• Kenji Ecarian's Gallery
  • View Profile
  • Send Private Message
  • Artist Info:
    <br />
    User ImageUser Image<br />
    <br />
    <br />
    <br />
    <br />
    Donate and I will give you luvs<br />
    People who have gotten luv:<br />
    Necromancer X Amithyst heart : heart <br />
    Vampire_Amaria heart <br />
    Ali [loves] Joe heart <br />
    kochico heart <br />
    iMooshie heart heart <br />
    ________________________________________________________<br />
    <br />
    User Image<br />
    Sitting Bull<br />
    <br />
    Where Will Our Children Live...<br />
    <br />
    A lonesome warrior stands in fear of what the future brings,<br />
    he will never hear the beating drums or the songs his brothers sing.<br />
    <br />
    Our many nations once stood tall and ranged from shore to shore<br />
    but most are gone and few remain and the buffalo roam no more.<br />
    <br />
    We shared our food and our land and gave with open hearts,<br />
    We wanted peace and love and hope, but all were torn apart.<br />
    <br />
    All this was taken because we did not know what the white man had in store,<br />
    They killed our people and raped our lands and the buffalo roam no more.<br />
    <br />
    But those of us who still remain hold our heads up high, and the spirits of the elders flow through us as if they never died.<br />
    <br />
    Our dreams will live on forever and our nations will be reborn, our bone and beads and feathers all will be proudly worn.<br />
    <br />
    If you listen close you will hear the drums and songs upon the winds, and in the distance you will see.....the buffalo roam again...<br />
    <br />
    <br />
    User Image<br />
    Standing Bear<br />
    <br />
    The American Indian is of the soil, whether it be the region of forests, plains, pueblos, or mesas. He fits into the landscape, for the hand that fashioned the continent also fashioned the man for his surroundings. He once grew as naturally as the wild sunflowers, he belongs just as the buffalo belonged....<br />
    <br />
    Out of the Indian approach to life there came a great freedom, an intense and absorbing respect for life, enriching faith in a Supreme Power, and principles of truth, honesty, generosity, equity, and brotherhood as a guide to mundane relations.<br />
    <br />
    Black Elk, Oglala Sioux Holy Man<br />
    1863-1950
    <br />
    <br />
    You have noticed that everything as Indian does is in a circle, and that is because the Power of the World always works in circles, and everything tries to be round.....<br />
    The Sky is round, and I have heard that the earth is round like a ball, and so are all the stars. The wind, in its greatest power, whirls. Birds make their nest in circles, for theirs is the same religion as ours....<br />
    Even the seasons form a great circle in their changing, and always come back again to where they were. The life of a man is a circle from childhood to childhood, and so it is in everything where power moves.<br />
    <br />
    Crowfoot, Blackfoot warrior and orator<br />
    <br />
    User Image<br />
    The Trail of Tears<br />
    <br />
    All birds, even those of the same species, are not alike, and it is the same with animals and with human beings. The reason WakanTanka [God] does not make two birds, or animals, or human beings exactly alike is because each is place, here by WakanTanka to be an independent individuality and to rely upon itself.<br />
    <br />
    George Copway (Kah-ge-ga-bowh) Ojibwa Chief<br />
    1818-1863
    <br />
    <br />
    "The ground on which we stand is sacred ground. It is the blood of our ancestors."<br />
    <br />
    Black Hawk, Sauk<br />
    <br />
    "How smooth must be the language of the whites, when they can make right look like wrong, and wrong like right."<br />
    <br />
    Shinguaconse ("Little Pine" wink <br />
    <br />
    User Image<br />
    Lakota Woman<br />
    <br />
    <br />
    Concerning Native Americans<br />
    Their legends say that they were created from earth, water and stars. DNA says they came from Siberia to what is now Alaska, Canada and US, through a land bridge called Behringia, about 15,000 years ago. Older western movies depicted them as wild and cruel. But in fact, they were victims of the intrusion in their territory of the greediest predator they ever faced: the White Man.<br />
    <br />
    The Native Americans were often called Red Skins. The name traces its roots in Columbus’ voyages, when the navigator met the Caribbean natives with an odd red color of the skin. This was due to the ochre they used to slosh their face and body. This misconception was then applied to all indigenous of the Americas, even if the habit is not employed by the natives of North America. In change, some tribes in South America still practice it. Later, the native Americans were named Amerindians, a proper name.<br />
    <br />
    The Indian man was hunter and warrior, while women took care of the children, cultivated and harvested crops, grounded grains for making flour and maintained the tents. The main crops of the Amerindians were corn, squash and bean, but all the tribes collected forest products.<br />
    <br />
    In bison hunting tribes, women helped cutting the animals and bringing the meat into the camp, then with its processing for being consumed later. In Apaches tribes, even if men helped in agriculture, women knew best how to do it, with all the required works, prays and flooding technology. Women also mounted and dismounted the tents, which were usually used for two years; the Indian woman was respected and had many rights; even today in some tribes (like Hopi) the woman is the owner of all material goods. The inheritance in many tribes was on the mother's line, and the husband went to live in the house of the bride; in case of divorce, the husband could not take more then his clothes, weapons, pipe, and had to return to the house of his mother. In the Iroquois tribes, women had a lot of power: they could not be the chief of the tribe, but they chose him. Each family was led by the oldest woman. The council of the elder women chose the new chief.<br />
    <br />
    User Image<br />
    Atsina Warriors<br />
  • Avg. rating: