Mary Blackmountain — director at St. Michael's Association for Special Education
For 35 years, Mary Blackmountain worked with a nonprofit in Window Rock, Arizona, founded in 1970 to help children on the Navajo Reservation. She recalls the challenges of working in the school's and the state's structures for healing, in a rural community spread across 27,000 square miles.
0 Comments
James Etcitty travels across the country to lead ceremonies in the tradition of the Native American Church. He offers healing and strength in currents that have flowed through his own family.
Mary Blackmountain: Back home, I mean, I was raised with non-educated parents, and our ways were very traditional. No running water, no electricity, just horses and wagons. I had two older sisters, and I'm the youngest one.
On a summer day, James Etcitty collapsed at home with his grandson. He and Mary recall the experience of seeking help and treatment for his illness is a rural community.
James Etcitty and his grandson stood among raised beds. Families gathered around them on a long summer day, on the earth where they were growing tomatoes and chiles, onions and squash — deep yellow, flame orange, blood red.
For four years, Solidarity Farm has grown food on 1.5 acres at the Great Barrington Fairgrounds, in support of a BRIDGE program that brings food to 200 families. They are cultivating a meditation garden for their families. And Etcitty has come to bless the plants and the community on the ground. Gwendolyn VanSant has known James for 22 years, through healing circles and cleansing rituals at local farms on summer nights. And James has come to BRIDGE many times since BRIDGE has started the farm and their Solidarity House as a place for work and gathering, studying and sharing books, sharing food around a long table, and giving shelter to folk who need a safe place to regroup. He has offered blessings for the house and the farm, for their continued growth. BRIDGE's food sovereignty and sustainability programs And this winter BRIDGE has bought the Solidarity House for their own. |