Title
Declaring May 24-26, 2003, Cherokee Heritage Weekend in Celebration of The Tenth Annual Cherokee Indian Festival.
Body
WHEREAS, Predating the arrival of the European explorers by almost five hundred years, the Cherokee Indians occupied much of the Southern Appalachian Mountain area to the eastern seaboard of what is now the United States, and provided the new settlers with techniques of working and living on the land; and
WHEREAS, The Cherokee Nation, today, consists of three major groups: the Eastern Band, the Western Band and the Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy, representing the largest Native American group in the United States; and
WHEREAS, The Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy of Pennsylvania which was designated an official Cherokee group in July 1988, with Buffy Red Feather Brown's appointment as Chief and Hamilton Hawk Brown as Vice Chief by the Tribal Office at Ochlocknee, Georgia, now counts 18,375 Native Americans within the Keystone State; and
WHEREAS, The Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy of Pennsylvania has flourished since its formation. The tribal council has been successful in preserving the Cherokee Language, whose written alphabet was invented in 1821 by Sequoyah, making the first Native American Newspaper, The Phoenix possible in 1828; and
WHEREAS, The Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy also offers the culture of the Cherokee Nation to students in public and private schools and universities throughout the Commonwealth with exhibitions of dance, arts and crafts, music and Cherokee regalia and ideals; and
WHEREAS, The Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy of Pennsylvania preserves the tradition of great respect for learning and education through its Scholarship Fund and the sponsorship of the Cherokee Festival, enabling the award of four-year scholarships to worthy and needy students; and
WHEREAS, The Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy will host representatives from at least ten states at the Cherokee Festival over the Me...
Click here for full text