This is a video of some of the sights and sounds my sister Carol and I saw when we went to the Lenape Tribe Pow-Wow in Core Creek Park, in Bucks County, PA.
There was a lot to see, and the dancers were great to watch. It was a warm day, but the sun was strong too. When you see the dancers out in the bright sun of the dance ring, remember the heat they were performing in. It was not as easy as they made it seem.
Near the end of the video, there is a young woman teaching kids to make fire. It was awsome to watch her. She really had a way with the kids, that many teachers just don't have.
Here's a little more about the Lenape tribe:
At the time of European contact in the 16th and 17th centuries, the Lenape lived in the area known as Lenapehoking, roughly the area around and between the Delaware and lower Hudson Rivers. This encompassed what is now the U.S. state of New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania around the Delaware Valley, the north shore of Delaware, and southern New York, especially the Hudson Valley and New York Harbor. They spoke two related languages in the Algonquian subfamily, collectively known as the Delaware languages: Unami and Munsee.
Lenape society was organized into clans determined by matrilineal descent. Territory was collective, but divided by clan. At the time of European contact the Lenape practiced large-scale agriculture, their primary crop being maize, and also practiced hunting and the harvesting of seafood. They were primarily sedentary, moving to different established campsites by season. After the arrival of Dutch settlers and traders in the 17th century, the Lenape and other tribes became heavily involved in the North American fur trade. This eventually depleted the beaver population in the area, proving disastrous for both the Lenape and the Dutch settlers. The Lenape were further weakened by conflict with the Europeans and with their traditional enemies, the Iroquoian-speaking Susquehannock. Over the next centuries they were pushed out of their lands by treaties and by overcrowding by white settlers. In the 1860s most Lenape remaining in the Eastern United States were sent to the Oklahoma Territory. In the 21st century, most Lenape now reside in Oklahoma, while others live in Kansas, Wisconsin, Ontario, and in their traditional homelands.
Anonymous says ...
On Monday, Aug 31 at 1:48 PM
I Tim Keechi from okla. western Delaware Nation, would like to visit some different family up there some time.
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