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F. Henry Lickers
F.
Henry Lickers is a member of Seneca Nation, Turtle Clan. He has
been married for 33 years and has three children. He has been the
Director of the Mohawk Council of Akwesasne, Department of the Environment
for the past 26 years.
During this
time, he has been principle investigator on the EAGLE ( Effect on
Aboriginal in the Great Lakes Environment ) Project and the Naturalized
Knowledge Systems Project and the First Nations Community
Health Indicators Project, all of these projects are investigating
First Nations Environmental issues.
Some of his
other commitments have been:
Co-Chair of
the COSEWIC Aboriginal Subcommittee.
Member of the Science and Technology Advisory Council to Environment
Canada.
Scientific Co-Chair, The Haudenosaunee Environmental Taskforce.
Vice President, Board of Director, St. Lawrence River Institute
of Environmental Sciences.
Board of Director, Eastern Ontario Model Forest.
Scientific Co-Chair, The Assembly of First Nations Environment Committee.
Past Board Member
of the International Joint Commission, Science Advisory Board.
Past Member of the Panel on Ecological Integrity of Canada's National
Parks.
Past Member, The Scientific Advisory Committee, Northern River Basin
Study.
Past Board Member, Canadian Environmental Assessment Research Council.
A Teaching:
The night was
created as balance for the light of day, a time of rest for some
and a time of activity for other. The Haudenosaunee People believes
that the night is as important as the day. The division of the day
into dark and light represents the balance of Creation and was established
by the twin brother at the beginning of time. The time of darkness
is not a time of evil as the day is not the time of goodness; they
are but phases of the same day. Our elder brother the Sun was give
responsibility for the day and our Grandmother the Moon was given
the responsibility for the night. Each has carried out their responsibility
to us and the rest of Creation.
We say that
the Grandmother Moon turns her face to us every 28 day and we feel
awe at seeing her magnificence. She has the power to regulate all
female cycles upon the Mother Earth and has the ability to move
all of the Waters of the Mother Earth, even unto the first environment
to womb.
The velvet blackness
of the night can conceal the bright and confusing colours of the
day, heighten the other senses, hearing, smell and feel. The Stars,
our cousins have been put in the night sky to bring the dew of the
morning and to help guide us over the surface of the Mother Earth.
Their position in the sky talks to us about great lessons and stories
of our people. The moving constellations each have their own stories
and they remind us of the yearly cycles that determine our activities
on the Mother Earth.
The format of
todays talk about the Ecology of the Night will be much the
same as the way I learned about the world around me. The Haudenosaunee
learn not by lectures or hard teaching but by listening to people
talking about the knowledge we need in this world. Stories, jokes
and reminiscences are all part of the way in which our people convey
information and learn about Creation. A gentle teaching finds its
way into the minds in a most pleasant manner.
Let us learn
about the Ecology of the Night the Time of the Dark Brother.
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SPEAKERS
Bidwell,
Tony
Buchanan, Bryant
Crawford, Dr. David L.
Dick, Robert Stephen
Dickinson, Terence
French, Randy P.
Hill, Tom
Hills, Reverend Johanne
Hollan, Jenik
Hummel, Monte
Lickers, F. Henry
Lockley, Steven W.
Mesure, Michael
Moore, Chad A.
Reid,
Ron
Riley, John L.
Roberts, Dr. Joan
Rutenberg, Tony
Shaver, Dorothy
Welch, David
Whitehead, Brian
Wise, Sharon
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