TRIBAL MEMBERS TO COMPLETE CROSS-COUNTRY RUN WITH THE SUN, PRAYER FOR ALL WATER: CONCERT AND CELEBRATION JUNE 16-17 AT SYCUAN

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Update: Due to construction on the "barrier- the WALL"  organizers had to make adjustments and have the water merge at Imperial Beach by the pier on June 14. The driving access to the park will be gated. The water that was collected will still be taken/ran to the corner of Mexico and California. This was changed because this event is for everyone and easier for brothers and sisters with disabilities, according to a post on Bobby Wallace's Facebook page. 

By Miriam  Raftery

Photo, left:  Barona tribal members with Passamaquoddy tribal members in Maine

Photo,right: via "Run with the Sun" page of indigenousnetwork.org; Bobby Wallace (right) with run participants

June 1, 2023 (San Diego’s East County) --  Local Native Americans are about to complete the longest  indigenous prayer run in U.S. history. “Run with the Sun” is the brainchild of Lakeside resident Bobby Wallace, a member of the Barona Band of Mission Indians,  in hopes of protecting waters across America.

“It’s been awesome making changes in people’s minds about water everywhere,” Wallace told ECM in an interview today.  “We started running, traveling with the water over every footstep of this continent, over every major waterway, with a prayer for all water.”

The effort is supported by the Barona, Sycuan and Viejas tribes in San Diego’s East County, as well as participants from other tribes across the U.S.

A picture containing sky, outdoor, landscape, cloudDescription automatically generatedThe run began in Maine in July 12 last year, with runners collecting water vials from tribal members nationwide.  On June 14, they will arrive in San Diego and hold a ceremony on the beach near Friendship Park at the international border,  followed by a “Run for the Sun” concert on June 16 at the Sycuan reservation. The concert will feature multiple stages with many bands.

Wallace says he came up with the idea while walking across the Mojave Desert in 2019, concerned that “Water was getting killed everywhere” due to the effects of pollution and climate change. Then an Ojibwe friend in Canada told him, “Bobby, we need to start this. Water is getting so polluted everywhere, so we need to bring awareness and prayer.”

The first leg of the run began at the West  Quoddi Lighthouse at the border of Maine and Canada at “the very northeast corner of the U.S., the furthest place you can go” in the nation,” Wallace recalled.  There,  tribal women including from the Haudenosaunee from New York, Passamoquoddi from Maine, and Navajo fromArizona blended waters from their areas with waters from the San Diego River and the Pacific Ocean, historic Kumeyaay territory.

 “When they poured the water in,  I watched them and looked out at the ocean,” Wallace said, recalling a tidal surge that swept to shore over everyone’s feet but his.

After completing half the continent last year, the run was suspended in winter, a peace pipe and staff with eagle feathers left in the Midwest to keep the prayer alive. Earlier this year, runners including Wallace, his son and nephew resumed the run through Kansas City to Arizona, heading to California.

Across America, Wallace says people were receptive and concerned about water quality. He voices concern over a recent Supreme Court decision prohibiting the Environmental Protection Agency from regulating wetlands not connected to the sea, as well as over raw sewage being pumped into the Pacific Ocean from Tijuana, Mexico that has caused numerous beach closures in San Diego County in recent weeks.

Photo, right:  Bobby Wallace in Farmington, AZ with the Navajo people

In  a small Colorado town, Lamar, where runners set up a campground, Wallace told ECM,  “On the last day, we were sitting there and this little school bus came by. Little kids were waving at us.  This whole town knew what we were doing.”

He adds, “It’s been like that everywhere we went.  People know now that water is getting horrible to drink.”

Photo, left: The Jicarillo Apache people welcome Run with the Sun participants

For  Native Americans, the issue is spiritual as well as a health concern.  “In our belief, water is alive,” explained Wallace, who says he grew concerned that “water is getting killed everywhere.”

On June 14, runners will near the end of their journey, arriving at Friendship Park around 5 p.m.  near the international border, where the polluted  Tijuana River flows into the sea.  Native American bird singers will celebrate the arrival, followed by prayers and a pipe ceremony.  Then waters from across America will be merged with the Pacific, with a prayer for all waters.

Wallace hopes these efforts will “bring more attention to clean water, but also to our planet as a whole…If everybody does their part, we can make things better.”

After the beachside prayer ceremony, runners will continue on through local mountain and desert tribal areas, ending at Sycuan on June 16, where an awards ceremony for participants will be held from 10:45 a.m. to 12 noon.

The two-day concert will start immediately after the ceremony and run June 16-17 at the Sycuan reservation on Dehesa Road in unincorporated El Cajon.

The music festival will feature artists of all genres, including national acts, international recording artists, local bands, cultural performances, vendors, and local artisans. The festival will be an opportunity to showcase those in our community and allow people to have a unique experience.

For a full list of bands and entertainment, or to buy tickets($40 per day general admission, $100 VIP), visit https://runwiththesunmusicfest.org/ or visit https://www.facebook.com/search/top?q=runwiththesunmusicfest.

“Everything is open to everyone,” Wallace says of the prayer run and concert, “because we’re all in this together.”



 

 


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