by Hakima Betty Lou Chaika

A DUP dance, a memorial sculpture, Native Americans, Irish people, Ancestors, Nature-Spirit, and a humble ceremony. How do these all come together?

Here's the story: Two of our beloved Dances of Universal Peace leaders, Larry Taylor and Lynda Aiman-Smith, created the Hashtali Elements Dance for our North Carolina DUP community a number of years ago, Lynda being of Choctaw lineage. (Her Choctaw great-great-grandmother married an Irish settler.) A few years ago they moved away from us, and then, sadly, Larry, an incredible musician, passed away. My husband, Hamid David, is of another Native American lineage (his Ojibwe great-great-grandmother also married an Irish man), and we've always loved this dance. When we heard about the unveiling of a Choctaw Monument in County Cork, Ireland, where my Irish ancestors are from, we were determined to go to it. In September, 2016, we traveled to see the Choctaw memorial sculpture, “Kindred Spirits,” created by Alex Pentek.

The sculpture is magnificent: Nine bright stainless steel eagle feathers, twenty feet tall, looking strong against the trees, light and airy against the sky, shining in the sun. It is beautifully set in a lovely biodiversity park. Pentek created it in gratitude to the Choctaw Nation. The removal of the Choctaw on the "Trail of Tears" was in the 1830's, yet it was in 1847, such a short time later, that the tribe raised $170 (equivalent to thousands of today’s dollars) to send to the Irish Great Famine relief, joining with them in the mutual losses of their people, land, traditions, language, religion, and in the commonality of their oppression. We are so moved by this history of suffering, solidarity, and compassion.

One of our primary missions for this Ireland trip was to pray to our deep-time Irish ancestors and ask for their connection to deep-time Native American ancestors, inviting their combined wisdom in these dire times when we so urgently need to remember how to reunite with and honor sacred Earth. The monumental sculpture was the perfect place for a small ceremony. We lit a candle in the center and prayed passionately for light to come into this relationship between our peoples, past and present, and with Nature. The concrete platform was just big enough for us to dance the sunwise circling of the Hashtali dance, raising our arms from heart to God (Hashtali), touching Earth with our steps, as we moved with each of the Elements, air (mali), water (oka), earth (yakni) and fire (luak). The feathers were spaced out just right to dance the into-center-and-out part, raising our voices up through the circle of feathers to the circle of sky they enclosed. It was as if the dance and the sculpture were made for each other! Round and round we danced, rattling and singing Hashtali. Then we circled the monument sunwise, sprinkling offerings of biscuit crumbs in gratitude to the loving spirits of this land.

Later we sang Hashtali to one of our Irish guides, Pius, who leads earth spirituality walks. He was very interested in the whole story and wanted to transmit it to folks who come to walk with him. When we return to Ireland this fall, God willing, we hope to dance this dance with a group of Irish friends and share a small ceremony. The dance goes on. Now, as I write this, we read that a Choctaw delegation will arrive in June, 2017 for a joint unveiling of this gorgeous and moving sculpture.

Copyright © 2017 by Betty Lou Chaika

Update:
The Hashtali Elements Dance is now in the Dance Write-Ups on the DUP Website.

Here is a July, 2017 link to a Choctaw report on the amazing event. Now that was a Ceremony! Wish we could have been there!
https://www.choctawnation.com/news-events/press-media/sculpture-ireland-honors-choctaw-nation