U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIORBUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
 
Print Page

For Immediate Release:  August 31, 2005

Contacts: 

  Suzan Craig or Victoria Atkins 970-882-5600

 

Teec Nos Pos Master Weaver at Anasazi Heritage Center

Roy Kady, a fourth-generation Navajo (or Diné) weaver from Teec Nos Pos, Arizona area will discuss and demonstrate his art from 10:30 to 3:00 on Saturday, September 17 at the BLM Anasazi Heritage Center.

Kady, considered a master weaver among his peers, was born to the Tl'izilani (Many Goats) clan and was raised in Teec Nos Pos. Kady founded and manages Dine' Woven, a family weaving business, whose web site expresses a reverent, holistic understanding of “the sacred art of textile weaving, which Spider Women has bestowed upon us.”

Kady is one of the few male Navajo weavers working today. He learned at his mother's knee from age nine, and continued to practice throughout his teenage years. When his mother— Mary Clah, a well known weaver— decided to retire, his sisters were uninterested in following her path. So Roy acquired her tools, which had been passed down through generations. Now he has re-inspired his sisters, nieces, and nephews, and he weaves with them on occasion.

For Kady, sheep symbolize the good life, living in harmony and balance on the land. When his people acquired sheep from Spanish colonists in the early 1600s, they exchanged their old hunting lifestyle for one of herding. The sheep thrived and assumed a central role in Diné psychology, creativity, and religious life. Kady says “Diné philosophy, spirituality, and sheep are intertwined like wool in the strongest weaving.”

Kady uses only wool from Churro sheep, a breed developed in the deserts and mountains of Diné Bikéyah, the old Navajo homeland of northwest New Mexico. Churro wool is stronger and absorbs natural dyes better than other wool. Unfortunately, Churros almost disappeared in the 20th century by a series of misguided management schemes. Kady is part of a movement to re-establish the breed for future generations.

The Anasazi Heritage Center is 3 miles west of Dolores, Colorado and is open daily from 9 to 5. The museum also serves as the visitor information center for Canyons of the Ancients National Monument. A $3 admission fee is charged for adults; people under 17 and Golden Pass holders are free. Special events are funded through visitor donations and entry fees under the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act. For more information, call the Center at (970) 882-5600.

-BLM-


 
Last updated: 10-25-2007