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HoopDancingChampionship

06 FEBRUARY 2011 - PHOENIX, AZ: QOOTSVENA DENIPAH-COOK, 10 years old, (center) a Navajo Hopi Indian from the Okhay-Owingeh pueblo in New Mexico, warms up before dancing at the 21st Annual Heard Museum World Championship Hoop Dance Contest at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, AZ, Sunday, February 6. Hoop dancing has a long tradition among Native American peoples. The hoop or circle is symbolic to most Native people. It represents the Circle of Life and the continuous cycle of summer and winter, day and night, male and female. Some native people use hoop dancing as a part of healing ceremonies designed to restore balance and harmony in the world. Photo by Jack Kurtz

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American Indian Arizona Colorful Culture Dance Hoop Dance Native American Phoenix Regalia Tradition Youth ZUMA
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Phoenix 2011
06 FEBRUARY 2011 - PHOENIX, AZ: QOOTSVENA DENIPAH-COOK, 10 years old, (center) a Navajo Hopi Indian from the Okhay-Owingeh pueblo in New Mexico, warms up before dancing at the 21st Annual Heard Museum World Championship Hoop Dance Contest at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, AZ, Sunday, February 6. Hoop dancing has a long tradition among Native American peoples. The hoop or circle is symbolic to most Native people. It represents the Circle of Life and the continuous cycle of summer and winter, day and night, male and female. Some native people use hoop dancing as a part of healing ceremonies designed to restore balance and harmony in the world.      Photo by Jack Kurtz
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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