t Circie OF NATIVE AMERICAN MENTOR & APPRENTICE WRITERS The spring salmon feast at Cel Ho was smaller this year 7he rodeo and pow wow on the Warm Springs Reservation split Indian Country down the middle that weekend No m atter Magic has little to do w ith numbers For the Columbia basin tribes, the River People, CeliIo is a holy place, the center of their world For centuries, the people have come here in the spring to feast, renew old kinships, and pray The salmon is a g ift from the Creator and the fir s t fish of the season is caught ritu a lly by young men of the tribe whose character has brought them honor The salmon is then ritu a lly consumed, w ith roots, berries and water, by the people The feast is a sacrament that joins the River people to each other and to their place in the scheme of things The people came to CeliIo because of the great fa lls Here the Columbia, second largest rive r on the continent, narrowed to a boiling cataract 200 feet wide and a m ile long whose booming roar could be heard for miles Maggi Jim, whose husband Howard Jim is chief of the Celilo-Wyam, once talked of the feast of her youth when thousands of the people came, so many that the sound of the drums and the songs echoing from the bluffs drowned the sound of the fa lls Celilo Falls is gone now, submerged in the waters behind the Dalles Dam, along w ith an elaborate network of fishing scaffolds generations in the building Maggi Jim Is gone too The old woman cleaning bitte rro o t In the east wind died last year on the 34 acres of Celilo V iIläge—the last scrap of land le ft to one of the richest native cultures on the continent, a settled people whose villages once lined the rive r they call Che Wana from the mouth of the Snake to the Astoria bar The spring salmon feast was smaller this year The night before the Washat ceremony-revealed in a vision to Smowhalla, the last Native American prophet whose village at Priest s Rapids on the upper reaches of the Columbia is now part of the Hanford Plutonium F ac,Iity--the people danced in the long house, welcoming many times the whites who had come to be w ith them Midway through the dancing, an old woman, an elder of the tribe, introduced a young man who had come to honor the people He had danced all day at Warm Springs and had come here, at the old woman s request, to dance the chicken dance for her daughter who was vis itin g and who, like many of the people, had never seen the chicken dance She thanked the young man, who looked to have stepped from the pages of National Geographic, for honoring her daughter, and then counseled the children to watch, to see how it was in the old days, to see who they are As the young man danced the old dance, some of the people walked so ftly into the circle and, eyes cast down, placed dollar b ills on the packed earth flo o r--g ifts to honor the dancer who never once looked at them The dollar b ills were then blessed w ith a wand of eagle feathers by a male elder Then several young g irls in beaded doeskin and single white feathers, watched over by an older g irl on the verge of womanhood, picked up the g ifts, walked to the edge of the circle, and placed them in the hands of the oldest women, those without husbands, the poorest of the people The old women accepted the g ifts , sometimes nodding, remembering other feasts, when their eyes were younger and the people were many, and the sound of the drums and the songs s tille d the roar of the rive r The spring salmon feast at Celilo was smaller this year Unless you count the heart of the people NATIONAL OH 'ICH 2 9 5 1 HUtntwtMMi D riv a F a irfa x , VA 22OJ1 20 ^ 8 V o ie* /VAX; (7 O J ) 284A1028 F rancia, F b J ) IM n tclitr The Oregon Coast Council for the Arts w ill be welcoming a diverse group of Native w rite rs to the Newport Performing A rts Center for an Intensive W riting Workshop scheduled for October 21-23. 1993 This NW Regional Gathering of Native W riters is being sponsored by Wordcraft Circle of Native Mentor/Apprentice W riters, the OCCA, and the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Wordcraft Circle was established at the Returning the G ift Festival of Native W riters held in Norman, Oklahoma in 1992 This historic gathering brought over 400 Native w rite rs together to share ideas and experiences The purpose of the Wordcraft Circle is to create, develop, and maintain an ongoing formal national and international network of Native w rite rs Participants in the visionary e ffo rt are beginning and emerging Native w rite rs (Apprentices) who work w ith established Native w rite rs (Mentors) for at least one year The emphasis during the year is to fa c ilita te the developement of self motivated, self-directed w rite rs At the conclusion of each year, an anthology w ill be published to present the best work of the Apprentice w rite rs A ll services are free to Native w rite rs because Mentors volunteer their time and s k ills The National Director and all Regional Coordinators also donate their services The workshop is open to all Native w rite rs, and membership in the Wordcraft Circle is not required to attend Admission is free Beginning and emerging w rite rs are encouraged to bring samples of their work for one-to-one mentoring sessions and critique There w ill be public performances Thursday and Friday evenings Thursday evening's featured performers w ill be poet Elizabeth Woody and Ed Edmo, performing an excerpt of his play, ‘ Through Coyote s Eyes" A special benefit performance by renowned Santee Sioux poet and a ctivist, John Trudell, is scheduled for Friday He w ill be accompanied by the percussion and traditional songs of Warm Springs singer/songwriter, Quiltman Admission is $ 10 SO Proceeds w ill benef it publication of W ordcrafts First Anthology Cal, 503-265-ARTS for tickets or E K (Kim) Caldwell at 503-765-2107 for more information B r u te E. 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