Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival and Restore Our Sacred Lake 5K run/walk

Indigenous Values Initiative

August 8, 2023


16-17 September 2023 at Onondaga Lake Park Syracuse, NY

The Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival returns once again to Onondaga Lake Park. The event will feature traditional wooden stick crafters and other Haudenosaunee crafts; social dancing; presentations by Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Makers; and the Randy Hall Memorial Master’s Lacrosse Tournament. Faithkeeper Oren Lyons reminds us, “When you play lacrosse with a wooden stick you play with all the trees and animals in the world. Plastic sticks are dead sticks and don’t have spirit.”

This year we continue collaborating with Restore Our Sacred Lake 5K Fun Run/Walk on September 16, 2023.  The eagles are returning to Onondaga Lake. We invite runners and walkers to Onondaga Lake for a day of celebration. This event will raise awareness of the importance of the lake and the urgency of furthering the cleanup efforts and the return of our sacred lake.  We are excited to have our run celebrating the Eagle’s return as part of the Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival. When speaking about the United Nations Faithkeeper Lyons said, “I do not see a delegation for the four-footed. I see no seat for the eagles. We forget, and we consider ourselves superior, but we are, after all a mere part of the Creation. And we must continue to understand where we are. And we stand between the mountain and the ant, somewhere and there only, as part of the Creation.”

 “This year we will return to Onondaga Lake for another Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival in September.  We live in the heartland of Dehontsigwa’ehs (lacrosse)—homeland to the Haudenosaunee.  Over 1,000 years ago the game was first played at Onondaga Lake to help bring 5 warring nations together in peace. CNY has benefitted from this rich legacy, and as a result this area is a hotbed for lacrosse. There are nearly 1 million lacrosse athletes in the US today and it continues to be the fastest growing game in the world. Lacrosse offers us a unique educational opportunity to teach these Haudenosaunee values to young athletes and enthusiasts.” According to Philip Arnold, the President of the Indigenous Values Initiative, and Founding Director of the Skä·noñh—Great Law of Peace Center.

With the festival, we are also holding the “Randy Hall Memorial Master’s Box Lacrosse Tournament.”  Randy Hall, Akwesasne Mohawk Wolf Clan, passed away in January 2018. He loved lacrosse and was committed to the Onondaga Athletic Club where he coached and played.  In 2013 Randy Hall asked Philip Arnold and Sandy Bigtree to help bring the game back to Onondaga Lake. Ages 35+; 8-20 players per team.

Learn more about the Wooden Stick Festival at: indigenousvalues.org/laxweekend23/

Learn more about the 5K Fun Run/Walk at aila.li/5k 

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Contact:
Philip P. Arnold
Indigenous Values Initiative
315-885-7503
info@indigenousvalues.org


Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of RNA.

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