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Iroqua Μολών Λaβέ's Blog

  • The Native American Source for the Declaration and the Constitution

    Current mood:angry

    ..Photobucket


    In the standard high school history textbooks, the primary sources of the ideas behind the Constitution are almost entirely from western Europe.  We read about English common law, laws from ancient Greece and Rome, and French civil law.  Then, by some sort of magic, the Framers added their original genius, ideas about democracy, separation of powers, federalism, and so on, to the mix and, behold, the Constitution was created.

    All well and good.  Certainly ancient Greece and Rome, medieval England, and the minds of Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, and others were vital contributions to the ideas of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.  But one source, hiding in plain sight, so to speak, is frequently overlooked.  This is the contribution of native Americans, particularly the Iroquois, to the mix.  The Iroquois constitution, called the Great Law of Peace, or Gayanashagowa, contains many echoes of our Constitution, and in a number of respects, is more advanced in thought than the Constitution that resulted from the Convention of 1787.

    This is not something I made up.  If you read the original documents from the time, from people like Benjamin Franklin and George Washington, you will easily see that they deeply acknowledged their debt to the Iroquois and other native Americans.   It's no accident that the protestors at the Boston Tea Party chose to disguise themselves as Indians.  They did this out of respect for the democratic and free nature of Indian society - something they were trying to establish in the face of what they considered British tyranny.

    Who were the Iroquois?  Here's how the Wikipedia article on the Iroquois describes it:


    The Iroquois Confederacy (Haudenosaunee, also known as the League of Peace and Power, Five Nations, or Six Nations, mostly Six nations now a days) is a group of First Nations/Native Americans. It was made up of six tribes: the Mohawks, the Oneidas, the Onondagas, the Cayugas, and the Senecas. A sixth tribe, the Tuscarora, joined after the original five nations were formed. They are also sometimes called the people of the Long house. They are often referred to as Iroquois, a term that some members of the group consider derogatory.

    The Union of Nations was established prior to major European contact, complete with a constitution known as the Gayanashagowa (or "Great Law of Peace") with the help of a memory device in the form of special beads called wampum that have inherent spiritual value (wampum has been inaccurately compared to money in other cultures). Most anthropologists have traditionally speculated that this constitution was created between the middle 1400s and early 1600s. However, recent archaeological studies have suggested the accuracy of the account found in oral tradition, which argues that the federation was formed around August 31, 1142 based on a coinciding solar eclipse (see Fields and Mann, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, vol. 21, #2). Some Westerners have also suggested that the Great Law of Peace was written with European help, although some dismiss this notion as racist.


    The Iroquois were not simply passive observers of the conflict between the French and British.  They were a formidable military power.  In fact, they held the balance of power in the West for the 17th and 18th centuries.  According to Francis Parkman, the famous 19th century historian, the Iroquois were at the height of their power in the 17th century, with a population of around 12,000 people. Our image of native Americans comes mainly from those John Ford westerns, that they were savages who scalped innocent white settlers who just wanted to farm on the empty prairie.  This is not how Benjamin Franklin, who negotiated a treaty with the Iroquois, saw them.


    "It would be a strange thing if six nations of ignorant savages should be capable of forming a scheme for such a union and be able to execute it in such a manner as that it has subsisted ages and appears insoluble; and yet that a like union should be impractical for ten or a dozen English colonies.


    At the time, Franklin proposed a plan, called the Albany Plan of Union, based on the Great Law of Peace, to unite the colonies.  About 40 Iroquois representatives, led by Chief Hendrick of the Mohawk, urged such a union because it had worked so well for the Iroquois.  The white "savages", unfortunately, could not agree.  A number of historians cite the Albany Plan as a predecessor to our Constitution.  They don't always mention that its basis was a native American constitution that had been functioning continuously for hundreds of years.

    On June 11, 1776, the Continental Congress, in the midst of debating the text of the Declaration of Independence, formally invited visiting Iroquois chiefs into the meeting hall.  Read about it here.  There a speech was delivered, in which they were addressed as "Brothers" and told of the delegates' wish that the "friendship" between them would "continue as long as the sun shall shine" and the "waters run." The speech also expressed the hope that the new Americans and the Iroquois act "as one people, and have but one heart."  After this speech, an Onondaga chief requested permission to give Hancock an Indian name. The Congress graciously consented, and so the president was renamed "Karanduawn, or the Great Tree."  Like I said, I'm not making this up.



