header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
April 25
1906 - Bercaw General Store opens in Surrey (Saugus) [story]
Bercaw Store


| Friday, Jul 15, 2016
Loading...

Indigenous people from all over the Americas who are participating in a run across two continents stopped in the Santa Clarita Valley to be greeted by local tribal members before continuing on to Los Angeles and points south.

Elders and other members of the Fernandeño-Tataviam Band of Mission Indians, along with members of other tribes, met at a private home in San Francisquito Canyon Thursday evening to welcome Peace and Dignity Journeys runners with food, a ceremony and a place to rest.

“The most valuable part of it is the communities that are connecting with one another,” said Rudy Ortega Jr., president of the Fernandeño-Tataviam Band. “Regardless of technology and everything else, we’re still keeping traditions. … It brings unification among all of the tribes.”

Kim Marcus, an elder from the Santa Rosa Band of Cahuilla Indians,  participated in the quadrennial run in 1992 and joined in this year’s ceremony in the SCV. Marcus, along with Ortega and other Fernandeno-Tataviam members, performed traditional songs and prayer.

“The run is for the people, for the healing of the people and of the earth,” Marcus said. “It was to restore dignity for our people, self-respect.

“In a sense, the running was more a of prayer,” he said. “For blessings every time we took a step across the earth, then renew the earth again.

“The period of time since the arrival of the Europeans, the Spaniards – when they inhabited the earth in 1492, that was a great hardship for our people. So to be able to run is an ability to renew our self-respect and self-dignity, to have a purpose and prayer for the healing of our communities for the generations to come.”

Every four years, the transcontinental run is held to unify tribes, preserve culture and honor local communities. A theme is chosen each year, this year’s being for natural seeds.

Participants run southward from Alaska and northward from Argentina and meet in Panama. The journey takes several months.

Peace and Dignity Journeys began in 1992, five hundred years after the 1492 arrival of Christopher Columbus. The elders of the Tarahumara tribe in Chihuahua met with other tribal leaders in 1990 to begin planning the journey to “attain the following goals amongst first nations of the North and South American continents, that which is known to be the unification of the eagle and the condor,” according to the organization’s website.

Goals include holding the spiritual run as a prayer, honoring the community, reinforcing unity among all first indigenous nations, recognizing more than 500 years of strength and preservation of culture, and bringing awareness about Native American communities.

Ceremonial staffs and feathers are given to the runners by tribes to be carried on the journey. A ceremony is held each morning and evening before picking up or laying down each staff.

The runners average about 70 miles per day, but on Thursday, the runners trekked 102 miles from Bakersfield – where they were joined by some members of the Tejon Indian tribe – to Santa Clarita, said Daniel Mejia of Patterson, Calif. Mejia began the journey in Sutton, Alaska.

“Nowhere during the run are people able to get in cars and take off. Someone literally has to be on foot the entire way,” said Porter Ranch resident Javier Lujan (Tarahumara, Navajo), an organizer of the journey.

“(Another organizer) equated it to someone sewing and stitching,” Lujan said, “and the needle is stitching and piecing. He said that continent has been torn to pieces from colonialism and has been ripped apart. When the runners and their feet are going through the earth, it’s kind of like the weaving of a sewing machine, weaving that broken body back together again.”

“We’re awakening, uniting and connecting and bringing this message of peace and dignity,” said Yaotl Mazahua (Tarahumara, Mazahua).

Last year, Tataviam tribal members Kagen Holland and his mother, Caroline Ward-Holland, walked from mission to mission throughout California, a 780-mile journey. Both are direct descendants of people who lived in the Santa Clarita Valley prior to the arrival of the first Europeans in 1769. This year, Kagen Holland helped plan the runners’ route through the Santa Clarita Valley, and he said he hopes to participate in the next journey in 2020.

“I really respect what they’re doing, trying to unify tribal peoples from all over the world,” he said, “especially in this hemisphere where things have been so hard for them and with everything going on in the political scene right now with this anti-Latin sentiment.”

Mejia (Caxcan, Chichimeca) said the community is looking for support, be it financial or hospitality. More information can be found [here].

“More than anything, it’s a calling to help carry this prayer, to keep this tradition going. It’s very important to spread a message of hope, unity and solidarity,” Mejia said.

Indigenous071416n

Indigenous071416o

Indigenous071416a

Indigenous071416b

Indigenous071416c

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

0 Comments

You can be the first one to leave a comment.

