Chiron
Communiqué
Author's
Occasional Newsletter
from
Steven McFadden
Let
Us Now Praise a Worthy Man:
Grandfather William Commanda at Age 90
© - Copyright 2003 by Steven McFadden
William Commanda marked his 90th birthday on Nov. 11, 2003. He is worthy
of praise and honor for having attained great age in a sacred manner,
and for having accomplished much good over his years.
Grandfather
Commanda is a traditional Algonquin Elder from the Kitigan Zibi Reserve
in Maniwaki, Quebec, Canada. He is the Keeper of three Wampum Belts:
the Seven Fires Prophecy Belt, the 1700s Belt, and the 1793 Jay Treaty
Border Crossing Belt.
I have
been fortunate to know Grandfather since 1989, when I related part of
his story in Chapter 2 of the book "Profiles
in Wisdom: Native Elders Speak About the Earth."
At many
times and in many ways, William has expressed his understanding that
it is crucial for all the children of Mother Earth to come together
at this time with one heart, one mind, one love, and one determination
-- to create a fitting legacy for all our children and our childrens
children.
Among his many accomplishments, Grandfather provided guidance to the
1995-96 Sunbow 5 Walk from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean -- what
proved to be an epic pilgrimage that continues to unfold to this day.
Walking
the Sunbow Road
As the Sunbow 5 Walk made its way from East to West in 1995 and '96,
I kept a daily journal.
Over the course of eight months, the Sunbow pilgrimage walked South
from First Encounter Beach on Cape Cod, Massachusetts to the Qualla
Boundary in North Carolina. Then we walked West to Los Angeles, finally
turning North to end in Santa Barbara, California, on February 2, 1996.
By way of a 90th birthday tribute to Grandfather William Commanda for
his sure guidance throughout that walk and far beyond, I offer some
sketches of him as they were recorded in my journal along the way, and
later expanded.
The journal begins with an account of a Thanksgiving Day gathering,
seven months before the first steps of the long walk.
Thursday,
November 24, 1994
In the last few moments of a weakly illumined
night, tar-dark clouds roiled and raced over all. Then just before the
Sun pulled above the horizon on this piercingly cold Thanksgiving Day,
a west wind raked across the hills and valleys of Massachusetts. The
wind spiked out over Cape Cod Bay, frothing the blackened waters into
angry, spitting caps. A great, bitter wind was upon the land and the
sea. Still, the people came.
In the face of icy needles cast by the unrelenting gale, 40 people broke
from their cars into a wild, scattered search for a place with a scrap
of windbreak. They needed protection, for they had arrived to light
a sacred fire at First Encounter Beach, just five years before the Millennium.
We found a low place, a depression about four feet below grade of the
road on the West, and marked by a wispy picket of marsh grasses to the
East. The people gathered and piled driftwood shoulder high in a tipi
form, then held up blankets and huddled close around Tom Dostou, sheltering
him as knelt to strike a spark. The wind raged, the spark struggled
against the screaming elements. Then the fire came. Within moments it
was big, strong, and wild.
Under the guidance of Algonquin Grandfather William Commanda, the group
of about 40 people -- representing all the colors and many of the spiritual
traditions of the world -- formed a circle and began the ceremony. We
had come to help open the Eastern Door, one of the spiritual gateways
to North America, and to pray for a planned prayer walk of some 3,700
miles that would start from this same beach, and from this same sandy
hollow, in seven months.
In the minutes after
sunrise on Thanksgiving Day, 1994, as the people huddled in blankets
about the wildly blowing fire at First Encounter Beach, a sacred song
was sung. Pipes were filled then lit. Grandfather Commanda prayed in
the Algonquin language. Then Tom Dostou called on four people to speak:
one person representing each of the Four Directions, the Four Colors:
Black, Red, Yellow, White.
Many months later. The Sunbow pilgrims
head West. (Photo by S. McFadden)
When the ceremony ended that cold, windy Thanksgiving morning, we hurried
back to the shelter of our vehicles, and fired them up to travel 15
miles to the home of Tom Dostou and Naoko Haga on Bank Street in Harwich,
Massachusetts. A river of coffee awaited us, to wash down a wild smorgasbord
of turkey, squash, doughnuts, pies, sweet rolls and butter.