    Faithkeeper Oren Lyons, an Onondaga, states The Great Law of Peace includes "freedom of speech, freedom of religion, [and] the right of women to participate in government. Separation of power in government and checks and balances within government are traceable to our Iroquois constitution—ideas learned by colonists."

    The central idea underlying Iroquois political philosophy is that peace is the will of the Creator, and the ultimate spiritual goal and natural order among humans. The principles of Iroquois government embodied in The Great Law of Peace were transmitted by a historical figure called the Peacemaker. His teachings emphasize the power of Reason to assure Righteousness, Justice and Health among humans. Peace came to the Iroquois, not through war and conquest, but through the exercise of Reason guided by the spiritual mind. The Iroquois League is based not on force of arms or rule of law, but spiritual concepts of natural law applied to human society.

    At the planting of a Tree of Peace in Philadelphia in 1986, Mohawk Chief Jake Swamp explained, "In the beginning, when our Creator made humans, everything needed to survive was provided. Our Creator asked only one thing: Never forget to appreciate the gifts of Mother Earth. Our people were instructed how to be grateful and how to survive.

    "But during a dark age in our history 1000 years ago, humans no longer listened to the original instructions. Our Creator became sad, because there was so much crime, dishonesty, injustice and war.

    "So Creator sent a Peacemaker with a message to be righteous and just, and make a good future for our children seven generations to come. He called all warring people together and told them as long as there was killing there would be no peace of mind. There must be a concerted effort by humans for peace to prevail. Through logic, reasoning and spiritual means, he inspired the warriors to bury their weapons and planted atop a sacred Tree of Peace."


    Here's a description of the Great Law of Peace, from the Official Six Nations Web Site.  Peace was more than the absence of war - the Iroquois considered it as harmony with nature, one's surroundings, and one's brothers.


    You can read the excellent book Forgotten Founders, by Bruce Johansen, online, for free.  Mr. Johansen examines not only the Great Law of Peace, but also other native American influences on the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.  The Great Law was far more democratic than either document·  Women had full equality - in fact, they sort of ran the show.  The men turned in all their assets, except for their guns and arrows for fighting, to the women to manage.  The long house was a true democracy, where everyone could speak their mind.  Ideas such as free speech, later incorporated into the Bill of Rights, were first written down here.  The idea of separation of powers and federalism was not only written down but practiced.  Each nation preserved its own sovereignty but also agreed to the rights of the Iroquois nation for matters such as defense.  The Iroquois didn't have to wrestle with the "peculiar institution" of slavery because it was unknown.  A modern historian, faced with all the facts, could easily conclude that the Constitution was based on this native American document and then was debased by the fierce political horsetrading that occurred at the Convention in 1787.  Maybe this is too extreme a position.  At the least, however, the contributions of the native Americans to our fundamental documents should be both acknowledged and celebrated, instead of being invisible.


    By the way, the thing about scalping - it was a European invention.  The British placed a bounty on the scalp of an Indian.  The Indians considered scalping as barbaric and only resorted to it out of self defense.  Makes you think about who the savages really were.


    Let Freedom Ring
  • The Native American Source for the Declaration and the Constitution

    Current mood:angry

    ..Photobucket


    In the standard high school history textbooks, the primary sources of the ideas behind the Constitution are almost entirely from western Europe.  We read about English common law, laws from ancient Greece and Rome, and French civil law.  Then, by some sort of magic, the Framers added their original genius, ideas about democracy, separation of powers, federalism, and so on, to the mix and, behold, the Constitution was created.

    All well and good.  Certainly ancient Greece and Rome, medieval England, and the minds of Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, and others were vital contributions to the ideas of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.  But one source, hiding in plain sight, so to speak, is frequently overlooked.  This is the contribution of native Americans, particularly the Iroquois, to the mix.  The Iroquois constitution, called the Great Law of Peace, or Gayanashagowa, contains many echoes of our Constitution, and in a number of respects, is more advanced in thought than the Constitution that resulted from the Convention of 1787.

