Saturday, March 30, 2013
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$10
Sedona Public Library
7 - 9 pm Meeting Room 3250 White Bear Road
Sedona,
Arizona
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To the Hopi an individual goes
through multiple life cycles or symbolic life cycles. With every cycle
the individual grows in an number of ways. In this visual presentation, Ramson
will discuss a number of topics relating to the development and growth of a
child into an adult. He will also speak on the concept of educating
students using traditional values.
Ramson Lomatewama is an eloquent and
engaging speaker on Hopi culture in relation to today's world. He is a mentor at the Hopi School and retired adjunct
professor of sociology (North Central College, Naperville, Illinois).
Ramson is a published poet, cultural anthropology consultant, farmer,
and artist who participates in Hopi traditional culture. Ramson is a
traditional-style katsina doll carver who has developed a unique
contemporary hot glass art based on ancestral images which are a
"contemporary expression of Hopi spirit and belief."
He
is a board member and mentor for Hopitutuqaki, The Hopi School, at
Hotevila, Arizona (on Third Mesa on the Hopi Indian Reservation) which is
dedicated to developing an educational process derived from Hopi Indian
philosophy, values and methods: "Hopi students come from a Hopi
environment and culture. They are also part of larger environments and cultures,
culminating in world (or Universal) environment and culture. The task of
students is to prepare to enter those environments ready and willing to
contribute."
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Sponsored
by the Crossing Worlds Hopi Project, which conducts service
projects at Hopi and cross-cultural education opportunities since 1999 and
Verde Valley Archaeology
Center.
Ramson's Hopi glass art will be on display March 29 - 30 at the Verde Valley Archaeology Fair in Camp Verde.