After we feasted, Grandfather Commanda settled into an arm chair by
the fireplace in the sun-filled living room. He laid out on the carpet
a prayer cloth. Upon the prayer cloth he set some of the ancient, elegant
Wampum Belts that he has been entrusted to keep since the 1960s: the
Seven Fires Belt, the Jay Treaty Belt, and the 1701 Montreal Treaty
Belt.
The belts are about four inches wide, and perhaps three feet long. Two
of them are beautifully crafted of beads made from wampum, the white
and purple shell of the Quahog clam. The softly colored cream or purple
beads are strung together with rawhide to serve as records of important
agreements, occurrences, or understandings.
As I understand
it, an elder who reads the wampum does more than faithfully remember
what the symbols woven into the belt represent. He or she also communes
with the spirit of the wampum beads -- for each bead bears its own living
vibration, the quahogs being among the Earths oldest creatures.
Together the linked wampum beads form a coherent field of meaning that
is alive in time and carries authority. The wampums not only serve as
records of the past, but also reflect the present and the future. They
are a link to Creators mind.
"I don't own these belts," Grandfather explained to the 30
people crowded into Tom and Naoko's living room. "I just keep them
for the people."
With the support of his helper, Frank Decontie, Grandfather Commanda
told the story of the first belt, the oldest belt, the belt of the Seven
Prophets and the Seven Fires. His understanding of this has been deepened
over the years, as he has interacted and shared with other Anishinabe
elders such as Eddie Benton-Banai. Part of the teaching of this wampum
belt, the part about the Seventh Fire, indicates that "new people"
would arise at a time of great troubles. These new people would have
an opportunity and a responsibility to retrace the footsteps of the
ancestors to find the sacred ways that had been left behind long ago.
It was at this time, as I heard Grandfather recount it, that the light-skinned
race would be given a choice. If they choose the right road, then the
seventh fire would light an eighth and final fire: an eternal fire of
peace, love and brotherhood. But if the light-skinned race makes the
wrong choice of road -- the road of greed and materialism -- then the
destruction which they brought with them on coming to this great Turtle
Island continent will come back to them, causing much suffering and
death.
"It is time to walk," Grandfather Commanda told the gathering
that Thanksgiving Day in 1994. "It is time to retrace the steps
of the ancestors and find what was left by the side of the trail. It
is time to walk now."
When Frank and Grandfather finished speaking, Tom Dostou (Nabesse Pishum)
huddled with guest after guest, making plans for the long cross-continent
pilgrimage that would start in just seven months, in June, 1995.
Tom was to be the head man. He had been afire with the idea of a long
walk since the Cry of the Earth Conference in New York in November 1994
-- and since he had participated in a second walk for native rights
in Canada. The walks had stirred him deeply.
With
his wife Naoko Haga, Tom shared a vision of the Sundog, or Whirling
Rainbow. When this natural phenomenon occurs, a full 360-degree circle
of a rainbow appears in a wide ring around the Sun. Tom and Naoko spoke
of it as the Sunbow, and added the number 5 to it to signify five colors
of human beings: Red, White, Black, Yellow, and Brown. The long walk,
Tom said, would be called the Sunbow 5 Walk for the Earth.
The Sunbow, or Whirling Rainbow, represents an emerging understanding.
In some indigenous communities, it is considered a sign from the Creator.
It has long been held that a time of great change, or transition on
the Earth, would be signaled by an increase in the number of visible
Sunbows.
These full-circle
rainbows around the Sun, some say, may be understood as a sign to people
of the necessity to live a life in respect and harmony with all the
creations that make life possible: plants, animals, waters, minerals,
winds, and other human beings respecting all races and religions.
But there is a lot
to learn about the Sunbow. We are just at the beginning of our understanding.
Day
14 of the Sunbow 5 Walk - Thursday, July 6, 1995
As they were making their steps today the walkers realized that they
had covered a far stretch of road over two weeks. They had walked across
Cape Cod, Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and then West along the shore
of Connecticut toward New York City. This day -- the fourteenth day
on the road -- the walkers covered about ten more miles across New Rochelle
and the Bronx, ending at the Willis Bridge on the margin of Manhattan.
Though
the walking distance was short, it took over five hours for the walkers
to make all the steps, for the way was congested and the road was hot
to the point of torment.
Valaine Lighty and Erika Haga looked about them as the walk approached
New York City, and they discussed their experience. Reaching for descriptors,
Valaine asked: "Have you ever seen the film Koyaanisqatsi?
