On
October 11, 2004, 13 Indigenous Grandmothers from all
over the world—the Arctic Circle, North, South and
Central America, Africa, and Asia—arrived at Tibet
House's Menla Mountain Retreat amidst 340 acres of forests,
fields and streams in upstate New York. Within a few
days of convening, the grandmothers agreed to form a
global alliance; to work together to serve both their
common goals and their specific local concerns.
The
first council gathering was a time of hope and inspiration.
The grandmothers are both women of prayer and women
of action. Their traditional ways link them with the
forces of the earth. Their solidarity with one another
creates a web to rebalance the injustices wrought from
an imbalanced world; a world disconnected from the fundamental
laws of nature and the original teachings based on a
respect for all of life.
Aama Bombo - Tamang - Nepal
Margaret Behan
- Arapaho/Cheyenne - Montana, USA
Rita Pitka Blumenstein - Yup’ik - Arctic Circle, USA
Julieta Casimiro
- Mazatec - Huautla de Jimenez, Mexico
Maria Alice Campos Freire
- Amazonian Rainforest, Brazil
Flordemayo
- Mayan - Highlands of Central America/ New Mexico
Tsering Dolma Gyaltong
- Tibetan
Beatrice Long Visitor Holy Dance
- Oglala Lakota - Black Hills, South Dakota, USA
Rita Long Visitor Holy Dance
- Oglala Lakota - Black Hills, South Dakota, USA
Agnes Baker Pilgrim
- Takelma Siletz - Grants Pass, Oregon, USA
Mona Polacca
- Hopi/Havasupai/Tewa - Arizona
Bernadette Rebienot
- Omyene - Gabon, Africa
Clara Shinobu Iura
- Amazonian Rainforest, Brazil
Statement of Alliance
WE
ARE THIRTEEN INDIGENOUS GRANDMOTHERS who came
together for the first time from October 11 through
October 17, 2004, in Phoenicia, New York. We gathered
from the four directions in the land of the people of
the Iroquois Confederacy. We come here from the Amazon
rainforest, the Arctic circle of North America, the
great forest of the American northwest, the vast plains
of North America, the highlands of central America,
the Black Hills of South Dakota, the mountains of Oaxaca,
the desert of the American southwest, the mountains
of Tibet and from the rainforest of Central Africa.
Affirming
our relations with traditional medicine peoples and
communities throughout the world, we have been brought
together by a common vision to form a new global alliance.
We
are the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous
Grandmothers. We have united as one. Ours is an alliance
of prayer, education and healing for our Mother Earth,
all Her inhabitants, all the children and for the next
seven generations to come.
We
are deeply concerned with the unprecedented destruction
of our Mother Earth, the contamination of our air, waters
and soil, the atrocities of war, the global scourge
of poverty, the threat of nuclear weapons and waste,
the prevailing culture of materialism, the epidemics
which threaten the health of the Earth's peoples, the
exploitation of indigenous medicines, and with the destruction
of indigenous ways of life.
We,
the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers,
believe that our ancestral ways of prayer, peacemaking
and healing are vitally needed today. We come together
to nurture, educate and train our children. We come
together to uphold the practice of our ceremonies and
affirm the right to use our plant medicines free of
legal restriction. We come together to protect the lands
where our peoples live and upon which our cultures depend,
to safeguard the collective heritage of traditional
medicines, and to defend the earth Herself. We believe
that the teachings of our ancestors will light our way
through an uncertain future.
We
join with all those who honor the Creator, and to all
who work and pray for our children, for world peace,
and for the healing of our Mother Earth.
For
all our relations.