WASHINGTON, DC – The answer to one of the biggest questions in Washington D.C. has been manifesting for over five months and more than 8,000 miles that span across the sacred grounds of living sovereign nations. The question, what steps can be taken to make known that "All Life is Sacred, Save Mother Earth?"
175 days (4200hrs.) ago walkers from all over Indian country as well as international allies embarked on a journey that carried them through rain, snow, and even a tornado.
Two paths were taken to make the journey, both a Northern and Southern route, in order to bring awareness to and address environmental and sacred sites protection, cultural survival, youth empowerment and Native American rights.
Thousands of walkers, which included new born babies and elders in their 90s, representing more than 100 Nations joined the Walk along the way. The Navajo (Dine' Nation), Hopi, Apache, Havasupai, Tunica-Biloxi, Anishinaabeg, Wintun, Hualapai, Lakota, Six Nations, Ute, Washo, and many others as well as representatives from New Zealand, Germany, Japan, Italy, Holland, Poland comprised the diverse Walk. As they walked they picked up more than 8,000 bags of trash on the roads they traveled.
At 2 o'clock today The Longest Walk will reach the steps of the US capitol. Walk representatives will meet with House Judiciary Chair, US Representative John Conyers (D-MI) to deliver a 'Manifesto for Change' along with the original manifesto from the 1978 Longest Walk which had initially been refused by Congress.
The Manifesto for Change is the testimony of the conditions of Indigenous communities collected by the Walkers along both routes.
"The manifesto is the result of this five-month journey to gather support for a call to action to protect our sacred sites and to clean up mother earth and deliver the voice of the people to congress and demand congress to act." Yaynicut Franco.
"We have witnessed the desecration of sacred sites by the United States government, corporations, developers and individual citizens," said Jimbo Simmons, Northern Route coordinator for the Longest Walk 2 and representative of the American Indian Movement. "We have also seen extreme pollution of our lands by littering, coal fired power plants and toxic waste dumps. We have seen extreme poverty and religious persecution and heard testimony of denial of religious freedom to prisoners."
The Walkers were inspired by the spirit of resistance that supported them in many communities like the Carson City Indian Colony in Nevada where they were warmly welcomed after walking through the snow, and Oklahoma where the Muskogee Cherokee Iowa Nation butchered a buffalo and commended the efforts of the Walkers.
"Most of these issues are identical to those encountered by the original Walk in 1978," said Yaynicut Franco. "Both Manifestos attest to the affirmation of the sovereignty and ongoing resistance of Indigenous peoples. The lack of responsible action will no longer be tolerated. The Manifesto is a demand for immediate responsible action."
Tuesday-Thursday July 8, 9, 10
9:00 AM – 5:00 PM - Cultural Survival Summit in Greenbelt Park (6565 Greenbelt Road, Greenbelt, MD 20770)
Friday July 11
7:00 AM - Converge at Malcolm X Park (aka Meridian Hill Park bordered by 16th/Euclid/15th/W St. NW DC)
7:30 AM - Walk to the White House
8:30 AM - Prayer Ceremony at the White House by Lafayette Park (1608 H Street NW)
1:30 PM - Walk to The Capitol Steps (between Const. Ave. NE, Independence Ave. SW, 1st St. NE, 3rd St. SW)
2:30 PM - Prayer Ceremony at Capitol Steps with Harry Belafonte & Dennis Banks
3:00 PM - Present Manifesto to Congress
4:10 PM - Walk to Vietnam Memorial (Constitution Ave. between 21st and 23rd Street)
5:00 PM – Prayer Ceremony at the Vietnam War Memorial, Joe Spado and other veterans to speak
6:30 PM - Walk to Sylvan Theater (by the Wash. Monument, 15th St. and Independence Ave. SW)
7:30 PM – Event honoring Longest Walk 2 Walkers and Runners; presentation of feathers, staffs and flags; screening of Longest Walk video; tribute to Floyd Red Crow Westerman & Vernon Bellecourt
Saturday July 12
9:30 AM - Water Ceremony by Reflecting Pool at the Lincoln Memorial
10:30 AM - Walk to the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) (3rd-4th Street on the DC Mall)
12 noon - POW WOW by the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI)
3:00 PM - Southern Route Walker's Performance
4:00 PM - Concert @ same location at 3rd and 4th Street on the D.C. Mall
Sunday July 13
10:00 AM - POW WOW by National Museum of the American Indian (3rd-4th St. on the DC Mall)
1:00 PM - Northern Route Walker's Performance
2:00 PM - Concert @ same location at 3rd and 4th Street on the Mall
Longest Walk Merchandise
Get 'em while they're hot. Help out the Longest Walk and get a T-shirt, Sweatshirt, Coffee Mug, or one of our other great gifts with your choice of two designs. The store is hosted by Cafe Press and all proceeds from the sale of this fabulous merchandise will be used to help pay for the costs of the Longest Walk 2008. We are especially proud to offer an Organic Cotton T-Shirt!
LOS ANGELES - Floyd Red Crow Westerman, Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota musician, actor, and activist, passed away at 5 a.m. PST at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after an extended illness. He was 72.