ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 1月11日 07時00分


A squat clapboard house in the West Village might seem like a surprising location for a Native American prayer center. But a wealthy activist who bought the property for $2.2 million in 2006 is essentially donating it back to its original owners: the Lenape Indians. Jean-Louis Goldwater Bourgeois wants Anthony Jay Van Dunk, a former chief of the Ramapough Lenape Nation — a tribe based in Mahwah, New Jersey — to start a prayer house, or Pahtamawiikan, there. The Lenape “tried to embrace and share, and in return, they got everything taken, even their lives,” said Anthony, a 54-year-old woodworker who’s active in Native American issues, who was photographed here by @samuelhodgson. These days, Manhattan — whose name comes from the #Lenape tongue, meaning roughly “the land of many hills” — has been developed to the hilt into a center of global commerce. The house has changed over the years, too: It has housed a saloon, a gambling parlor, an oyster house, a pool hall and gay bars. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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