Leave a Comment


SCV NewsBreak
LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES
Thursday, Apr 25, 2024
TMU Biology Students Earn Recognition at Annual Research Conference
Earlier this month, a team of biology students at The Master’s University won a distinguished award at one of the oldest intercollegiate research conferences in the country.
Thursday, Apr 25, 2024
April 26-28: Community Weekend Returns to CalArts
California Institute of the Arts' Community Weekend kicks off on Friday, April 26 and runs through Sunday, April 28.
Thursday, Apr 25, 2024
May 16: Children’s Bureau Foster Care Orientation
May is National Foster Parent Appreciation Month! Celebrate by applying to become a resource parent and fostering or foster-adopting siblings.
Keep Up With Our Facebook

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
How important is Film and Tourism to the Santa Clarita Valley Economy? 
SCVEDC Delves into Santa Clarita Film, Tourism Impact
Earlier this month, a team of biology students at The Master’s University won a distinguished award at one of the oldest intercollegiate research conferences in the country.
TMU Biology Students Earn Recognition at Annual Research Conference
Lisa Zamroz has announced her intent to step down as the head coach of The Master's University's women's basketball team effective July 1, 2024.
TMU Women’s Basketball Coach to Resign
Spring heralds a time of renewal and rejuvenation, not just in the natural world, but within our homes and lives as well.
Cameron Smyth | Spring Cleaning Your Neighborhood
College of the Canyons student-athletes Gigi Garcia (softball) and Hannes Yngve (men's golf) have been named the COC Athletic Department's Women's and Men's Student-Athletes of the Week for the period running April 15-20.
COC Names Gigi Garcia, Hannes Yngve Athletes of the Week
California Institute of the Arts' Community Weekend kicks off on Friday, April 26 and runs through Sunday, April 28.
April 26-28: Community Weekend Returns to CalArts
May is National Foster Parent Appreciation Month! Celebrate by applying to become a resource parent and fostering or foster-adopting siblings.
May 16: Children’s Bureau Foster Care Orientation
Santa Clarita resident Edina Lemus has been appointed Administrator of the Veterans Home of California in Lancaster by California Gov. Gavin Newsom.
Newsom Appoints SCV Resident Veterans Home Administrator
1906 - Bercaw General Store opens in Surrey (Saugus) [story]
Bercaw Store
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond testified today in the Senate Education Committee about the need for results-proven training for all teachers of reading and math.
State Superintendent Makes Historic Push for Results-Proven Training in Literacy, Math as Sponsor of SB 1115
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health cautions residents who are planning to visit the below Los Angeles County beaches to avoid swimming, surfing, and playing in ocean waters:
Ocean Water Warning for April 24
Dust off the boots and get ready to holler, because Boots In The Park making its way to back to Santa Clarita, y’all. 
May 10: Boots In the Park Returns to Santa Clarita
State Senator Scott Wilk (R-Santa Clarita) and Supervisor Kathryn Barger honor the memory of those lost 109 years ago in Armenian Genocide. 
Barger, Wilk Recognize Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day
The Salvation Army Santa Clarita Valley Corps is excited to announce the inaugural Donut Day event.
June 7: Salvation Army SCV Announces Inaugural Donut Day Event
The Los Angeles County Animal Care Foundation has approved $370,000 in funding to support the Vet@ThePark program operated by the County of Los Angeles Department of Animal Care and Control.
LAC Animal Care Foundation Provides $370K Grant to Support Vet@ThePark
The California Department of Public Health is encouraging Californians to take part in National Prescription Drug Take Back Day on April 27.
CDPH Urges Californians to Support Prescription Drug Take Back Day
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a motion, introduced by Supervisor Kathryn Barger and co-authored by Board Chair Lindsey P. Horvath, proclaiming May 2024 as Mental Health Awareness Month in Los Angeles County.
Supes Proclaim May as Mental Health Awareness Month
The Grammy-award winning rock ‘n’ roll group Blues Traveler will take the stage of the Santa Clarita Performing Arts Center at 8 p.m. May 9. 
May 9: Blues Traveler to Perform at PAC
1962 - SCV residents vote to connect to State Water Project, creating Castaic Lake Water Agency (now part of SCV Water) [story]
Castaic Lake
Los Angeles County Fifth District Supervisor Kathryn Barger issued a statement in support of the Los Angeles County Chief Executive Officer’s presentation of a $45.4 billion budget for the forthcoming 2024-25 fiscal year.
Kathryn Barger | Statement in Support of $45.4B County Budget
In a celebration held Tuesday, April 23 at the Port of Barcelona, award-winning actress and performer Hannah Waddingham officially welcomed the newest and most innovative Princess Cruises ship, Sun Princess, serving as godmother during a star-studded naming ceremony.
Hannah Waddingham Officially Christens Sun Princess
Six comprehensive high schools in the William S. Hart Union High School District which includes Canyon, Golden Valley, Hart, Saugus, Valencia and West Ranch have been ranked among the top public high schools in the country by U.S. News & World Report.
Hart District High Schools Recognized Best in Nation
College of the Canyons will offer four summer sessions running from June 3 through Aug. 17, giving students a variety of options in both class format and scheduling designed to help them achieve their educational goals, from launching a new career to transferring to a four-year university.
COC Offers Four Summer Sessions for Flexible Learning Options
California State Sen. Scott Wilk, R-Santa Clarita, announced his measure to combat illegal dumping, by increasing penalties and closing a loophole which has enabled the problem for years, was approved in the Senate Public Safety Committee.
Wilk’s Illegal Dumping Bill Approved by Committee
SCVNews.com