Ezra
Stiles Illustrations (Great Berrington “Monument of Stones”)
At the blog Sokoki Sojourn, my friend
writes, “A short article by Lisa McLoughlin of the Nolumbeka Project, outlining
a number of useful strategies to recognize and preserve existing Native stone
assemblage sites. Ongoing land development and a general lack of public
awareness, not to mention ignorance or dismissal, brings constant destructive
pressure upon these ancient interactions of land and spirit.” He adds this
quote from Lisa McLoughlin:
“…I’d say
that while many stone features have been destroyed, there are still thousands
left. They are hiding in our back yards, in our state forests, along our
waterways — everywhere in plain sight. Help others realize why they should be
respectful of these when they find them, help them imagine what it might mean
to have a religiously-important structure (e.g. something built to honor
someone in your family) technically belong to someone else, or be at risk from
vandals, pot-hunters, and developers. These stone structures are examples of
how humans found a way to interact respectfully and in a mutually-beneficial
way with nature. They are Natural Cultural nodes, blueprints for how we will
need to think in the future if we are to survive and allow our natural world
survive. They are important beyond the specific, and they should give us hope.”
Taken From:
Ways you
can help stop destruction of the few Indian features left in Massachusetts
by Lisa
McLoughlin of Nolumbeka Project
• preserve
land for whatever reason — environmental preservation usually means that
cultural resources are preserved on that land too. Support your local land
trust.
• support
Tribal efforts to protect their traditional cultural properties — protest
projects that will bulldoze them, and make connections with Tribal Historic
Preservation Officers if you have
found some stone structures that need protection (either through your historical commission, Nolumbeka Project, or similar group or reach out to them directly)
found some stone structures that need protection (either through your historical commission, Nolumbeka Project, or similar group or reach out to them directly)
•
influence the workings of your town, state, and national governments toward
protection of cultural resources — introduce and enact laws that put in place
protections and processes that require traditional cultural properties to be
taken into account, that encourage smart development (or less development),
that take a wholistic approach.
• learn
about cultural resources and the governmental agencies that manage them — the
writings of Thomas F. King are especially good at helping non-experts understand
what’s at stake and how to go about protecting it: Saving Places that Matter,
and the National Park Service Bulletin 38 are 2 good places to start.
• read
history, especially local history, and collect stories from older people,
hunters, and farmers (people close to the land) in your community — find out
and document what was/is there so that if it is threatened you can speak to its
importance. This applies to the land pre- and post- colonist—an important part
of doing this work is setting the record straight and reclaiming the history of
the first people before we came, and our interactions with them since. It will
tell us a lot not just about them, but about us and issues we still have not
resolved about how we treat others as a culture.
• talk to
others about why these features matter.
Finally,
I’d say that while many stone features have been destroyed, there are still
thousands left. They are hiding in our back yards, in our state forests, along
our waterways — everywhere in plain sight. Help others realize why they should
be respectful of these when they find them, help them imagine what it might
mean to have a religiously-important structure (e.g. something built to honor
someone in your family) technically belong to someone else, or be at risk from vandals,
pot-hunters, and developers. These stone structures are examples of how humans
found a way to interact respectfully and in a mutually-beneficial way with
nature. They are Natural Cultural nodes, blueprints for how we will need to
think in the future if we are to survive and allow our natural world survive.
They are important beyond the specific, and they should give us hope.
» Learn
more about Ceremonial Stone Landscapes impacted by Kinder
Morgan’s CT Expansion Pipeline path in Massachusetts
This entry
was posted in Uncategorized on February 19, 2017 by Rosemary Wessel.
Getting distracted by Stiles's sketch of the donation pile with the words: "Tradition every time Indian came along cast a stone upon it".
ReplyDeleteI am having trouble with the sketch showing two humps and a dip in between. It looks more like a pile with a hollow than the kind of pile with a single summit and sloping sides that I would expect for a donation pile.
Here is what a donation pile looks like:
ReplyDeletehttp://2.bp.blogspot.com/-yDJUDgOohMc/UCeTRzmgH9I/AAAAAAAAIjk/aZIfrGvwGR0/s1600/3982000390_ba0abf7846_o.jpg