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Humanitarian trips helping Indian Street Children and Tibetan Refugees

Gary has been working in India since the early 1990’s for humanitarian work to help the poor. He has helped with the Mercy & Grace Dalit School in Andhra Pradesh; with Bishop Rao’s Dalit School in Hyderabad, India; many Tibetan Refugee Camps in India under the Home Minister such as Bylakuppe and Mainpat; and a number of Tibetan Buddhist Monasteries in India such as Sera Jhe and Gaden Shartse, having visited them many times. These photos give an indication of the depth and breadth of his humanitarian work.

How the India Humanitarian Work Began

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I have been to India perhaps a dozen times; to help start two schools for street children and also to work with the Tibetan Refugee Camps. Whenever I look into the eyes of these children, I see God manifested in them in different ways.

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My humanitarian work in India started around 1991 somewhat mystically. I walked into Parson’s Drugstore in Canby after leading a weekend retreat on The Still Small Voice; I saw a photo of a starving child on the cover of a Time Magazine, immediately I choked up and tears welled in my eyes; I said out loud: “Gods Children are not supposed to starve, they are innocent”. The feeling stayed with me as I drove home to a rural farm I owned at the time. Later that afternoon the phone rang and a long distance operator asked if I would accept charges from a caller in India, I did not know anyone there but I thought I could always hang up. A fellow got on the phone and said his poor community had been praying and meditating all weekend on how to help their poor children and he said, “God told them to call me and ask for help”. I knew the moment he said that, it was real and that it had come from The Still Small Voice of God. Eventually it started a long relationship and I have visited there many times and helped them. Later a second school was started in a different city and then I met the Dalai Lama and began to help the Tibetan Refugee Camps. These photos I took from my first trip and I spent a day asking all 65 children to tell me what they wanted to be, and in the process, I saw the hope of God manifested in their eyes.

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If you would like to get involved with helping these children, please email me at garyspanovich@wholisticpeaceinstitute.com or call me at 503-314-5955.

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Peace

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Gary Alan Spanovich

Native American Peace Work

Gary began working with the Walker River Paiute Tribe in Schurz, Nevada in the late 1990’s to help the Tribe develop a Wovoka Ghost Dance & Peace Center focused on the Tribe’s most famous member – Wovoka or Jack Wilson. Gary also worked with Wovoka’s living relatives and especially his great granddaughters and great grandnieces and was officially invited to become a member of the Wovoka Family. He also worked with Raymond Hoefer 

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How The Native American Peace Project Began

 

One day in the fall of 2000, a friend of mine, Tom Purkey and I were coming back from a desert sojourn in Saline Valley, California.  Tom asked me if I wanted to visit Wovoka’s gravesite.  Wovoka, the Paiute prophet who lived from 1856 until 1932 on the Walker River Paiute Tribal Reservation, brought a ceremony which became known as the Father Dance to most western United States Tribes.  When I stood by Wovoka’s gravesite, meditating I heard a still small Voice say to me, “help the Tribe develop a memorial to Wovoka, he was a true saint and performed many miracles to help his people”.

 

I felt somewhat energized by my experience and so we drove to the Tribal offices, where I walked in and literally talked to the first person I met.  It turned out to be Ms. Vernadine McLain, Vice-Chairman of the Walker River Paiute Tribe.  When I related my experience at the gravesite, she did not miss a beat, but said, “We have wanted to develop something for Wovoka for years but don’t know how to begin the project”. I let her know I had developed such projects before and felt that with Wovoka’s incredible holiness that creating a museum or memorial around him was practical and could also be very healing for Native American youth.

 

When I returned home I immediately called Dr. Michael Harner, Director of the Foundation For Shamanic Studies and told him of my experience for it was with Michael that I first learned of the Father Dance Ceremony (the historians always called it the Ghost Dance Ceremony).  He left a message that said that he too felt moved by Wovoka and had wanted to try and assist with such a project for some time, to this holy man.   

