Pine Plains Free Library celebrates a Shekomeko Christmas

PINE PLAINS— Local residents were invited to take part in a Shekomeko-style Christmas at the Pine Plains Free Library, thanks to a lecture by award-winning Native American historian and Celtic author Evan Pritchard.

Starting at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 16, the Community Room  above the library welcomed a full house of community members young and old to the lecture. To the side of the room, several books related to the area’s rich history were placed on display, a few of which were compiled by the Little Nine Partners Historical Society.

Though he has researched a variety of topics relating to Native Americans, Pritchard pointed out that the Shekomeko Christmas presentation was brand new. As the lights dimmed and the presentation began, the wheels of history soon began to spin as the author took his audience on a tour of past Christmas traditions celebrated by the Algonquian people in the Shekomeko area. Shekomeko is an historic hamlet in the town of North East that borders on the town of Pine Plains.

Going back to the year 1743, Pritchard’s lecture brought the audience to the period in which many of the area’s Algonquian people joined together with the Moravian missionaries to form the first Native American Christian congregation in the United States. Excerpts from historic documents were displayed at the front of the room to provide context for the period. 

To give his audience a peek into what local life was like during the 1700s, Pritchard read aloud detailed passages from a diary dating Dec. 22 to Dec. 29, 1744. He discussed the rituals entailed in the Moravian’s Christmas “love feast” and compared them to the indigenous Winter Solstice ceremonies celebrated by Native Americans. He also tracked the various Christmas celebrations shared between the Moravians and Native Americans over the years, going back another century to 1642. 

Once he had carefully gone through the details inscribed in the diary, he revealed to the crowd that it was the missionary Gottlob Buettner who kept the diary and mentioned that Buettner died of tuberculosis shortly after writing in it.

Regardless of the possible dangers associated with the Native American-Moravian connection, Pritchard emphasized the extraordinary love shared by all as they celebrated the Christmas holidays together.

For more information about events at the Pine Plains Free Library, go to www.pineplainslibrary.org.

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