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The Haudenosaunee Policies on this page are the official word of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy as promulgated by the Grand Council of Chiefs concerning cultural patrimony & repatriation. |
Note: From Kanatiyosh. The policies contain statements that are important to insure cultural sensitivity towards the Haudenosaunee. The statements are evidence of why some school projects, museums, private collections, sellers, governments, and etc., are not being culturally sensitive or respectful to the Haudenosaunee. |
Haudenosaunee Confederacy Policy On False Face Masks
The
Grand Council of the Haudenosaunee, The Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy, issued
in 1995 the following policy statement regarding all medicine masks of the
Haudenosaunee:
Medicine Societies
Within the Haudenosaunee there are various medicine societies that have the sacred duty to maintain the use and strength of special medicines, both for individual and community welfare. A medicine society is comprised of Haudenosaunee who have partaken of the medicine and are thereby bound to the protection and perpetuation of the special medicines.
Such medicines are essential to the
spiritual and emotional well-being of the Haudenosaunee communities. The
medicine societies are a united group of individuals who must uphold and
preserve the rituals that guard and protect the people, and the future
generations.
Among these medicine societies are those that utilize the wooden masks and corn
husk masks, which represent the shared power of the original medicine beings.
Although there are variations of their images, all the masks have power and an
intended purpose that is solely for the members of the respective medicine
societies. Interference with the sacred duties of the societies and/or their
masks is a violation of the freedom of the Haudenosaunee and does great harm to
the welfare of the Haudenosaunee communities.
Status of Masks
All wooden and corn husk masks of the Haudenosaunee are sacred, regardless of size or age. By their very nature, masks are empowered the moment they are made.
The image of the mask is sacred and
is only to be used for its intended purpose. Masks do not have to be put through
any ceremony or have tobacco attached to them in order to become useful or
powerful. Masks should not be made unless they are to be used by members of the
medicine society, according to established tradition.
Sales of Masks
No masks can be made for commercial
purposes. Individuals who make masks for sale or sell masks to non-Indians
violate the intended use of the masks, and such individuals must cease these
activities as they do great harm to the Haudenosaunee. The commercialization of
medicine masks is an exploitation of Haudenosaunee culture.
Authority Over Medicine Masks
Each Haudenosaunee reservation has a medicine mask society that has authority over the use of masks for individual and community needs. Each society is charged with the protection of their sacred masks and the assurance of their proper use.
The Grand Council of Chiefs has
authority over all medicine societies and shall appoint individual leaders or
medicine societies as necessary. However, no individual can speak or make
decisions for medicine societies or the displacement of medicine masks. No
institution has the authority over medicine masks, as they are the sole
responsibility of the medicine societies and the Grand Council of Chiefs.
Exhibition Of Medicine Masks
The public exhibition of all medicine
masks is forbidden. Medicine masks are not intended for everyone to see and such
exhibition does not recognize the sacred duties and special functions of the
masks.
The exhibition of masks by museums does not serve to enlighten the public
regarding the culture of the Haudenosaunee as such an exhibition violates the
intended purpose of the mask and contributes to the desecration of the sacred
image. In addition, information regarding medicine societies is not meant for
general distribution.
The non-Indian public does not have
the right to examine, interpret, or present the beliefs, functions, and duties
of the secret medicine societies of the Haudenosaunee. The sovereign
responsibility of the Haudenosaunee over their spiritual duties must be
respected by the removal of all medicine masks from exhibition and from access
to non-Indians.
Reproductions, castings, photographs, or illustrations of medicine masks should
not he used in exhibitions, as the image of the medicine masks should not be
used in these fashions. To subject the
image of the medicine masks to ridicule or misrepresentation is a
violation of the sacred functions of the masks.
The Council of Chiefs find that there is no proper way to explain, interpret, or
present the significance of the medicine masks and therefore, ask that no
attempt be made by museums to do so other than to explain the wishes of the
Haudenosaunee in this matter.
Return Of Medicine Masks
All Haudenosaunee medicine masks
currently possessed by non-Indians, including Museums, Art Galleries, Historical
Societies, Universities, Commercial Enterprises, Foreign Governments, and
Individuals should be returned to the Grand Council of Chiefs of the
Haudenosaunee, who will ensure their proper use and protection for the future
generations.
There is no legal, moral, or ethical way in which a medicine mask can be
obtained or possessed by a non-Indian individual or institution, as in order for
a medicine mask to be removed from the society it would require the sanction of
the Grand Council of Chiefs. This sanction has never been given. We ask all
people to cooperate in the restoration of masks and other sacred objects to the
proper caretakers among the Haudenosaunee. It is only through these actions that
the traditional culture will remain strong and peace will be restored to our
communities.
Dawnaytoh,
Chief Leon Shenandoah, Tadadaho
Grand Council of the Haudenosaunee
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