MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
The Wakan Circle[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome to the Wakan Circle  
  Management list & Msn Code of Conduct  
  TheWakanCircleGuidelines  
  TheWakanCircleBeginning-  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  TO WALK THE RED ROAD~  
  What is The Red Road  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Dedicated to Our Ancestors  
  In Loving Memory.... Mamthesonak....5..1..2008  
  ***********************************  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Happy Thanksgiving to All  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  MESSAGE BOARD  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Wakan CHAT ROOM #! 1  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  ELDERS QUESTIONS  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  MEMBERS BIOS  
  Cherokee ? Board  
  NAME in CHEROKEE  
  Indian News  
  DID YOU KNOW???  
  American Indian Radio  
  Reservation Help  
  AdoptAElder&Grandparent  
  Prayer & Healing  
  YourPersonalPrayerCircle  
  Prayer Ties  
  Wakan Journeys  
  Mourning Place  
  OurCreator OurStrength  
  Spirit of Red Man  
  Abuse Shelter  
  Recovery Room  
  MemberProfiles&ContactList  
  Warning Message>  
  WHY AMERICAN INDIAN??  
  TheCherokeeWayOfTheCircle  
  Culture& History  
  Medicine Wheel & Shield  
  Earth Wheel,  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Daily Motivation  
  Elder Meditation  
  Healing Stones  
  Inspirational  
  Words of Wisdom  
  Quotes  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  A Womans World  
  Women Warriors  
  Women Of Courage  
  American IndianWomenRights  
  NativeAmericanMilitaryWomen  
  Words&Remedys(women)  
  *****************************************  
  Herbs, Oils, Etc  
  Medicinal Herbs.  
  Natural Soaps  
  Plants & Culture  
  Wakan Medicines  
  TalkingStick  
  Sacred Animals  
  Animal Medicines Etc  
  Totems & meanings  
  All Totems  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Pow Wow Updates  
  Events Updates  
  POW WOW Guidelines  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Leonard Peltier  
  Genealogy  
  Dreamcatchers Information  
  Dreamcatchers  
  Your Dreams  
  Indian Music +++  
  Storytime  
  Childrens Corner  
  Childrens Board  
  Our Storytellers  
  More Storyteller  
  Crafty Corner  
  Picture of Members  
  Pictures  
  Our Poetry Page  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Annie's Poetry  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Heart Songs  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Annie's Country Kitchen  
  FAMILY RECIPES  
  Old&New Remedies  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Folklore  
  Legends - Tales  
  FirstPipe&WhiteBuffaloWoman  
  White Buffalo Legend  
  White BuffaloECT  
  The Sacred PIPE  
  Age of the Sacred Pipe".  
  Sweat Lodge  
  Vision Quests  
  Smudging ect.  
  SMUDGING  
  Our Elders  
  Trail Of Tears  
  TrailOfTears Park(Powwow)  
  TrailOfTearsHistory...today  
  Cherokee Nation...Trail Map  
  Samuel Cloud turned 9 years old on the Trail  
  TrailOfTearsTimeline----&SpecialPoem  
  Cherokee Rose +  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Cherokee History  
  Cherokee..Lessons on Life  
  SouthernCherokee  
  Cherokee Sayings  
  The Cherokee Belief System  
  Cherokee Traditions  
  Cherokee Tribes  
  Our Cherokee Language  
  Cherokee Moons ect  
  Cherokee Seasons  
  Seven Clans of Cherokee Society  
  Cherokee history  
  Cherokee Words  
  Cherokee Nation  
  Building Body and Mind  
  NativeSymbolsOrigin&Meaning  
  Goal of Indian Spirituality  
  American IndianCodeOfEthics  
  Indian Beliefs  
  Maps of our Nations  
  Indian Prayers  
  AmericanIndianCommadments  
  American IndianLegends  
  Battle inHistory  
  American Indian Philosophy  
  Indian Poetry  
  Indian Authors  
  American Indians Poems  
  Wisdom  
  Great Quotes  
  American Indian Quotes  
  American Indian Quotes (more)  
  American Indian Spirituality #1  
  American Indian Spirituality# 2  
  Many Legends  
  Indian Heritage  
  Indian Genealogy  
  American Indian Religion  
  More Religion  
  Indian Beliefs  
  Indian Languages  
  Navajo Words  
  Blackfoot Words  
  Lakotah Words..  
  Ojibwe Words  
  Mohawk Words  
  Cherokee Lessons  
  Strength Of Our Ancestors  
  Our Military  
  Code Talkers  
  Todays History  
  Our Founding Fathers  
  The Six Nations:  
  History of Native Americans  
  In Honor of my People!!!!!  
  In Remembrance of The People  
  OUR LAND WAS TAKE----------------(message from our people)  
  Sign Language  
  Ceremonies!!!  
  SACRED HOOP  
  The DRUM  
  Cherokees�?Treasure  
  Power of the Flute  
  Ceremonial Dance  
  Spiritual Warrior  
  Indian Lands  
  Indian Spirituality.message  
  Spiritual Animals  
  Indian Myths ect  
  Indian Tribes !  
  Choctaw  
  Pawnee  
  Black Indians  
  Indian Tribes  
  Indian Quotes  
  Chiefs ect  
  Native Men  
  Todays Indians  
  Are You Indian????  
  Tribal Colors  
  Geronimo  
  Seven Teachings  
  Sacred Prayers ect  
  Our Prayer Carriers  
  The Philosophies  
  Moons ect.  
  Prophecies  
  Native American Code Of Ethics  
  Mother Earths Lament  
  Copyright Corner © Disclaimer...Copyright info  
  ALL Links Pages  
  Other Websites Links ect  
  Banner Exchange  
  Members Birthdays  
  World Clock & More  
  PSP Makers groups Links  
  PRAYERS  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Ceremonial Dance : Cherokee Sacred Dances
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 1 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameAnnie-LL  (Original Message)Sent: 10/28/2005 9:15 PM

