| Wells
College 2001 Commencement Address
By
Joanne Shenandoah
Se: ko ska: ne: go: wa (may a great
peace be within you) to all graduates, family, friends, and faculty of
Wells College. As a citizen of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, I am honored
to be with you at this special event—a day that marks a major milestone
in your lives.
You have devoted important years of
your lives toward the acquisition of knowledge. Now it is your responsibility
to apply that wisdom toward securing a world that is defined by peace and
harmony among human beings and the natural world.
Long ago, our prophet Skennenrehowl
walked among the Iroquois in this very region, bringing a message of hope
that there is an alternative to strife and a way to live in balance with
Mother Earth, that peace is the highest of human endeavors and may be achieved
through governments that have as their basis a constitutional respect for
all living things as well as a lawful obligation to preserve our world
for those yet unborn.
It was our Peacemaker who taught us
that our grandchildren unto the seventh generation in the future had a
right to clean air, pure waters, and fertile soils. Our leaders were prohibited
from enacting any law that might adversely effect those unborn. We live
together on this living being we call our mother, and it is good and proper
we treat her with utmost respect.
We were also taught to honor those
whom we call the Lifegivers, the women of the earth, for they have been
given the greatest of gifts.
It is also the responsibility of the
men to ensure that Lifegivers have physical security and to work with women
in partnership so they, under natural law, will have their voices heard.
Among all peoples of the world it was
here, in Iroquois territory, that women enjoyed the highest degree of liberty;
and it was our female ancestors who had a profound influence on the women’s
suffrage movement in America.
It is with this spirit of freedom and
mutual respect that I stand before you today. I ask you, in the name of
our respective nations, to work together to forge a new understanding that
will enable our peoples to live in peace. I appeal to your sense of reason
to create a new day and place where our children can live together in harmony
as our Peacemaker foretold.
Our traditional leaders are defined by their humility, generosity, and
kindness. These values I ask you to adopt as you move about your life’s
journey. By acting in a thankful manner, all you seek will be revealed
to you. Be patient. Be sensitive. Be truthful and respect the counsel of
your elders.
We are taught all living things have
a right to exist in their natural state and that each one of us has a particular
gift or talent that, if applied, makes for a stable community.
When I was a child I was given the
name Tekaliwha: kwa (She Sings) and have been fortunate to come from a
family that encouraged me to pursue my love of music. It is the gift I
have been given to communicate across cultural, national, and ethnic lines.
I would like to begin this new era in your lives by honoring you with a
song. The words translate to this:
Awaken, stand up and be counted. We
are being recognized in the spirit world. We are responsible for ourselves,
our families, and our nation.
As a woman of the 21st century, you
can reflect on the women who came before you; and you can influence those
who will come after you. I wish you peace, love, and continued success
as you experience your celebration of life. Congratulations!
Delivered on Saturday, May 26, 2001,
on the Wells College campus
Last updated 1/22/2002
|