|
|
|
|
By William TomkinsPROPERTIES.Blanket or other drapery for each Scout. It is desirable that Tenderfoot Scouts wear one feather, Second Class Scouts-two, and First Class Scouts-three. Scoutmasters and assistants should have more pretentious display, if possible, (this can be an old shirt, fringed and decorated with paint, etc., or made-up costumes, war bonnet). If possible have an electric or other council fire. Have a Tom-Tom, or a portable player with Indian music. STAGE SETTING.Troop in Indian regalia seated in circle around fire, at distance of 15 feet. Chief and assistants at fire within circle, according to diagram. Lights out, or very dim. Fire in operation. ACTION.One of the assistants, or any combination of assistants or boys do an Indian dance, to Tom-Tom or primitive music on portable phonograph, or have the music alone. All this is optional and according to individual possibilities, but highly recommended. All conversation around the fire is in sign language and therefore silent. A reader in the back of the audience will interpret the gestures. Guide enters with candidates. Halts them and comes close to outside of circle. Makes sign of friendly greeting. Chief invites him to come within circle, using sign language. Guide signs that he has come a long ways, over mountains, (meaning the tests), across a river, (meaning the parents' consent), with boys who want to make themselves Scouts, (or with boys who want to sit at the council fire). Chief signs for boys to be brought to the fire. This is done by motion, by the guide. Chief, (in sign): "Why want go with Scouts?" Candidates, (Being Scouts they are supposed to know the sign language): "Want go woods, make me strong, brave, true, rise in the world" (Be a rising man). The Chief and his assistants rise to their feet. Chief: "Make Scout oath." Candidates make the Oath in sign language, all may do it at once, or the candidates may do it while the rest hold the oath sign. Chief makes sign: "Good." Chief pins tenderfoot pin on each candidate, then makes sign: "YOU, ME, ALL BROTHERS, NOW, ALWAYS." Chief makes sign of shaking hands. He then motions to scouts in each patrol, some members of which will come forward (as many as there are candidates), throw one arm and blanket over a candidate's shoulder, and bring him to a place in the circle. Then everybody will rise and give the Scout benediction in sign, or do a friendship dance, followed by the benediction. See Also:Dan Beard's InitiationErnest Seton's InitiationTroop Investiture CeremoniesEengonyama Campfire CeremonySilent Scout Signals |
Site Contents
|
|
| ||||||||||||||||
|
When you place an order with Amazon.Com using the search box below, a small referral fee is returned to The Inquiry Net to help defer the expense of keeping us online. Thank you for your consideration! |
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
DVDs for Junior Leader Training Weekends! |
Additional Titles: Scout Books Trading Post |
Click on Underlined Green text to follow a hyperlink. Let me know if you find a broken link, especially those that reference a hard drive :-/
Click on Small Pictures to
Enlarge Them.
If this enlarged picture won't print on a single page, search your
software for a printing
option like "Best Fit." This is the default setting in most
browsers.
If the pictures are missing, send me the URL, and I'll scan them for
you.
To Email me, replace "(at)" below with
"@"
Rick(at)Kudu.Net
If you have questions, you must send me the URL!
The URL tells me what page you're talking about. This URL is sometimes called the
"Address" and it is usually found in a little box near the top of your
screen. Most
URLs start with the letters "http://"
Did I mention that you must send me the URL?
The Kudu Net is a backup "mirror" of The Inquiry Net. When linking to this Website, note that pages that end in "inquiry.net" are updated far more often than the corresponding "kudu.net" versions.
Since August 24, 2002
+550,762
Last modified: September 09, 2005.