That's what it was like."
Koyaanisqatsi is a Hopi word and concept. It means chaos, or
"world out of balance." A few years ago a film was made under
this title depicting traffic, pollution, hatred, and the desecration
of the earth, air, and water -- all set to a musical score by Philip
Glass that intensifies the experience to an excruciatingly painful degree.
Throughout their day on the road, Valaine, Erika, and the other walkers,
heard horns honk and various machines ratchet, throb and grind. They
saw jagged stretches of pavement, burned-out buildings, graffiti, trash,
people engaged in furious argument, and drug dealing. They saw unattended
children bawling on the street, beggars, and not a few people just sitting
and blankly staring. They saw a woman try to cross the street and almost
get run over by a car. They heard her cry out: "What? Do I not
exist?" For the walkers this overheard cry of frustration and despair
seemed to epitomize the voices of far too many souls in the modern world.
The walkers prayed as they went. They put down tobacco in places where
they saw trash, decay, or suffering. They contemplated their visions,
and their mission. They kept walking.
Meanwhile, Grandfather Commanda and Ned Pashene (Naskapi Cree) arrived
in New York via Air Canada, to accompany the walkers to their meeting
with officials at the United Nations on Friday.
After Grandfather and Ned got off the plane and greeted the walkers,
they told everyone the story of their difficulties in crossing the international
boundary from Canada to the United States.
They had been detained and hassled at the border by immigration officials
-- as they often are -- because they are not citizens of the US or Canada,
but rather First Nations people. In being stopped at the border, Grandfather
said, there was for him always a bitter irony. Thats because,
in addition to the other sacred artifacts he keeps, Grandfather is the
keeper of the Jay Treaty Border Crossing Belt.
A belt of beads is the traditional Algonquin device employed to record
the solemn and binding agreement they entered into in 1793 with the
US and Great Britain. This was a time when the newly formed government
of the United States was defining its corporate existence upon Turtle
Island and the Canadian nation did not yet exist. Native nations were
full and equal partners to the treaty, with the same standing as the
United States and Great Britain. But the Algonquins did not use black
marks upon paper to keep important records; they used beads woven into
beautiful, long-lasting belts.
The Jay Treaty has many provisions. One article stipulates that First
Nations peoples would always have the right to freely cross the border
between the US and Canada. After all, the native people had never drawn
lines on the earth to define regions, but rather had accepted the natural
boundaries of the earth. Native peoples considered the idea of drawing
lines on a map, and designating them as "real boundaries,"
to be both artificial and arbitrary. Many of their traditional tribal
homelands overlap what is now the US-Canada border.
As agreed upon by all parties, the Jay Treaty states explicitly that
Native Americans may travel freely back and forth across the U.S./Canadian
border, and that this is a permanent understanding: "The Indians
dwelling on either side of the...boundary line... {shall have the right}
freely to pass and repass by land or island navigation...and to navigate
all the lakes, rivers and waters thereof, freely, to carry on trade
and commerce with each other."
The way the Algonquin people recorded this permanent agreement -- as
with all important matters -- was to fashion a belt of beads in a pattern
that would plainly symbolize the understanding. For the most important
agreements, they used beads fashioned from the shell of the Quahog clam
(venus mercenaria), known as wampum in Algonquin.
Grandfather Commanda is the contemporary keeper of the Jay Treaty Belt
-- but that is of scant relevance to US or Canadian officials when he
crosses the border. He gets hassled anyway, just as Native American
people often are when crossing. As Grandfather put it, their right to
recognition as Native people is often not respected.
On this July day, after a long delay and intensive questioning by border
officials, Grandfather Commanda and Ned Pashene were finally admitted
to the United States, and traveled on to New York to join the walkers
at the United Nations.
Day
15 of the Sunbow 5 Walk - Friday, July 7, 1995
At 9 AM on Friday, July 7 the walkers met at the Willis Bridge and began
walking down Second Avenue to 44th St. and then over to United Nations
headquarters, which sits close by the shore of the East River.
As they passed through
Harlem many people offered the walkers warm smiles, and said "good
morning." It was an easy journey, and their spirits were peaceful
as they walked and prayed.