    This is not something I made up.  If you read the original documents from the time, from people like Benjamin Franklin and George Washington, you will easily see that they deeply acknowledged their debt to the Iroquois and other native Americans.   It's no accident that the protestors at the Boston Tea Party chose to disguise themselves as Indians.  They did this out of respect for the democratic and free nature of Indian society - something they were trying to establish in the face of what they considered British tyranny.

    Who were the Iroquois?  Here's how the Wikipedia article on the Iroquois describes it:


    The Iroquois Confederacy (Haudenosaunee, also known as the League of Peace and Power, Five Nations, or Six Nations, mostly Six nations now a days) is a group of First Nations/Native Americans. It was made up of six tribes: the Mohawks, the Oneidas, the Onondagas, the Cayugas, and the Senecas. A sixth tribe, the Tuscarora, joined after the original five nations were formed. They are also sometimes called the people of the Long house. They are often referred to as Iroquois, a term that some members of the group consider derogatory.

    The Union of Nations was established prior to major European contact, complete with a constitution known as the Gayanashagowa (or "Great Law of Peace") with the help of a memory device in the form of special beads called wampum that have inherent spiritual value (wampum has been inaccurately compared to money in other cultures). Most anthropologists have traditionally speculated that this constitution was created between the middle 1400s and early 1600s. However, recent archaeological studies have suggested the accuracy of the account found in oral tradition, which argues that the federation was formed around August 31, 1142 based on a coinciding solar eclipse (see Fields and Mann, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, vol. 21, #2). Some Westerners have also suggested that the Great Law of Peace was written with European help, although some dismiss this notion as racist.


    The Iroquois were not simply passive observers of the conflict between the French and British.  They were a formidable military power.  In fact, they held the balance of power in the West for the 17th and 18th centuries.  According to Francis Parkman, the famous 19th century historian, the Iroquois were at the height of their power in the 17th century, with a population of around 12,000 people. Our image of native Americans comes mainly from those John Ford westerns, that they were savages who scalped innocent white settlers who just wanted to farm on the empty prairie.  This is not how Benjamin Franklin, who negotiated a treaty with the Iroquois, saw them.


    "It would be a strange thing if six nations of ignorant savages should be capable of forming a scheme for such a union and be able to execute it in such a manner as that it has subsisted ages and appears insoluble; and yet that a like union should be impractical for ten or a dozen English colonies.


    At the time, Franklin proposed a plan, called the Albany Plan of Union, based on the Great Law of Peace, to unite the colonies.  About 40 Iroquois representatives, led by Chief Hendrick of the Mohawk, urged such a union because it had worked so well for the Iroquois.  The white "savages", unfortunately, could not agree.  A number of historians cite the Albany Plan as a predecessor to our Constitution.  They don't always mention that its basis was a native American constitution that had been functioning continuously for hundreds of years.

    On June 11, 1776, the Continental Congress, in the midst of debating the text of the Declaration of Independence, formally invited visiting Iroquois chiefs into the meeting hall.  Read about it here.  There a speech was delivered, in which they were addressed as "Brothers" and told of the delegates' wish that the "friendship" between them would "continue as long as the sun shall shine" and the "waters run." The speech also expressed the hope that the new Americans and the Iroquois act "as one people, and have but one heart."  After this speech, an Onondaga chief requested permission to give Hancock an Indian name. The Congress graciously consented, and so the president was renamed "Karanduawn, or the Great Tree."  Like I said, I'm not making this up.



    Faithkeeper Oren Lyons, an Onondaga, states The Great Law of Peace includes "freedom of speech, freedom of religion, [and] the right of women to participate in government. Separation of power in government and checks and balances within government are traceable to our Iroquois constitution—ideas learned by colonists."

    The central idea underlying Iroquois political philosophy is that peace is the will of the Creator, and the ultimate spiritual goal and natural order among humans. The principles of Iroquois government embodied in The Great Law of Peace were transmitted by a historical figure called the Peacemaker. His teachings emphasize the power of Reason to assure Righteousness, Justice and Health among humans. Peace came to the Iroquois, not through war and conquest, but through the exercise of Reason guided by the spiritual mind. The Iroquois League is based not on force of arms or rule of law, but spiritual concepts of natural law applied to human society.

    At the planting of a Tree of Peace in Philadelphia in 1986, Mohawk Chief Jake Swamp explained, "In the beginning, when our Creator made humans, everything needed to survive was provided. Our Creator asked only one thing: Never forget to appreciate the gifts of Mother Earth. Our people were instructed how to be grateful and how to survive.

