Archives for May 2012

Navajo Nation Treaty Days 2012

June 1 – 3, 2012

Navajo Nation Treaty Days 2012

Navajo Nation Treaty Days 2012

Treaty Days Social Song and Dance
Friday – Sunday
June 1-3, 2012

Carnival
Wednesday – Sunday
May 30 through June 3

All Indian basketball Men’s tournament
May 31 to June 3

Concerts
John Anderson
Friday, June 1 at 9pm

Misfits
Saturday, June 2

Traditional Games
by Navajo Nation Museum
June 1-3, 2012

Open Indian Rodeo
Saturday and Sunday
June 2 -3 2012

Open Junior Rodeo
Saturday and Sunday
June 1, 2012

POW WOW
Saturday and Sunday
June 2 -3, 2012

Half Marathon in 5k fun run walk
Sunday, June 3, 2012

Navajo Nation Treaty Days

Navajo Nation Treaty Days 2012

Brought to you by:

Navajo Nation Museum Special Event Selection
PO Box 2 370 Window Rock AZ 86515
928-871-6642 or 928.871.7941

Navajo Treaty Days Social Song and Dance

Friday – Sunday
June 1-3, 2012

Anne Wauneka
Song and Dance Arena

Navajo Nation Fairgrounds
Window Rock Arizona

Host singing group
Cross Canyon Echo Swingers

Friday, June 1, 2012
9 AM Treaty  Days Cultural Program Begins
12 PM Registration opens
1 PM Warm up
5 PM Registration closes
6 PM Warm-up  concluded
(Exhibitions solos etc.)

Saturday, June 2, 2012
10 am Registration opens
12 pm Grand entry and contest starts
3 pm Registration closes
7 pm Wrap-Up

Sunday, June 3, 2012
10 am Roll Call and contestant starts
4 pm Retire Colors and Wrap-Up

Categories
Tiny Tot – Eight years and under
Youth – 9 to 17 Year-old
Adult – 18 to 55 Year-old
Golden – 65 and up

BENEFIT GROUP SINGERS LIMITED TO 25 GROUPS

www.navajonationfair.com

For more information:
Coordinator, Shawnevan Dale
928-266-9882

Navajo Nation Museum Special Event Selection
PO Box 2 370 Window Rock AZ 86515
928-871-6642 or 928.871.7941

Treaty  Days Social Song and Dance

Treaty Days Social Song and Dance

Navajo Nation Treaty Days Open Junior Rodeo

Friday June 1, 2012

Dean C Jackson Memorial Arena
Navajo Nation Fairgrounds
Window Rock, AZ

For More Information:
Coordinator, Hank Begay
505-567-0007

Navajo Nation Museum Special Event Selection
PO Box 2 370 Window Rock AZ 86515
928-871-6642 or 928.871.7941

Navajo Nation Treaty Days Open Junior Rodeo

Navajo Nation Treaty Days Open Junior Rodeo

 

Navajo Treaty Days Open Indian Rodeo

Saturday and Sunday
June 2 -3 2012

Dean C Jackson Memorial Arena
Navajo Nation Fairgrounds
Window Rock, AZ

Performances
Saturday, June 2,  8:00 am – Slack
Saturday, June 2, 7:00 pm
Sunday, June 3, 1:00 pm

Navajo Nation Museum Special Event Selection
PO Box 2 370 Window Rock AZ 86515
928-871-6642 or 928.871.7941

Navajo Treaty Days Open Indian Rodeo

Navajo Treaty Days Open Indian Rodeo

Navajo Nation Treaty Days POW WOW June 2 -3

Saturday and Sunday
June 2 -3, 2012

POW WOW Arena
Navajo Nation Fairgrounds
Window Rock, AZ

Saturday, June 2
Gourd Dance 11 am to 1:30 pm
Grand Entry 2 pm
Supper Break 5 pm
Gourd Dance 5 pm to 6:30 pm
Grand Entry 7 pm

Sunday, June 3
Gourd Dance 10 AM pm to 11:30 AM
Grand Entry 12 pm

Navajo Nation Treaty Days POW WOW

Navajo Nation Treaty Days POW WOW

 

Navajo Half Marathon in 5k fun run walk June 3

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Window Rock Sports Center
Fairgrounds Window Rock, AZ

6 am 5K registration
No registration fees free event

Race Course

Window Rock, AZ TO Fort Defiance, AZ
All dirt roads rolling hills and sand areas.
13.1 miles half marathon 3.1 mile 5k
Elevation 6.900

 

All Indian basketball men’s tournament

May 31 to June 3
Navajo Nation Fairgrounds
Window Rock, AZ

16 teams. Double elimination bracket with know if necessary game.
$250 entry fee. $175 to secure a spot on the bracket.
Money orders only, payable to navajo nation.
Deadline May 29 at 5 pm

Navajo Half Marathon in 5k fun run walk

Navajo Half Marathon in 5k fun run walk

Navajo Traditional Games June 1-3, 2012

by Navajo Nation Museum
June 1-3, 2012

Navajo Nation Fairgrounds
Window Rock, AZ

Dine traditional games

 

Navajo horse Show and Stories at Indian Rodeo Performances
Cash Prizes to be awarded to several events

