The Frog moon is here and it’s easy being green when we follow natural law. During the Frog Moon, we focus on learning to love the first gift we received – the rhythm of our ancestral spirit and heartbeat. We also learn about other types of love and our reciprocal relationships within Wahkowtowin. And we learn how to demonstrate that love – how to say Kisâkihitin (I love you).
Join us to learn from Cree Knowledge Keeper Marilyn Dykstra how our hope and ultimate protection come from the Kitche Migawap (sacred teepee) that encloses our circular foundation and doorway.
Obedience, respect, humility and happiness are already intertwined and bound together in our foundation poles, Marilyn will explain, but we are not finished until our grandmothers’ shawl is wrapped around her shoulders and covering her feet. Enclosing this circle cradles the love we share when we are within the ultimate protection of our sacredness. A rhythm exists in the heat of the fire, the grounding of the earth, the movement of the water and the gusts from the wind. This brings together our love and our connections – our Wahkowtowin.
Workshop
This workshop is part of a monthly Wahkowtowin and Ways of Being series led by Knowledge Keeper Marilyn Dykstra. Each month, we will explore a variety of moon, pole and tea teachings in the Cree tradition.
Wahkowtowin – which translates to kinship – highlights how relationships, communities and the natural world are all interconnected.
Participants will discover and reflect on their connections with each other, with balance and with human rights through teachings and a traditional tea.