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Notice: This version of MyVaughn.com was coded in a hurry back in 2011. Due to the massive growth of our other sites I've not been able to give this site the attention it needs. You will notice very slow load times, glitches, and all sorts of other mess.

-Mark Vaughn, [email protected]
Kanonsionni
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Kanonsionni
i am a active traditional tribal member of the akwesasne st regis mohawk indian nation in upstate new york. i am haudenosaunee, iroquois confederacy people of the longhouse the 6 nations of new york. i am NOT christian. i am of the original people of this land onkwehonweh. the closer we are to creation, the closer we are to creator, our prayer, we are now reminded to be aware of our place upon this earth and to fulfill our obligations to our self, family, indian nation, the natural world, and to the creator, the haudenosaunee words say we are to awakin, stand up, be counted, for we are being recognised by the spirit world. all life, everything living has a spirit, we are equal we must learn to coexist with mother earth.
Kanonsionni
death is false, we dont live here, life on earth is a short visit, somday we will all be reunited with our friends, family, ancestors, that went home before us . dreams are a communication with our loved ones that already crossed over. keep our deceased loved ones close . talk of them and remember them often
Kanonsionni
SKA KA LUK SA, i would like to acknowledge the fish life and our connection to all water life. since the beginning of time , creator gave fish their own instructions. to this day they havent forgotten them. i would like to remember our gratitude for thier sacrifice as a life giving source.
Kanonsionni
THE PEACEMAKERS JOURNEY Some say it was a thousand years ago. Some say that it was two thousand years when there was a dark period in the history of The People. The Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca Nations were at war with one another. It was a terrible time of cruelty, bloodshed and mourning. But then a Huron man, referred to as the Peacemaker, canoed from the western shore of Lake On...tario. He brought with him a message of peace and unity. The first individual to accept his message of peace was a Seneca woman named Jigonsaseh. Because it was a woman who was the first individual to accept his message of peace, the Peacemaker gave women an important role in the new confederacy that was to be formed. Jigonsaseh became known as “The Mother of Nations.” The first nation to accept the Peacemaker’s message was the Kanienkehaka or the Mohawk Nation. The Peacemaker traveled east and camped near Cohoes Falls. He made a campfire so that the Mohawks in the nearby village would see the smoke and know that he was there and that he wished to confer with them. Mohawk runners came to his campsite to ask who he was and to find out what he wanted. The Peacemaker said that he was the one they were waiting for. He was the one who was carrying a message of Peace. The Mohawks were uncertain as to whether they should trust this stranger or not and so they said that he would have to pass a test to prove that he had the power to carry such an important message. They said that he would have to climb a tree that was growing next to Cohoes Falls. The Mohawks would then cut the tree down and if he survived the fall, they would know that he had great power and they would listen to his words. The Peacemaker agreed to the test. He climbed the tree. The tree was cut down. The Peacemaker fell into the water and disappeared over the falls. The Mohawks waited and waited, but there was no sign of the visitor emerging from the water. The Mohawks were disappointed and went back to their village. The next morning, a thin wisp of white smoke was seen in the distance. Upon investigation, it was discovered that the Peacemaker had made this campfire and that he was alive and well. He was waiting to be invited to enter the village. It was in that village that he met Ayonwatha, the one who would travel with him to convince the five nations to stop fighting and to unify. It took many years, but eventually, the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca Nations unified and formed a peace league. The English referred to it as “The Five Nations”. Later, they called it “The Six Nations” because the Tuscarora people came north from the Carolina’s in the early 1700’s to join. The French called the league “The Iroquois Confederacy”. The real name is the “Haudenosaunee” meaning “The People of the Longhouse” which refers to the traditional long, bark-covered houses in which the Haudenosaunee lived. Longhouse is also a metaphor for the social, political and spiritual structure that was put into place by the Peacemaker. “Five Nations”, “Six Nations”, “Iroquois Confederacy,” and “Haudenosaunee” are all different names for the same thing. The Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca and Tuscarora Nations are distinct and separate nations that belong to a United Nations called the Haudenosaunee. The Peacemaker put into place a constitution called The Great Law. It is documented that Benjamin Franklin met on many occasions with the Haudenosaunee to learn about The Great Law. It is not surprising that many of the ideals, symbols and some of the structure of the Great Law were borrowed and incorporated into what was to become the Constitution of the United States of America. The Peacemaker remembered that Jigonsaseh was the first individual to accept The Great Law and so Clan Mothers were appointed and given the responsibility to nominate new Chiefs whenever a former Chief passed away. The women assist the Chiefs and warn them to change their ways if they forget to consider the welfare of the people they represent. The women can remove a Chief from office if he does not heed the three warnings that the women send if a Chief is not fulfilling his duties. The Clan Mothers keep track of the names of the children. The Clan Mothers work with the Chiefs to uphold The Great Law. The Chiefs, Clan Mothers, Faithkeepers and Sub-Chiefs still meet today in Grand Council to uphold The Great Law
Peepsinmate
YOU ARE A VERY HANDSOME MAN AND I LOVE THAT YOU STAND BY YOUR PEOPLE AND TAKE CARE OF THE ANIMALS