Schedule of traditional games

Friday, June 1
Youth Fruit Scramble
Dean C Jackson Memorial Arena at 12 pm

Saturday, June 2
Arm Wrestling
Dean C Jackson Memorial Arena at 10 am

Traditional hair tying
Song and Dance Arena 11 am

Tug-Of-War
Dean C Jackson Memorial Arena at 7 pm

Sunday, June 3
Gunny Sack Race
Pow Wow Arena 4:30 pm

Chicken Pole
Dean C Jackson Memorial Arena at  1pm

Navajo Traditional Games June 1-3, 2012

Navajo Traditional Games June 1-3, 2012

Navajo Treaty Days Concerts 2012

John Anderson
Friday, June 1 at 9pm

$10 Presale
$15 Day of show
9 pm being see jackson Arena

Misfits
Saturday, June 2

$15 Pre-Sale
$20 At The Show

Window Rock Sports Center 9 pm

Concert tickets on sale today

at

Navajo Nation Museum Special Event Selection
PO Box 2 370 Window Rock AZ 86515
928-871-6642 or 928.871.7941

Navajo Nation Treaty Days Concerts 2012
Navajo Nation Treaty Days Concerts 2012

Navajo Nation Treaty Days Carnival

Wednesday – Sunday
May 30 through June 3

Wednesday, May 30, 2012
5 PM carnival opens
5 PM to 8 PM – $1 ride night (5 ride minimum)
8:00 PM carnival closes

Thursday, May 31, 2012
5 pm Carnival open
5 pm to 8 pm $50 ride all rights
12 am carnival closes

Friday, June 1, 2012
5 pm carnival opens
12 am carnival closes

Saturday, June 2, 2012
2 pm carnival opens
2 pm to 5 pm $50 all rights
1 am carnival closes

Sunday, June 3, 2012
2 pm Carnival opens
2 pm to 5 pm $50 all rights
8 pm Carnival closes

Navajo Nation Treaty Days Carnival

Navajo Nation Treaty Days Carnival

First Contact with the Navajo – 1540

In 1493, the year after the discovery of the New World, Pope Alexander VI issued his famous Bull of Demarcation, in which Spanish explorers be gave to Spain all the undiscovered country of the Southwest lying beyond an imaginary line one hundred miles west of the Azores and the Cape Verde Islands. Upon this Spain based her claims to the New World.

Coronado Expedition Map

Coronado Expedition Map

Not until 1513 did European explorers venture into the interior of North America. Previous to this time they had merely touched upon the shores of the great western continent. The great beyond appeared to them dark, void, and impenetrable. Balboa in that year crossed the Isthmus of Panama, and six years later Cortez landed on the east coast of Mexico.
Don Francisco Vásquez de Coronado, Spanish Explorer, leads an expedition of soldiers from Mexico into the American southwest in search of gold. They arrive and discover the Hopis during the summer of 1540, where Navajos were already in the Hopi province.

Francisco Coronado

Francisco Coronado

The first recorded contact between Navajos and the Spanish invaders came in 1583 in the area of Dinetah.

An expedition led by Antonio de Espejo refers to the Querechos Indians near Mt. Taylor. The Spanish also at times referred to Navajos as “Apaches de Navajo,” leading to some confusion for future historians.

During this time and up to the recent past, Navajos were referred to as Apaches. At the time of the conquest, the word “Apache”, from the Zuñi “apachú” (enemy), their appellation for the Navajo, was used by the Spaniards to denote any hostile Indians.
Then the Spaniards named the Apache bands according to their traits or locale:

Mescalero, for the mescale gatherers, several tribes for the closest mountain,

“Apache de Jicarilla” for their baskets,

and the “Apache de Navaju” which they borrowed from the Tewa word – “Navaju” meaning “the arroyo with the cultivated fields.

The Navajo name for Spaniard is Nakai, meaning “those who wander around,” referring to the various expeditions that frequently came into Navajo country.
That the Navajos consider themselves the aristocrats of the southwest they tactily admit by calling themselves “Diné,” the People.

A Native American (Navajo) Family

A Native American (Navajo) Family

They are of Athapascan stock, and ethnologists are generally agreed that they came from the north, drifting into the area they now occupy less than a thousand years ago. In earliest historical times they were found wandering over what is now western New Mexico, eastern Arizona, and southern Utah and Colorado. Their present reservation, while much smaller than their original range, is in the same region.

Navajo legends in general bear out the supposition that they came from the north, except one very picturesque one which tells that the People came from the south, bringing their four sacred plants: tobacco, corn, squash, and beans.

Navajo Camp

Navajo Camp

They occupied all the country, but, finding the Pueblo people better fitted for agriculture, they generously gave them the valley lands and kept the high grassy uplands for themselves.

This legend has the great advantage of justifying the Navajo habit of appropriating the crops raised by the Pueblo people.

The Navajo also appropriated women when it suited him to do so, with the result that his race is probably a compound of all the southwestern Indian stocks, with accretions of Spanish blood, whatever racial amalgam the Spaniards had acquired in Mexico, and later additions from the American Army and American traders. What was most vigorous, most alluring, most enduring of all races the Navajo has apparently taken and made his own.

History of the Navajo

Ancient Navajo and Native Americans Migrations
First Contact with the Navajo – 1540
The Americans and the Navajo
The Mexicans and the Navajo
The Spanish and the Navajo
Navajo Long Walk to Bosque Redondo
Antonio el Pinto Chief of the Navajos