1firedivider.gif

 
 
      Cherokee ceremonies are held with the cycles of Mother Earth. During ceremony, positive attitudes are far more important than rituals. Ceremonies offer opportunities for community worship, socialization, and bonding. Ceremonial musical instruments used for dancing and festivals include drums, gourd rattles, and turtle shell rattles (leg shackles). As part of worship, stomp dancing is held around the sacred fire and is accompanied by drums, singing, and leg shackles worn by women. Other dancing occurred in a "square", a social area, usually around a center pole or social fire. This was usually an area near the Council House, or the Long House. Our Cherokee ancestors tried to make each ceremony unique in some way, they were creative. Music, dancing, feasting, stick-ball and storytelling were joyous expressions of thanksgiving and occasions for Cherokee bonding at all cyclical ceremonies.

A sacred fire containing seven different types of wood, to represent the seven clans, was prepared and lit prior to ceremony according to scared rites. Direction of movement around the sacred fire during Cherokee ceremony is counter-clockwise. A complete, unbroken circle of "Red Heart" people around the fire produces powerful energy of the Creator's presence carried by the postitive attitudes in the heart of the participants.

1firedivider.gif

1. Great New Moon Ceremony - Celebrated at the first new moon in autumn (October). Since autumn was the season when Cherokee stories say the world was created, it represented the new year celebration. Each family brought some produce from their field to share, such as corn, beans and pumpkins. Ceremonies included dancing, purification by immersing seven times in water, called "going to water". This ceremony gave the Cherokee an opportunity to give thanksgiving to the Great Spirit and the ancecestors for their blessings on us. It was a time to feast, and give thanks to Creator that the cycle would continue.

1firedivider.gif

2. Propitiation of Cementation Ceremony (Friendship Ceremony) - Celebrated 10 days after the Great New Moon Ceremony. This ceremony symbolizes the unity between the Creator and mankind and also dealt with relationships between two people of the same or opposite sex. These relationships were bonds of eternal friendship in which each person vowed to regard the other as himself as long as they both lived. It was a ceremony that was a pledge of universal fraternal or paternal love. It also entailed reconciliation between those who had quarreled during the previous year. It symbolized the uniting of the people with the Creator and purification of body and mind. The New Moon Ceremony was said to have been the most profoundly religious of all the ceremonies. As with other observances, it also involved the rekindling of the scared fire.

1firedivider.gif

3. Bouncing Bush Ceremony (Exalting Bush Festival) - This was a joyous ceremony were the Cherokee expressed unrestrained joy giving thanks to the Great Spirit and his helpers, acknowledging them as the source of our blessings. Dancing and feasting abound, and thansgiving was expressed by everyone tossing an offering of sacred tobacco in the sacred fire.

1firedivider.gif

4. First New Moon of Spring Ceremony - Celebrated in March, at the time the green grass began to grow. Fruits from the previous fall harvest were brought to ceremony and consumed to remember the continuation of the Creator's care and blessing. This festival initiated the planting season and incorporated predictions concerning crop success or failure. It lasted seven days and included dancing and the re-lighting of the sacred fire by the "fire-keeper". There ceremony included sacrificing a deer tongue in the fire. All the home fires were extinguished and rekindled from the sacred fire's coals, symbolizing fresh beginnings, and renewal of life from Mother Earth.

1firedivider.gif

5. Green Corn Ceremony - Celebrated in July or August, when corn is still green but fit to taste.  New corn was not to be eaten until after the ceremony took place. Messengers were sent to notify the towns of the nation about when the celebration would take place. Along the way they gathered seven ears of corn, each from a field of a different clan. After the messengers returned, the chief and seven councilors fasted for six days. The ceremony began on the seventh. Again, the sacred fire was extinguished and rekindled. As the with the First New Moon Ceremony, a deer tongue was sacrificed in the sacred fire. Kernels from the seven ears of corn that had been gathered from the clans were also sacrificed. Food that was made from the new corn was brought to the town house and everyone was fed. The Chief and his councilors could only eat corn from the previous year's crop for another seven days.

1firedivider.gif

6. Ripe Corn Ceremony - Celebrated about 40 to 50 (late September) days after the Green Corn Ceremony, when the corn is matured. It was the only ancient ceremony that survived into the 20th century. This is the end of the national cycle of ceremonies. Thanksgiving is offered to the Creator for the harvest of mature, ripe fruit.

1firedivider.gif

7. The Chief Dance (UKU Ceremony) - Celebrated once every seven years. The Principal Cherokee Chief is carried into the Sacred circle of the Sacred Fire, on a white chair, and acknowledged as the Chief of all the people by each of the clans. This ceremony reminds us of the one true Chief, the Great Spirit-Creator. Dancing and feasting follows.

1firedivider.gif



First  Previous  No Replies  Next  Last