (no experience necessary). A multi-media approach. Charley Armstrong, Leader
Healing Circle at 7 circles
Dr. Chris Rybak & Pastor Carol
Summer Time: Mondays 2-3:30
The group is planning to work on the memorial garden beginning at 10am on Mondays. Everyone is welcome to help. Bring light lunch.
Springfield Fellowship:
Meeting the fourth Tuesday of
Every month at 6:30
From the Tribe
Congratulations Graduates:
Jeremy Roberts, High School
Jessica Bale, Jr High
PRAY FOR
Our elders: Ruth Sine, June Haikey, Mary Gohde’s mother.
For healing: Jamie Rensimer, Shari Lagore, Beth Rubel , April Elston, Fred Shelabarger, Cathy Miller, Bill Rutherford, Jeff Clark
Robert Jones.
-For Sacred Sites Run; those warriors protecting our holy places
Prayer Chain Contacts:
Rose Staley 309- 274-3561 or rosalie.hagaman@insightbb.com
(Arizona, cont )
City is Flagstaff, Arizona, which is about 96 miles away.
The population of Tuba City is 98% Native American. The primary language is Navajo and coming in second is Hopi. About 80% practice their ancient traditional beliefs and know the stories taught thru the ages by their ancestors.
There are approximately 250,000 Navajo living on the reservation and about 5000 Hopi. Both Nations struggle to maintain honor, respect the past while struggling to survive in the present.
History tells, for many years how the Hopi and the Navajo have not walked together mainly because of the Navajo taking over so much of the Hopi lands Yet it was the Hopi that helped stop Kit Carson from killing off the Navajo nation.
I have been able to walk with many Navajo and Hopi during my stay here. It has been my privilege to stay in Hogan’s and to be invited into the Kiva's. However I do feel like I understand and walk closer with the Hopi.
The Hopi still prefer to be left alone by the outside world and only open few village dances/ ceremonies for the public. Signs on the entrance to the village warn of their wish to be left alone by non-native people. They are mostly farmers and live in 9 small villages with a close clan structure and depend greatly on the family and their clan relatives. Each village has Kivas, the Hopi place of prayer and ceremony. Each village differs in the number of Kiva they have.
I am most familiar with two of the 9 villages Holtville, and Moenkopia. The first village of the Hopi was established in old Oribi and many years latter over a disagreement some the villagers split and formed the town of Hotevilla. Most of the village is made of connected stone huts with the first layer by the plaza being the first built and another row formed behind it. There are two plazas in Hotevilla where the families gather to celebrate their dances and the Katchina appear. Each family is assigned a Kiva and it is their responsibility to care for it. Occasionally a Kiva sponsors a dance. Their dances begin in December, in 2005; it was on Christmas Eve, when the Kivas were opened led by one of the female Katchina. There are 14 Katchinas but only 4 of them are women. The traditional Hopi villages do not have electricity or in door plumbing. Their chief water supply is their springs. The village councils have chosen not to have these conveniences because of belief in the prophecy of the ancient ones. " As long as one child remembers the traditions and the way, the world will be allowed to survive"
Hopi people are loosing their ceremonies and clans are dying off. As a result ceremonies are being lost. The snake dance is one, which in the past could be seen at each village but as the old ones die and do not pass on their wisdom, this dance is only done now at three of the nine villages. This is why it is important to listen now because they are truly a dying Nation.
If you want more information on the dances, Katchinas, the sacred, and the people come and listen to Cimarron Gr