The
walkers soon reached the technological and bureaucratic wonderland of
the United Nations (UN), perched upon the fabled $26 island acquired
through an infamous 1626 trade between the Manhattan peoples and a company
of European merchants.
While at UN headquarters the walkers met with Delphine Redshirt, the
chairperson of the UN's Committee for the "International Decade
of the World's Indigenous Peoples (1995-2004)," and with Elsa Stamatopoulou,
an official of the UN's Centre for Human Rights. The Sunbow walkers
and Grandfather Commanda had come to reiterate the messages presented
during the prophetic and historic "Cry of the Earth" conference
in 1994.
Grandfather Commanda opened todays meeting with a prayer, and
then Ms. Stamatopoulou welcomed the walkers to the UN. In her remarks
she outlined what the UN was doing for the Earth and for indigenous
peoples.
Tom Dostou responded with a brief speech. "Many of the nation states
that belong to the UN are afraid of indigenous peoples. But we have
no guns, no money, and no systems of power of the kind that they need
to be concerned about. We have our spiritual basis. That's about it.
We don't want to overthrow the nation states and create more fear, hate,
and harm. That won't help anybody. We don't feel we 'own' the land,
but rather that we are all -- every color, and nationality, and religion
-- tenants on the Earth Mother. Indigenous people are trying to help
show the industrial-commercial nation-states how to live on the land,
how to be in good relation with it. That's something that we all need
to know. It's important, and it's important now."
After this statement Tom rested and Grandfather Commanda opened his
medicine bag and withdrew the Seven Fires Wampum Belt to show it to
the walkers and the UN officials.
The Seven Fires
Wampum Belt is primarily dark, purple wampum beads, with a pattern of
seven white diamonds, each diamond representing a 'fire,' or epoch of
time. The middle fire is represented by a double diamond, indicating
the promise of an Eighth Fire, or epoch, if people heed the foundational
lessons of honesty, love, caring, sharing, and respect.
Grandfather Commanda explained to everyone about the belts, briefly
telling the meaning of each of the seven diamonds shown on the belt
(representing the Seven Fires).
I noted the core of his message during a phone conversation later that
day that day, Grandfather told the officials: "We are in the time
of the Seventh Fire now. That's the reason for this Sunbow walk. We
need to maintain our honesty, and to bring things into keeping with
the way the Creator intended. That way we can bring the double-diamond
at the center of the belt together, to make one diamond representing
the lighting of an Eighth Fire. That fire does not have to burn or destroy,
but can illuminate this world that we are part of. It's up to us which
way it burns. We have the choice now, and can use our will as we want.
It's up to the people."
"The first key in this healing," Grandfather said, "is
forgiveness: to forgive those people, and nations, and races that we
feel have done us harm. We may not forget, but we have to forgive. That
will begin to heal the hurt. We have to forgive ourselves, too, for
the harm we have done to ourselves and to others. It's very difficult.
It's not easy. But that's what's required. Those are the teachings that
have been handed down to me. That's part of what the wampum belt is
about, and that's what I have to share."
"If all the races will come together," Grandfather Commanda
said at the UN, "and stop doing what they are doing, it can begin.
Forgiveness, peace, love, respect -- those are the four important things.
With all of that, then the waters can again be pure, the air can be
clean, the Earth can be healed, and the children can live. Whether it
will happen or not, we don't know. The people have the choice. The time
to choose is now. We pray for the good things. That's why the walk."

Many
months later. The Sunbow pilgrims head West. (Photo by S. McFadden)
Day
224 of the Sunbow 5 Walk -- Thursday, February 1, 1996
The rain kept coming on and off. We all sat on logs and chairs and tarps
around the main campfire at Circle K Ranch, in the hills just to the
East of Santa Barbara, California, on the shore of the Pacific Ocean.
From the coals they
cared for, the firekeepers had built the blaze up big. We talked for
a while, getting ready for the closing ceremony that was planned for
the next day, and we looked around the circle at ourselves, soggy and
tired.

At
final camp. L. to R.: Ned Pashene, Joe Soto, Grandfather Commanda, Evelyn
Dewache. (-S.McFadden)
Grandfather was
wearing his silver cowboy hat with beaded band, and a black vest as
he sat by the fire, with his daughter Evelyn at his side. Someone had
placed a blanket on his chair. He reached into his pocket and pulled
out a letter he had brought with him, dated January 26, 1996.
