40th Annual Native American
Elders and Youth Gathering

July 26th – 28th, 2024

Presenters

Venerable Dhyani Ywahoo, is the Founder and Spiritual Director of Sunray Meditation Society. She is the 27th generation lineage holder of the ancestral Ywahoo lineage in the Tsalagi / Cherokee tradition. She is unique as a teacher, carrying three intact streams of ancient spiritual wisdom. Venerable Dhyani is the Chief of the Green Mountain Band of the Ani Yun Wi Wa. She is the author of Voices of Our Ancestors, Learning Cherokee ways: The Ywahoo Path, and 108 Quotations: A Treasury of Mystical Wisdom. She has also contributed to many books over the years and has written various curriculums that have been utilized for peacemaking around the world. 

Venerable Lama Konchok Sonam is the Spiritual Director of the Drikung Meditation Center (DMC) in Arlington, MA. Born in Lhasa, Tibet, Lama Sonam is expert in both the theoretical and practical aspects of training the mind through meditation and Vajrayana methods for awakening our Buddha Nature.

Grandfather Clifford Mahooty is a member of the Sun Clan within the Zuni Pueblo Nation of New Mexico. He is active in the sacred Zuni Orders of the Kachina and Galaxy Medicine Society, and he is a wisdom keeper of the Zuni History.

Grandfather Mahooty has shared extensively the teachings of the Star people in lectures and retreats, and many of his talks can be found on media channels such as Gaia.com and YouTube.

He is a retired civil environmental engineer, having worked specifically on environmental justice for Native American tribes and with federal EPA enforcement in environmental compliance.

Tehoronio Joey David is a member of the Mohawk nation (Wolf Clan). He works at the Tekanikonrahwa:kon Wholistic Health and Wellness Program in Akwesasne, NY. He utilizes the Onkwehonwehnéha Ohkakowenta, or “original person wheel” to help clients and community members connect with their hearts and develop spiritually, mentally, emotionally and physically.

Grandfather Michael Bastine is a member of the Algonquin Nation, and he is a healer, elder, and former student of famous Tuscarora medicine man Wallace “Mad Bear” Anderson and Tuscarora healer Ted Williams. He lives in South Wales, New York. He is the co-author of the book, Iroquois and Supernatural: Talking Animals and Medicine People.

Grandfather Doug Harris is a Native American tribal historic preservationist and is a member of the Narragansett Nation. For the past 16 years, he has been tribally-certified to seek and preserve indigenous ceremonial and sacred stone landscapes in his position as the Deputy Tribal Historic Preservation Officer for the Narragansett  Indian Preservation Office. He travels and lectures extensively in the northeast USA in seeking to identify ceremonial stone structures for earmarking as historic ceremonial landmarks.

Rudy Schild, Ph.D.,  is the Executive Director of FREE: Foundation for Research into Extraterrestrial Encounters. He is a Professor Emeritus research astrophysicist at the Harvard/Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, following an extensive career studying dark matter, black holes, and the fluid mechanical origins of cosmic structure. He has become deeply interested in the formulation of a coherent understanding of the nature of space-time in the Universe. As an editor-in-chief of the Journal of Cosmology, he is seeking to broaden the scope of scientific inquiry to include the nature of consciousness and the Universe.  He is a co-author of the book, Beyond UFOs:  The Science of Consciousness & Contact with Non-Human Intelligence.

Tatjana Cady, Abenaki, Women’s Wisdom Keeper, was trained by her mother in the sacred teachings and practices of women’s moon cycle of the Abenaki Nation.

Nootauau Kaukontuoh, “she hears the crow,” is a woman of the Eastern Woodlands. She lives her life in the tradition of the Nanhigganêuck, the people known today as the Narragansett. A Storyteller of Longhouse Tales, told in  different styles including Native Sign Language, call and response and other traditional styles. She has twice been awarded publishing contracts for her book of poetry and is currently completing a Native mid-grade novel. She brings to life the oral tradition at schools, community centers, Indigenous gatherings and wherever the stories lead her.

As a ‘kuhkootomwehteâen’ (one who shares knowledge), a ceremonial leader, and thirty-five plus years of telling, she brings forth the culture of the Longhouse People, through their stories.

Lei’ohu Ryder and Maydeen Ku’uipo ʻĪao are visionaries, ceremonialists, musicians and kahu/caretakers of a sacred temple on Maui. They celebrate life by embracing the spirit of aloha within the one ocean of our collective hearts.

SunBôw is an author, networker, international speaker and shamanic practitioner with four decades of experience in shamanic journeys and teachings in 20 countries. He has learned and worked with Indigenous Elders from dozens of nations of the Americas and last year of Australia. These teachings and experiences have led him to connect with the guidance of interdimensional guides such as ancestors, animal spirits, the Sasquatch and Star Elders. 

Grandmother Shirley John – While Saugeen First Nation Elder Shirley John aka Strong White Buffalo Woman doesn’t call herself a water protector per se, she said it’s part of what she does. “I pray for the water all the time, every day,” she said. “I guess it’s part of protecting the water in some sense, I’m about praying for the water.   She is Ojibway Mohawk,  the Loon is my Clan.
Not a day goes by where Elder Shirley John doesn’t go to the water somewhere, whether it be on the shores of Lake Huron,  a trip into Saugeen Shores, Owen Sound and abroad. She offers tobacco, prays for that water, for all nations, inviting everyone into that circle because we’re already in the circle so when she prays it’s for everyone, not just her people.
Elder Shirley John believes we’re at a crucial time right now and we need all women and family to do this work. From teaching our children not to litter and throw things into the water to being mindful of Mother Earth and not to abuse and destroy her are the things we must teach teach them. And sometimes the children are so far ahead of us that they have to teach us.
In 2016 she was awarded the YMCA Peace Medal. Standing for Participation, Empathy, Advocacy, Community and Empowerment, the award celebrates the presence of peace in our communities.

Lawrence Happy Laughing is a member of the Turtle Clan from Akwesasne. His Turtle name is Aronwantankie and also Wakasehronni, which is his nick name ‘Happy”. He comes  from the Rotinonsonni, People of the Longhouse and was always inspired by his Onkwehonwe people in his community who still carry their cultural ways, ceremonies, language and sacred knowledge which connects them to Mother Earth.  He has worked in the North American Indian Travelling College, different schools, drug and alcohol programs, and community projects with the Longhouse Clan Mothers and Clan Chiefs. In the      school in California, he teaches young people through song and tradition about building community through expressing great gratitude and great love for our Earth Mother, rather than teaching them about survival which only promotes fear and can make them afraid of our Mother the Earth.

Bear Fox is a songwriter and singer of the Mohawk nation. On her website she greets visitors in her native language by saying: “Shekon Sewakwekon, Kenkiohkoktha ionkia’ts wakathahionni, Akwesasne nikiteron”, (hello everyone, my name is Kenkiohkoktha, this name means I am standing at the back of a crowd of people, or at the end of a long line. I was named after my Grandmother. I live in Akwesasne.) www.bearfoxmusic.com

At the age of 29, she realized that she had a gift for songwriting. She first began writing songs in Mohawk for the Traditional Women’s singing group called, ‘Kontiwennenhawi’, (Carriers of the Words). In 2001, she began writing songs in English as well, and her first song was entitled, ‘Broken.’ She now shares her music widely in many forms and to many people.

Reverend Meli (aka Mary Kitchens), through her father, is part of the Western Cherokee diaspora that journeyed to California during the dust bowl of the 1930’s.  She teaches high school and is the drumkeeper for Unole, a drum group that has been nominated for a Native American Music Award. She is a Sunray minister in the Ywahoo tradition.