    "But during a dark age in our history 1000 years ago, humans no longer listened to the original instructions. Our Creator became sad, because there was so much crime, dishonesty, injustice and war.

    "So Creator sent a Peacemaker with a message to be righteous and just, and make a good future for our children seven generations to come. He called all warring people together and told them as long as there was killing there would be no peace of mind. There must be a concerted effort by humans for peace to prevail. Through logic, reasoning and spiritual means, he inspired the warriors to bury their weapons and planted atop a sacred Tree of Peace."


    Here's a description of the Great Law of Peace, from the Official Six Nations Web Site.  Peace was more than the absence of war - the Iroquois considered it as harmony with nature, one's surroundings, and one's brothers.


    You can read the excellent book Forgotten Founders, by Bruce Johansen, online, for free.  Mr. Johansen examines not only the Great Law of Peace, but also other native American influences on the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.  The Great Law was far more democratic than either document·  Women had full equality - in fact, they sort of ran the show.  The men turned in all their assets, except for their guns and arrows for fighting, to the women to manage.  The long house was a true democracy, where everyone could speak their mind.  Ideas such as free speech, later incorporated into the Bill of Rights, were first written down here.  The idea of separation of powers and federalism was not only written down but practiced.  Each nation preserved its own sovereignty but also agreed to the rights of the Iroquois nation for matters such as defense.  The Iroquois didn't have to wrestle with the "peculiar institution" of slavery because it was unknown.  A modern historian, faced with all the facts, could easily conclude that the Constitution was based on this native American document and then was debased by the fierce political horsetrading that occurred at the Convention in 1787.  Maybe this is too extreme a position.  At the least, however, the contributions of the native Americans to our fundamental documents should be both acknowledged and celebrated, instead of being invisible.


    By the way, the thing about scalping - it was a European invention.  The British placed a bounty on the scalp of an Indian.  The Indians considered scalping as barbaric and only resorted to it out of self defense.  Makes you think about who the savages really were.


    Let Freedom Ring
  • why i am on myspace and my solidarity for all my people an

    Current mood:depressed

    ........................

    I am on my space because I believe in freedom, I believe in
    freedom for all my people  and all
    people.  And my brother who land are
    being taken. Hate is what killing us all. There is no love any more in this
    word. I have seed my family fights over lies. I have seed my family talk lies
    with out love. I have seed my mother who die because of greed

    I have seed my family who believe in them self and have no
    honor.  I have seed my kids who do not
    take honor on how they are or who do not follow there native path. I have seed
    my sister kids walk with greed for them self and not give to shit for there
    mother or father. I have seed one of my sister kids get marry and his wife give
    to shit only for her self. I have seed this women spy on my sister but her kids
    do not care at all.

    I have seed people
    fight because of race because of religion because of greed and lies. I have
    seed that this country going to hell. I have seed my people being killed rape
    and hurt for greed. I have been put down by my sister for what I believe and by
    the one I love. I have been told I look for fame to be a big shot. My sister
    told me why do I do this on my space, my sister who try to have me killed by
    her son because of hate. And my brother who also join in. the one who I love
    and still love because I will not be like them. I will walk as the creator
    wants me to be. I will not deny who I am. I am a native I will fight for my
    people my land. But I am sick of being
    put down.  I will not follow the hate of
    this world I will walk as a warrior and
    if I have to die for my people I will. I will walk with honor and respect. If my
    sister or brother does not like it to bad I am who I am. For my sister kids I hop
    that you open your eyes and walk with respect for your mother and father. To me
    you have dishonor our blood. By walking with greed, walking with out love for
    your mother and father. Do not tell me you love them because if you did you
    will not do what you are doing. And I am sorry that women will not be family to
    m. for she walk in greed and hate and a two face. To the world wake up walk with love and truth.
    I will stand with by brother and sister and fight for freedom. I will fight for
    my people I will fight for the truth. This video is in my heart and I will walk
    with honor until the day I die. I am here to fight for freedom and if you do
    not like it to bad. I will say to all Molon ....labe....


    i Will Not Go Down i will stand with my people and my brother and with Palestine and my country for freedom. to be free and to live free




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