 

I first did the Father Dance Ceremony with Michael Harner in 1987 at Joy Lake, Nevada and for me it was a profound healing experience.  Later after further work with Michael at Esalen and the Ceremony, I began to lead the Father Dance Ceremony, perhaps two dozen times in the early nineties.  Once I had over 100 people attend and the energetic healing experience in the room was very present.  The Father Dance Ceremony, my experience of it at least is that it brings a collective healing to the group that participates in it.  I can think of now greater ceremony that the average person can share in with little or no experience.

 

After some months of correspondence with Vernadine, Tom and I headed back to Saline Valley for our annual sojourn in the desert.  Saline Valley has played a key role in my spiritual development since 1988, when I began to hear a “still small Voice” within.  I went there after spending two weeks with Michael Harner at Esalen and had a life changing experience in that desert.  When we came back through Schurz, Nevada we met this time with Raymond Hoefer, who became our lead person in coordinating with the Tribe on the project.

 

Raymond was given the title, Father Dance Emissary and given the responsibility of reviving the Father Dance Ceremony and also to coordinate the development of a living memorial to Wovoka.  He reached out to many tribes across the West and discussed the return of the Ceremony with them.  His feedback was positive and all the Tribes he talked to encouraged the Walker River Tribe to revive the Father Dance Ceremony and to bring it back.

 

Raymond reached out to the Wounded Knee Survivors Association.  One of the tragedies of the late 1800’s was the Massacre of Wounded Knee, which occurred on December 29, 1890 near Wounded Knee Creek at Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.  A shot rang out and the Army (many of which were remnants of the 7th Cavalry) let loose a barrage of gunfire which killed 300 Native American men, women and children.

 

This tragedy effectively killed the Father Dance movement and also heralded an era of repression for all Native peoples.  At this point the US government made it illegal for the Native peoples to practice their religious ceremonies, speak Native languages, and participate in cultural events.  Perhaps most tragic they removed Native children from their parents and placed them in Indian schools so that they would be brought up in a white cultural environment.  The Father Dance Ceremony has been out of sight for the last 113 years.   

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What We Know Of Wovoka and His Miracles

 

What we know today of Wovoka and how the Father Dance Ceremony came to him is from many sources. One of them is from James Mooney who wrote The Ghost Dance Religion and Wounded Knee.  While cutting wood, Wovoka fell unconscious for two days and when he awoke, claimed that God “took him to Heaven” where he saw a beautiful land filled with game.  He also said he talked to Jesus Christ in his revelatory experience and that he was given a Dance to bring back to the people that would unite them in friendship and brotherly love.

 

In Wovoka’s own words he described his experience as, “When the Sun died, I went up to Heaven and saw God and all the people who had died a long time ago.  God told me to come back and tell my people they must be good and love one another, and not fight, or steal or lie.  He gave me this dance to give to my people.”

 

Wovoka called this dance the “Father Dance” or the Dance given by God. He also called it the “Friendship Dance” or sometimes the “Dance of Unity” for it was to unite the Indian peoples.  They key aspect of his experience was that when he returned from his revelation, he returned with the ability to do miracles. Mooney documented many miracles where Wovoka was able to change the weather at will, to make objects appear, to help the sick and dying, and many more.

 

It was his miracles that allowed the Dance to spread across the western United States, in less than a year.  The Dance was normally done for five days in a row.  It was common for the white settlers around Schurz, Nevada and especially the Mormon farmers to also participate in the Dance during this time.

 

We have had the pleasure to work with many of Wovoka’s living relatives, including Inez Jim and Evelyn Cook, his granddaughters.  They have recounted many personal family stories but the one that stands out in my mind are the times, they often went rabbit hunting with Wovoka. He would run out of bullets and would simply put sand down the barrel of his gun and miraculously, bullets would come out.  Such was the miracles of this holy Paiute prophet.

