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Travel Bug Dog Tag Indian Bead Chief!

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Owner:
TreePlanter Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Friday, October 29, 2004
Origin:
Michigan, United States
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

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Current Goal

Indian Bead Chief!!

This great Indian Ruler wants to go on vacation to Europe and see all the sites. He started his journey from the Detroit area of Michigan. We wants to return home to Milford, Michigan on Dec. 31, 2015. So, he has lots of time to visit! Please post some pictures. Thanks!

About This Item

The Great Indian Chief !

Onoda'gega (People of the Hills) In lands of Ohio to New York. Great Tree of Peace: White Pine (Michigan's State Tree!) Onondaga OVERVIEW: Written by Kanatiiosh The Onondaga call themselves Onoda'gega, sometimes spelled Onontakeka, which means People of the Hills, or Onondagaono (The People of the Hills). The Onondagaono are one of the original Five Nations to accept the Peacemaker's message, and they joined together with the Mohawk, Oneida, Seneca, and Cayuga to form the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, which is also know as the Iroquois Confederacy.

Haudenosaunee translates to mean (People of the Longhouse), which refers to the type of homes built by the Haudenosaunee. In approximately 1714, the Tuscarora joined the Haudenosaunee, and the Confederacy became six Nations strong. A man wearing a gustoweh (feathered hat) containing two eagle feathers placed near hills to represent that the Onondaga are known as the People of the Hills. When reading the Ayonwatha (Hiawatha) Belt, the Onondagaono are located at the center of the belt. If looking at the Ayonwatha Belt as it is presented , which is looking northward, then the Onondaga are represented by the symbol of the Great White Pine tree. After Tadodaho, who stood in the way of the Confederacy, accepted the Great Law of Peace from the Peacemaker, the Haudenosaunee Confederacy was founded, and then, at Onondaga, the Great Tree of Peace was planted and all the articles of war were buried beneath the tree.

If one reads the belt by looking at the belt southward, then the Onondaga are represented by the symbol of the heart, for Onondaga is the center (Heart) of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. The Hiawatha belt represents the founding of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. When the Peacemaker came to the warring Five Nations, he carried with him the message of Kaianeraserakowa (the Great Law of Peace). The Peacemaker came to the Haudenosaunee with his message of Skennen (Peace), Kariwiio (The Good Word), and Kasatensera (strength), which contains the principles of peace, equality, respect, love, and justice. The Peacemaker envisioned the uniting of these Nations in peace as one extended Longhouse with each Nation having their own hearth fire. In other words, each Nation would have a shared sovereignty in the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, and the responsibility to protect the Peace, the Natural World, and the Future Generations to come, while retaining the sovereignty over their own Nations. The joining together of the Five Nations is perhaps the oldest example of nations uniting under a single form of government and spirituality.

Interestingly, the Haudenosaunee draw no distinction between what is political and what is spiritual, for our spiritual leaders are also the political leaders. The Onondaga are known as the Fire-keepers, which has significance when the Grand Council of Chiefs, composed of all fifty chiefs of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, meet to discuss matters of importance to the entire Confederacy. During the Grand Council the Onondaga officially open and close the meeting, as well as confirming and sanctioning all decisions of the Council. The Onondaga are also the Keepers of the Wampum, and they are known as the Elder Brothers. The man is wearing a Gustoweh, which is a feathered hat. One can identify the Nation that the wearer is from by the number of eagle feathers and the position of these feathers worn on the kastoweh.

Gallery Images related to Indian Bead Chief!

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Tracking History (66979.4mi) View Map

Retrieve It from a Cache 10/31/2004 GT.US retrieved it from Hamburg-er Hill Michigan   Visit Log

Indian Bead Cheif will cross the big water soon. More details when I get him in a cache.

Dropped Off 10/31/2004 TreePlanter placed it in Hamburg-er Hill Michigan   Visit Log
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