He read the letter aloud: "Greetings Walkers, It is very pleasing
to hear that you have completed your walk. It has been a difficult journey,
and you have certainly sacrificed yourself for this sacred purpose.
This walk is a history that will be remembered, respected, and honored...You
have done your job, the message is delivered. May the California Sun
shine into your hearts and minds. - Frank Decontie, Algonquin Nation."
Grandfather folded the letter back into his pocket, and looked up. "No
more walking after this," he said. "Let nature talk to us.
Observe it. Well see if the people will listen."

Destination.
Sunbow 5 Walkers at the Pacific Ocean, Feb. 2, 1996 (Photo by S. McFadden)
For
more information:
"Profiles
in Wisdom: Native Elders Speak About the Earth" by Steven McFadden
A
brief biography of William Commanda: http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/ks/3062_e.html
Some
of the teachings in Grandfather's tradition: http://www.ratical.org/ratville/future/william.html

Reminder:
Harmonic Concordance - Nov, 8, 2003
For two celestial reasons, the weekend of November 8-9, 2003 will provide
an auspicious moment for ceremony on a global scale. Over that weekend
the planets will arrange themselves in a Grand Sextile pattern, representing
a sublime balance of energy. This six-pointed star pattern represents
one of the key themes in 2003s phenomenal best selling novel,
"The Da Vinci Code."
The Nov. 8-9 event is being touted as Harmonic Concordance, an echo
of the Harmonic Convergence of 1987. For the full the story, see the
September, 2003 edition of the Chiron Communiqué: http://www.chiron-communications.com/communique%208-5.html
The Da Vinci Code
As mentioned in the September edition of the Chiron Communiqué,
the six-pointed star pattern of Harmonic Concordance on Nov. 8 closely
parallels the publishing phenomenon of 2003: a book titled "The
Da Vinci Code" by Dan Brown.
The book is having an unprecedented global impact, with its revelations
about Western spiritual traditions, and this impact is continuing to
build. In its first week on sale in March 2003, "The Da Vinci Code"
achieved smashed all records when it debuted at #1 on The New York Times
Bestseller list... as well as #1 Wall Street Journal, #1 Publishers
Weekly, and #1 San Francisco Chronicle.
Since then the book has hit #1 on every major bestseller list in the
country and is being translated into more than 30 languages. There are
now more than three million copies of The Da Vinci Code in print, and
it is soon to become a major motion picture.
Meanwhile, interested viewers can see author Dan Brown on the ABC TV
network Special "Jesus, Mary, and Da Vinci." The show is set
to air Monday, Nov. 3rd (8 PM EST). Check local listings.
FOR
MORE INFORMATION:
Author
Dan Browns official website for "The DaVinci Code."
http//:www.danbrown.com/
SCHEDULE
- 2003
Nov. 6 Soul Centered Astrology. Steven McFadden will fill
in for Alan Oken, and offer an astrological look at the month ahead
in a free talk at the Longevity Cafe, 132 Water St., Santa Fe, NM. The
talk begins at 7 PM, and will cover the Nov. 8 Harmonic Concordance,
the Solar Eclipse of Nov. 23, the Saturn station Rx of late Oct., and
other key forces at work in the world. Longevity
Cafe.
Nov. 8 Labyrinth Building at the Santa Fe Sophia Center,
and Ceremonial Consecration at the moment of Harmonic Concordance. For
information, contact Jose in Santa Fe, NM: haveinnerpeace@earthlink.net
Dec
5 - Target Earth 2004: An Astrological Reality Check. The annual
symposium of the Santa Fe Astrology Forum, starting at 7 pm in The Forum,
College of Santa Fe. Marcia Starck will speak on the Cosmic Challenges
in 2004. Steven McFadden will speak on "Pluto in Sagittarius: The
Final Decanate." He will share perceptions of the personal, national,
and global trends that lie immediately ahead of us as Pluto transits
the third and Final Decanate of Sagittarius from Dec. 19, 2003 until
Nov 28, 2008. For information write to webmaster@sfastroforum.org
or see the website http://www.sfastroforum.org
Late April, 2004 Peace Paradigm conference in Rudd, Iowa.
Details to be confirmed.
In
times to come, more to come...
* The Chiron Communique is now published as a blog on the Chiron Communications home page.
All
contents © copyright October, 2003 by Steven McFadden