Indianz.Com > News > Joanne Shenandoah-Tekaliwakwa, 1957-2021
Joanne Shenandoah-Tekaliwakwa, 1957-2021
Legendary Oneida Singer, Songwriter and Peace Humanitarian
Monday, December 6, 2021
Indianz.Com
Obituary provided by family.
She had a bright voice like liquid gold, a luminous heart and a magnetic smile.
Joanne Shenandoah-Tekaliwakwah, one of the most renowned Indigenous musicians on the Native American music scene, nurtured the spirit, inspired joy and shared her love of laughter and her people with audiences around the world.
She passed into the spirit world on November 22, 2021, at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Arizona, at the age of 64.
Multi-talented Singer, Composer, Instrumentalist, Author and Actress
Joanne was known as a matriarch of Indigenous music. Given the Oneida Wolf Clan name “Tekaliwakwha” meaning “She Sings”, she fully lived into her name. She was publicly acknowledged as the most prolific and creative Indigenous songwriter and performer of her era. She was a cross-cultural artist who released 24 award winning albums and inspired many artists in the burgeoning Indigenous music industry. Teaching Haudenosanee culture was paramount to Joanne, and her people’s principles of peace were woven throughout her songs, performances and humanitarian efforts.
Joanne was a visionary trailblazer who has left an impactful global legacy.
Her original musical compositions blended ancestral Haudenosaunee melodies and songs with contemporary lyrics and instrumentation. Her innovative recordings ranged from Indigenous to world, folk, pop, new age and country — she was in a genre that could truly be called her own. Joanne was adept at picking up any instrument she was interested in. She played the guitar, piano, flute and cello.
In 2005 Shenandoah was awarded a GRAMMY for the album Sacred Ground: A Tribute to Mother Earth. Among her more than 40 awards, she received two additional GRAMMY nominations, an unprecedented 14 Native American Music Awards (NAMMYS), multiple Syracuse Area Music Awards (SAMMYS). Globally, she received multitudes of accolades for her stunning creativity, beautiful vocals and teachings.
Peace Advocate and Humanitarian
Joanne was driven to aid and inspire where there was need. She supported many causes and offered free performances for musical benefits across the country and loved performing for elders in nursing homes. As an advocate for Native American music, she supported Ellen Bello, president of the Native American Music Awards, in giving a voice to hundreds of Indigenous artists across the Americas. At the first NAMMYS awards show in 1998, Joanne’s outreach attracted Wayne Newton, Richie Havens, Robbie Robertson, the Coolidge sisters, Floyd Red Crow Westerman and John Fusco to the stage.
Joanne was an ordained friend of the East-West Interfaith Ministry alongside Nelson Mandela, the Dalai Lama, Elie Weisel and Amma. She officiated many weddings across the country.
Mentorship was important to Joanne. She generously encouraged many young Indigenous musicians to join her on stage and gave many the start to their musical career. She focused messages of encouragement to the youth and for all people to be mindful of the next seven generations.
Joanne was a founding board member of the Hiawatha Institute for Indigenous Knowledge based on Haudenosaunee principles of peace. In 2014 she served as Co-Chair for the National Task Force of Children Exposed to Violence for the Department of Justice at the request of US Attorney General Eric Holder and President Barack Obama.
A Rich Heritage
Joanne descended from a long line of Haudenosaunee leaders. Her ancestor Oneida Chief Skenandoa (Shenandoah) was a close friend of George Washington for whom the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia was named. The Oneidas under Skenandoa’s leadership helped save Washington’s army during the Revolutionary War and from the naming of this valley, came the inspiration for the American ballad “O Shenandoah”. Chief Skenandoa worked alongside his good friend Reverend Samuel Kirkland to found Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, for the education of Oneida peoples.
In September of 1991 she married Doug George-Kanentiio, Akwesasne Mohawk journalist. They purchased Tkanalohale, the historic homestead of the great Chief Skenandoa in Oneida Castle. Joanne lived there for 28 years with her husband, daughter Leah Shenandoah, a Ph.D. candidate at Cornell, and their grandson Ryder Oroniakenrats (Beautiful Sky) Shenandoah. Chief Skenandoa lived and died here at the age of 110. Joanne had wished to turn the historic home into a cultural center.
Another relative was international advocate for Native American rights, Laura Cornelius Kellogg (Oneida) who lived at the turn of the 20th century. In 2020, Joanne served alongside 25 Haudenosaunee leaders and community members as consultants to the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission that memorialized Cornelius-Kellogg in a bronze monument in Seneca Falls, New York.
At the time of her passing Joanne was working on her autobiography.
Joanne was predeceased by her parents Oneida Wolf Clanmother Maisie Shenandoah and Onondaga Pine Tree Chief Clifford Schenandoah, her beloved grandma Gertrude Schenandoah and her cherished brother Gerald Schenandoah (Cheryl, living.) She is survived by her sisters Wanda Wood, Diane, Victoria and Danielle Schenandoah (Tony Mata), of central New York. She also departs from many nieces, nephews, and hundreds of cousins across the continent.
Joanne Shenandoah was a kind and generous soul who always found a reason to celebrate, laugh and find gratitude in every situation. She fought a long battle for her health that began in 2015 with an infection from C. diff that led to organ failure and nearly took her life. She was gifted the last five years with her family, saw her daughter become a mother and welcomed her grandson into the world. She will be greatly missed by her family, friends and fans.
Services
A national public memorial to commemorate Joanne’s life will be held in the spring of 2022. Details will be forthcoming.
In lieu of flowers please send sympathies and donations to the care of Leah & Ryder Shenandoah & Doug George-Kanentiio.
Condolences may also be shared at faroneandsoninc.com/obituaries/Joanne-Shenandoah-Tekaliwakwah
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