 

Where We Are Now With Developing the Wovoka Peace Center

 

The Tribe has a large vision for the Wovoka Peace Center. It would be first a national museum, developed to the standards set by the Smithsonian Museum, so that all the artifacts of Wovoka that is now stored in other museums could be brought home to Nevada.  It would also in later phases be developed as a Native American teaching institution that would teach on indigenous language, culture, religion and philosophy.  It would also have over time a conference and mediation center where tribal and tribal and non-tribal controversies could be settled in an atmosphere of peace and reconciliation.  A world peace center would eventually be developed that would be devoted to the preservation of indigenous culture all over the planet.  Finally the Center would be the nucleus of the revival of the Father Dance Ceremony and would serve as a religious center for Native American spirituality.

 

In October, 2003 the Tribe held a national conference on Wovoka and invited all 400 Indian Tribes west of the Mississippi River to participate.  Also Raymond has met twice with Michael Harner and been involved in the Father Dance Ceremony with Michael’s circles.  Subsequent discussions with Tribal officials have indicated that the Father Dance Ceremony may be offered out, for the first time in 113 years, this coming September, 2004 when the Tribe holds its annual Pine Nut Ceremony.  Most likely the second national conference on Wovoka will also take place then.

 

We have also reached out to the Nevada Congressional Delegation and asked them to help earmark funds for the development of a $5 million museum building which would form the first phase of the overall project.  The Tribe felt that it was important to name it a Peace Center for a variety of reasons: because this was the Spirit which Wovoka offered the Dance out and to ensure that history does not repeat itself.  The Dance Ceremony can heal, has healed and will heal as it occurs again.  The Ceremony is needed today in our fractured and broken world where wholeness is often forgotten about.

 

A Way Of Offering Out This Dance Of Peace To The World

 

It is possible to perform this Father Dance, as Wovoka called it in a performance that can be done on the concert halls of the world. With a troupe of 100 drummers, a full symphony orchestra and with a troupe of actors and actress, the Dance of Peace could be brought to a large audience.  Discussions are underway now in Portland to see if this can be first accomplished here.

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Nobel Peace Laureate work and world peace forums

Gary along with US Senator Mark O. Hatfield and Oregon’s senior religious leaders founded the Wholistic Peace Institute in 2000 in order to bring Nobel Peace Laureate to Oregon and to work with them in different parts of the world on world conflict issues; the Institute began its work in 2001 with a six Nobel Peace Laureate Conference at Portland State University; and the 10,000 student Dalai Lama Youth Summit.  For more information go to www.wholisticpeaceinstitute.com

Uniting Students With World Peace Leaders From Around the World

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The Wholistic Peace Institute - Educating for Peace mission is to “reduce the killing created by war” by relying on the wisdom of the Nobel Peace Laureates – our contemporary living Mahatma Gandhi’s.  Our Student Peace & Leadership Program evolved from the Dalai Lama Youth Summit in 2001 and a number of Student Peace Summits in the intervening years with the WPI first awarding the Harold Schnitzer Spirit of Unity award in 2009.  For more information go to www.wholisticpeaceinstitute.com

Church of The Still Small Voice

We have a regular weekly meditation on hearing your Still Small Voice within. We gather for a one & half to two hour process of meditation, reflection, and healing and use the book:  “A Book of Gentleness; Developing a Dialogue with God”; published in 1995 by John Honea Press.  Gary Alan Spanovich has taught this form of meditation since 1988 and has meditated every morning for 27 years; he has taught about the Still Small Voice at Marylhurst University for many years in the Religion Department; he is also a oblate (secular member) of Mt Angel Monastery.  He is assisted by his wife Nancy Spanovich.

 

The Church focuses on: 

  • The spirituality of listening to God (and developing a dialogue with God), which can be heard as a “still small Voice within”; inviting the Holy Spirit in

  • Through a series of guided prayers and meditations; learning methods which could develop into a person’s spiritual practice for themselves.

  • Simple methods for “inner listening” and “centering prayer” so that they might hear their own “still small Voice within”. 

 

Today’s world is unstable and you will never have control over the external world. Meditation on the Still Small Voice of the Lord Within offers you a spiritual meditation and healing practice.  God talks to all of us - all the time- and the only issue is are we listening?  The Church helps you to listen deep inside to hear your life purpose and to feel empowered to follow your unique path and move closer to God in your daily life.              

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