Community Corner
Talk On Indigenous Ceremonial Stone Landscape In Sudbury
A preliminary walkthrough and assessment of whether Eversource's proposed clearing might impact sacred ceremonial stone landscapes.

SUDBURY, MA—The hills and valleys of New England are peppered with ceremonial stone landscapes created by Indigenous people of all regions. These are explored in "Let the Landscape Speak: A Talk on the Importance and Meaning of the Indigenous Ceremonial Stone Landscape" on Tuesday, Oct. 23, at 7 p.m. at Sudbury Grange Hall.
These stone structures were built to create and restore harmony between human beings and Mother Earth. The prayers that they embody continue to live as long as the stones are kept intact, according to the announcement.
In response to Eversource’s proposed Sudbury to Hudson Transmission Project, the Town of Sudbury and local nonprofit Protect Sudbury invited regional tribal experts Doug Harris and Bettina Washington (Historic Preservation Officers for the Narragansett and Wampanoag Tribes) to conduct a preliminary walkthrough and assessment of whether Eversource’s proposed clearing might impact sacred ceremonial stone landscapes.
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